April 8, 2026

Headings and tasks for study structure

Use the rich text tools you already have to outline sermons, lessons, or personal devotions.

Headings and tasks for study structure

You do not need a separate outliner. The same editor that stores Scripture blocks also gives you hierarchy and checklists.

Headings mark movements

Use the heading menu to promote lines to H2, H3, or deeper levels. That mirrors how you might move from a main idea to supporting verses or illustrations.

Lists carry detail

Bullet lists work well for observations. Numbered lists help when order matters, such as steps in application.

Task lists track follow through

Task items are ideal for actions after study: reread a chapter, look up a Greek word, pray for a person, or send an encouraging message. They store as part of the note JSON like any other block.

Alignment and emphasis

Center a prayer section, justify wide paragraphs, or highlight a phrase you want to spot quickly. Highlights and bold are especially helpful next to inserted passages.

Links to supporting material

Paste a URL and convert it through the link popover when you want commentary articles or church resources beside your own words.

For how passage blocks behave differently from normal paragraphs, see Scripture inserts and locked passage text.

"For everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose under heaven." (Ecclesiastes 3:1, WEB)