Lutheran Homeschool Curriculum: Complete Guide
Lutheran families stand in the Reformation tradition, emphasizing grace alone, faith alone, and Scripture alone. Lutherans have a rich educational heritage -Luther himself championed universal education and wrote catechisms for family instruction. Educate Your Way creates curriculum integrating Lutheran theology and practice across all subjects.
Lutheran homeschool curriculum with Reformation theology, catechism study, vocational emphasis, Bach and musical heritage, and per-subject faith control. Pre-K–8 standards-aligned.
What Makes Lutheran Education Distinctive
Lutheran education stands on the Reformation’s foundational convictions. and Luther himself was one of history’s strongest advocates for universal education:
What Lutheran Curriculum Includes
When you select Lutheran, your curriculum draws from these tradition-specific elements:
Lutheran Content in Each Subject
Lutheran theology creates distinctive integration in every subject area. always enriching, never forced:
Choosing Your Integration Level
Lutheran families range from high-church liturgical to broadly evangelical. Integration levels let you match curriculum to your family’s practice:
The Catechism in Homeschool Education
Luther wrote the Small Catechism specifically for parents to teach their children at home. It remains one of the most effective tools for family faith formation:
Build Your Lutheran Curriculum
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this include catechism study?
Yes. Luther's Small Catechism concepts are woven into appropriate lessons. The curriculum also incorporates Lutheran contributions to music, education, and the Reformation.
Which Lutheran synod does this follow?
The curriculum supports both LCMS and ELCA families by focusing on core Lutheran theology (sola gratia, sola fide, sola scriptura) with adjustable integration.
Can I keep some subjects secular?
Yes. Per-subject integration control lets you set each subject independently. You might want faith integration in history and language arts but secular science and math.