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How to Reach Gen Z: A Church Leader's Guide to Engagement & Discipleship

How to Reach Gen Z: A Church Leader's Guide to Engagement & Discipleship

How to engage Gen Z in church through authenticity, digital connection, and discipleship that meets them where they are.

How to Reach Gen Z: A Church Leader's Guide to Engagement & Discipleship
Category
Outreach
Publish date
January 26, 2026
Author
Chris Dunagan
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CHURCH TECH PODCAST
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TV
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Modern Church leader

Gen Z is craving something real, and while they may distrust religion, many are still drawn to the person and teachings of Jesus. While headlines often scream of church decline, new research shows a spiritual curiosity rising in the most connected, cause-driven, and culturally aware generation yet.

So, what’s the disconnect? Traditional models aren’t always meeting them where they are. For church leaders ready to bridge the generational gap, this guide reveals a research-backed framework for Gen Z church engagement. It’s time to move beyond "cool" services and toward timeless truth delivered through current, authentic methods.

Prioritize Authenticity & "Belonging Before Belief"

Gen Z has been marketed to since birth. They have a "filtered content" detector that is second to none. What they crave isn’t a high-production show; it’s radical sincerity.

Instead of simply offering another program, create intentional spaces for vulnerability. Whether it’s small group storytelling nights or mentorship dinners, Gen Z wants to know the people leading them are "walking the walk."

  • Be Real: Practice what you preach. They stay when they see leaders who are honest about the struggles of faith.
  • Listen & Mentor: Shift from being the "sage on the stage" to a curious listener. Barna research shows that Gen Z is returning to church because they are looking for wisdom from "spiritual grandparents."
  • Foster Belonging: In many cases, Gen Z needs to feel they belong in the community before they fully adopt the belief system.

Check out the data: Gen Z Returning to Church: Barna Research

Leverage Technology for Connection (Not Just Production)

For Gen Z, the digital world is not separate from the "real" world; it’s just another room where life happens. Church strategies for Gen Z must include a seamless digital-to-physical pipeline.

Go Where They Are

  • Use TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts to share authentic stories and bite-sized biblical truths.
  • Highlight behind-the-scenes moments, mission work, and testimonies in video form.
  • Consider launching a podcast or livestream Q&A series on Gen Z topics.

Make Services Interactive

Use tech to turn Sunday into a two-way conversation:

  • Enable real-time polling and live Q&A with apps like Slido or Kahoot!.
  • Offer digital sermon notes with community interaction through YouVersion Events.
  • Encourage social media engagement during worship with curated hashtags.

Embrace the Hybrid Church

Use digital platforms as the front door to invite them into authentic community. Gen Z wants to be known, but you have to meet them where they scroll first.

Where Gen Z Spends Their Digital Time

Gen Z Usage Rate Avg. Time Spent / Day Why It Matters for Churches
TikTok 60%+ 95 minutes Ideal for short, punchy testimonies, authentic moments, and quick encouragement.
YouTube 89% 70 minutes Perfect for deep-dive teaching, sermons, and “day in the life” ministry content.
Instagram 76% 53 minutes Great for aesthetic storytelling, community updates, and visual discipleship.

Read more: 8 Ways to Reach Gen Z with Technology | Tailoring Youth Ministry to Gen Z & Alpha

Contextualize the Gospel & Empower Action

Preach Real Truth for a Real World

Don’t shy away from tough conversations around mental health, identity, sexuality, social ethics, and injustice. Instead, contextualize biblical truth for the world they actually live in.

  • Create sermon series around relevant cultural questions.
  • Invite guest speakers with lived experience and theological depth.
  • Encourage open discussion in small groups about complex issues.

Empower Agency Now—Not Later

Many churches unintentionally delay leadership opportunities for years. But Gen Z wants to serve now.

  • Let them lead outreach efforts, justice initiatives, and creative projects.
  • Give them ownership of digital media, podcasting, and content creation.
  • Find new ways to train and mobilize young leaders.

Help Them Find Their Story in God’s Bigger One

Gen Z wants purpose. Help them understand how their unique gifts and callings fit into the redemptive arc of Scripture and church history.

Strategy Guide: 7 Ways for Churches to Reach Gen Z

Model Financial Transparency & "Impact Giving"

Gen Z’s view of resources is deeply tied to their values. A recent Cause & Social Influence report found that 62% of Gen Z won’t give unless they see measurable impact.

Show the "Why" Behind the Dollar

When they tithe or give to missions, Gen Z wants to know:

  • Who is being helped?
  • What problem is being solved?
  • What’s the measurable outcome?

Create monthly impact reports with stories, visuals, and data.

Build Trust Through Radical Transparency

  • Publish your church budget in an accessible format.
  • Invite members to finance Q&As.
  • Celebrate generosity by sharing transformation, not totals.

Giving Trends: Gen Z Giving Trends and Habits

Address Mental Health & Create a Holistic Environment

We are seeing a fascinating trend: Young men are coming to Jesus in record numbers as they seek stable identity and purpose. To sustain this, the church environment must be one of holistic health—addressing the soul, the mind, and the community.

  • Mental Health Matters: Integrate theology with mental health awareness. A church that talks about anxiety and depression from the pulpit is a church that Gen Z trusts.
  • Cross-Generational Connection: Create ministries that connect youth with older members, moving away from "siloed" youth ministries toward a unified family of God.

Research Insights: Faith in Jesus is Rising in America

Conclusion: A Generation Ready for Revival

Gen Z isn’t anti-God; they’re anti-fake.

They don’t need cooler churches. They need truer ones.

As church leaders, our calling is to strip away the noise and return to authentic community, intentional discipleship, and a Gospel lived out loud.

Lead with authenticity. Empower with purpose. Invite with humility.

The harvest is ready. Gen Z is searching. Will your church be ready to meet them?

📥 [Free Resource] The "Reaching Gen Z" Playbook

Want a step-by-step guide to implementing these strategies? Download our comprehensive resource to help your leadership team engage the next generation.

Download the Resource Here

Related Articles

AUTHOR

Chris Dunagan is a marketing strategist focused on church tech and digital engagement. He helps churches grow through SEO, email campaigns, and tools like Tithe.ly and Breeze ChMS, with an emphasis on online giving, content strategy, and digital outreach.

Gen Z is craving something real, and while they may distrust religion, many are still drawn to the person and teachings of Jesus. While headlines often scream of church decline, new research shows a spiritual curiosity rising in the most connected, cause-driven, and culturally aware generation yet.

So, what’s the disconnect? Traditional models aren’t always meeting them where they are. For church leaders ready to bridge the generational gap, this guide reveals a research-backed framework for Gen Z church engagement. It’s time to move beyond "cool" services and toward timeless truth delivered through current, authentic methods.

Prioritize Authenticity & "Belonging Before Belief"

Gen Z has been marketed to since birth. They have a "filtered content" detector that is second to none. What they crave isn’t a high-production show; it’s radical sincerity.

Instead of simply offering another program, create intentional spaces for vulnerability. Whether it’s small group storytelling nights or mentorship dinners, Gen Z wants to know the people leading them are "walking the walk."

  • Be Real: Practice what you preach. They stay when they see leaders who are honest about the struggles of faith.
  • Listen & Mentor: Shift from being the "sage on the stage" to a curious listener. Barna research shows that Gen Z is returning to church because they are looking for wisdom from "spiritual grandparents."
  • Foster Belonging: In many cases, Gen Z needs to feel they belong in the community before they fully adopt the belief system.

Check out the data: Gen Z Returning to Church: Barna Research

Leverage Technology for Connection (Not Just Production)

For Gen Z, the digital world is not separate from the "real" world; it’s just another room where life happens. Church strategies for Gen Z must include a seamless digital-to-physical pipeline.

Go Where They Are

  • Use TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts to share authentic stories and bite-sized biblical truths.
  • Highlight behind-the-scenes moments, mission work, and testimonies in video form.
  • Consider launching a podcast or livestream Q&A series on Gen Z topics.

Make Services Interactive

Use tech to turn Sunday into a two-way conversation:

  • Enable real-time polling and live Q&A with apps like Slido or Kahoot!.
  • Offer digital sermon notes with community interaction through YouVersion Events.
  • Encourage social media engagement during worship with curated hashtags.

Embrace the Hybrid Church

Use digital platforms as the front door to invite them into authentic community. Gen Z wants to be known, but you have to meet them where they scroll first.

Where Gen Z Spends Their Digital Time

Gen Z Usage Rate Avg. Time Spent / Day Why It Matters for Churches
TikTok 60%+ 95 minutes Ideal for short, punchy testimonies, authentic moments, and quick encouragement.
YouTube 89% 70 minutes Perfect for deep-dive teaching, sermons, and “day in the life” ministry content.
Instagram 76% 53 minutes Great for aesthetic storytelling, community updates, and visual discipleship.

Read more: 8 Ways to Reach Gen Z with Technology | Tailoring Youth Ministry to Gen Z & Alpha

Contextualize the Gospel & Empower Action

Preach Real Truth for a Real World

Don’t shy away from tough conversations around mental health, identity, sexuality, social ethics, and injustice. Instead, contextualize biblical truth for the world they actually live in.

  • Create sermon series around relevant cultural questions.
  • Invite guest speakers with lived experience and theological depth.
  • Encourage open discussion in small groups about complex issues.

Empower Agency Now—Not Later

Many churches unintentionally delay leadership opportunities for years. But Gen Z wants to serve now.

  • Let them lead outreach efforts, justice initiatives, and creative projects.
  • Give them ownership of digital media, podcasting, and content creation.
  • Find new ways to train and mobilize young leaders.

Help Them Find Their Story in God’s Bigger One

Gen Z wants purpose. Help them understand how their unique gifts and callings fit into the redemptive arc of Scripture and church history.

Strategy Guide: 7 Ways for Churches to Reach Gen Z

Model Financial Transparency & "Impact Giving"

Gen Z’s view of resources is deeply tied to their values. A recent Cause & Social Influence report found that 62% of Gen Z won’t give unless they see measurable impact.

Show the "Why" Behind the Dollar

When they tithe or give to missions, Gen Z wants to know:

  • Who is being helped?
  • What problem is being solved?
  • What’s the measurable outcome?

Create monthly impact reports with stories, visuals, and data.

Build Trust Through Radical Transparency

  • Publish your church budget in an accessible format.
  • Invite members to finance Q&As.
  • Celebrate generosity by sharing transformation, not totals.

Giving Trends: Gen Z Giving Trends and Habits

Address Mental Health & Create a Holistic Environment

We are seeing a fascinating trend: Young men are coming to Jesus in record numbers as they seek stable identity and purpose. To sustain this, the church environment must be one of holistic health—addressing the soul, the mind, and the community.

  • Mental Health Matters: Integrate theology with mental health awareness. A church that talks about anxiety and depression from the pulpit is a church that Gen Z trusts.
  • Cross-Generational Connection: Create ministries that connect youth with older members, moving away from "siloed" youth ministries toward a unified family of God.

Research Insights: Faith in Jesus is Rising in America

Conclusion: A Generation Ready for Revival

Gen Z isn’t anti-God; they’re anti-fake.

They don’t need cooler churches. They need truer ones.

As church leaders, our calling is to strip away the noise and return to authentic community, intentional discipleship, and a Gospel lived out loud.

Lead with authenticity. Empower with purpose. Invite with humility.

The harvest is ready. Gen Z is searching. Will your church be ready to meet them?

📥 [Free Resource] The "Reaching Gen Z" Playbook

Want a step-by-step guide to implementing these strategies? Download our comprehensive resource to help your leadership team engage the next generation.

Download the Resource Here

Related Articles

podcast transcript

(Scroll for more)
AUTHOR

Chris Dunagan is a marketing strategist focused on church tech and digital engagement. He helps churches grow through SEO, email campaigns, and tools like Tithe.ly and Breeze ChMS, with an emphasis on online giving, content strategy, and digital outreach.

Gen Z is craving something real, and while they may distrust religion, many are still drawn to the person and teachings of Jesus. While headlines often scream of church decline, new research shows a spiritual curiosity rising in the most connected, cause-driven, and culturally aware generation yet.

So, what’s the disconnect? Traditional models aren’t always meeting them where they are. For church leaders ready to bridge the generational gap, this guide reveals a research-backed framework for Gen Z church engagement. It’s time to move beyond "cool" services and toward timeless truth delivered through current, authentic methods.

Prioritize Authenticity & "Belonging Before Belief"

Gen Z has been marketed to since birth. They have a "filtered content" detector that is second to none. What they crave isn’t a high-production show; it’s radical sincerity.

Instead of simply offering another program, create intentional spaces for vulnerability. Whether it’s small group storytelling nights or mentorship dinners, Gen Z wants to know the people leading them are "walking the walk."

  • Be Real: Practice what you preach. They stay when they see leaders who are honest about the struggles of faith.
  • Listen & Mentor: Shift from being the "sage on the stage" to a curious listener. Barna research shows that Gen Z is returning to church because they are looking for wisdom from "spiritual grandparents."
  • Foster Belonging: In many cases, Gen Z needs to feel they belong in the community before they fully adopt the belief system.

Check out the data: Gen Z Returning to Church: Barna Research

Leverage Technology for Connection (Not Just Production)

For Gen Z, the digital world is not separate from the "real" world; it’s just another room where life happens. Church strategies for Gen Z must include a seamless digital-to-physical pipeline.

Go Where They Are

  • Use TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts to share authentic stories and bite-sized biblical truths.
  • Highlight behind-the-scenes moments, mission work, and testimonies in video form.
  • Consider launching a podcast or livestream Q&A series on Gen Z topics.

Make Services Interactive

Use tech to turn Sunday into a two-way conversation:

  • Enable real-time polling and live Q&A with apps like Slido or Kahoot!.
  • Offer digital sermon notes with community interaction through YouVersion Events.
  • Encourage social media engagement during worship with curated hashtags.

Embrace the Hybrid Church

Use digital platforms as the front door to invite them into authentic community. Gen Z wants to be known, but you have to meet them where they scroll first.

Where Gen Z Spends Their Digital Time

Gen Z Usage Rate Avg. Time Spent / Day Why It Matters for Churches
TikTok 60%+ 95 minutes Ideal for short, punchy testimonies, authentic moments, and quick encouragement.
YouTube 89% 70 minutes Perfect for deep-dive teaching, sermons, and “day in the life” ministry content.
Instagram 76% 53 minutes Great for aesthetic storytelling, community updates, and visual discipleship.

Read more: 8 Ways to Reach Gen Z with Technology | Tailoring Youth Ministry to Gen Z & Alpha

Contextualize the Gospel & Empower Action

Preach Real Truth for a Real World

Don’t shy away from tough conversations around mental health, identity, sexuality, social ethics, and injustice. Instead, contextualize biblical truth for the world they actually live in.

  • Create sermon series around relevant cultural questions.
  • Invite guest speakers with lived experience and theological depth.
  • Encourage open discussion in small groups about complex issues.

Empower Agency Now—Not Later

Many churches unintentionally delay leadership opportunities for years. But Gen Z wants to serve now.

  • Let them lead outreach efforts, justice initiatives, and creative projects.
  • Give them ownership of digital media, podcasting, and content creation.
  • Find new ways to train and mobilize young leaders.

Help Them Find Their Story in God’s Bigger One

Gen Z wants purpose. Help them understand how their unique gifts and callings fit into the redemptive arc of Scripture and church history.

Strategy Guide: 7 Ways for Churches to Reach Gen Z

Model Financial Transparency & "Impact Giving"

Gen Z’s view of resources is deeply tied to their values. A recent Cause & Social Influence report found that 62% of Gen Z won’t give unless they see measurable impact.

Show the "Why" Behind the Dollar

When they tithe or give to missions, Gen Z wants to know:

  • Who is being helped?
  • What problem is being solved?
  • What’s the measurable outcome?

Create monthly impact reports with stories, visuals, and data.

Build Trust Through Radical Transparency

  • Publish your church budget in an accessible format.
  • Invite members to finance Q&As.
  • Celebrate generosity by sharing transformation, not totals.

Giving Trends: Gen Z Giving Trends and Habits

Address Mental Health & Create a Holistic Environment

We are seeing a fascinating trend: Young men are coming to Jesus in record numbers as they seek stable identity and purpose. To sustain this, the church environment must be one of holistic health—addressing the soul, the mind, and the community.

  • Mental Health Matters: Integrate theology with mental health awareness. A church that talks about anxiety and depression from the pulpit is a church that Gen Z trusts.
  • Cross-Generational Connection: Create ministries that connect youth with older members, moving away from "siloed" youth ministries toward a unified family of God.

Research Insights: Faith in Jesus is Rising in America

Conclusion: A Generation Ready for Revival

Gen Z isn’t anti-God; they’re anti-fake.

They don’t need cooler churches. They need truer ones.

As church leaders, our calling is to strip away the noise and return to authentic community, intentional discipleship, and a Gospel lived out loud.

Lead with authenticity. Empower with purpose. Invite with humility.

The harvest is ready. Gen Z is searching. Will your church be ready to meet them?

📥 [Free Resource] The "Reaching Gen Z" Playbook

Want a step-by-step guide to implementing these strategies? Download our comprehensive resource to help your leadership team engage the next generation.

Download the Resource Here

Related Articles

VIDEO transcript

(Scroll for more)

Gen Z is craving something real, and while they may distrust religion, many are still drawn to the person and teachings of Jesus. While headlines often scream of church decline, new research shows a spiritual curiosity rising in the most connected, cause-driven, and culturally aware generation yet.

So, what’s the disconnect? Traditional models aren’t always meeting them where they are. For church leaders ready to bridge the generational gap, this guide reveals a research-backed framework for Gen Z church engagement. It’s time to move beyond "cool" services and toward timeless truth delivered through current, authentic methods.

Prioritize Authenticity & "Belonging Before Belief"

Gen Z has been marketed to since birth. They have a "filtered content" detector that is second to none. What they crave isn’t a high-production show; it’s radical sincerity.

Instead of simply offering another program, create intentional spaces for vulnerability. Whether it’s small group storytelling nights or mentorship dinners, Gen Z wants to know the people leading them are "walking the walk."

  • Be Real: Practice what you preach. They stay when they see leaders who are honest about the struggles of faith.
  • Listen & Mentor: Shift from being the "sage on the stage" to a curious listener. Barna research shows that Gen Z is returning to church because they are looking for wisdom from "spiritual grandparents."
  • Foster Belonging: In many cases, Gen Z needs to feel they belong in the community before they fully adopt the belief system.

Check out the data: Gen Z Returning to Church: Barna Research

Leverage Technology for Connection (Not Just Production)

For Gen Z, the digital world is not separate from the "real" world; it’s just another room where life happens. Church strategies for Gen Z must include a seamless digital-to-physical pipeline.

Go Where They Are

  • Use TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts to share authentic stories and bite-sized biblical truths.
  • Highlight behind-the-scenes moments, mission work, and testimonies in video form.
  • Consider launching a podcast or livestream Q&A series on Gen Z topics.

Make Services Interactive

Use tech to turn Sunday into a two-way conversation:

  • Enable real-time polling and live Q&A with apps like Slido or Kahoot!.
  • Offer digital sermon notes with community interaction through YouVersion Events.
  • Encourage social media engagement during worship with curated hashtags.

Embrace the Hybrid Church

Use digital platforms as the front door to invite them into authentic community. Gen Z wants to be known, but you have to meet them where they scroll first.

Where Gen Z Spends Their Digital Time

Gen Z Usage Rate Avg. Time Spent / Day Why It Matters for Churches
TikTok 60%+ 95 minutes Ideal for short, punchy testimonies, authentic moments, and quick encouragement.
YouTube 89% 70 minutes Perfect for deep-dive teaching, sermons, and “day in the life” ministry content.
Instagram 76% 53 minutes Great for aesthetic storytelling, community updates, and visual discipleship.

Read more: 8 Ways to Reach Gen Z with Technology | Tailoring Youth Ministry to Gen Z & Alpha

Contextualize the Gospel & Empower Action

Preach Real Truth for a Real World

Don’t shy away from tough conversations around mental health, identity, sexuality, social ethics, and injustice. Instead, contextualize biblical truth for the world they actually live in.

  • Create sermon series around relevant cultural questions.
  • Invite guest speakers with lived experience and theological depth.
  • Encourage open discussion in small groups about complex issues.

Empower Agency Now—Not Later

Many churches unintentionally delay leadership opportunities for years. But Gen Z wants to serve now.

  • Let them lead outreach efforts, justice initiatives, and creative projects.
  • Give them ownership of digital media, podcasting, and content creation.
  • Find new ways to train and mobilize young leaders.

Help Them Find Their Story in God’s Bigger One

Gen Z wants purpose. Help them understand how their unique gifts and callings fit into the redemptive arc of Scripture and church history.

Strategy Guide: 7 Ways for Churches to Reach Gen Z

Model Financial Transparency & "Impact Giving"

Gen Z’s view of resources is deeply tied to their values. A recent Cause & Social Influence report found that 62% of Gen Z won’t give unless they see measurable impact.

Show the "Why" Behind the Dollar

When they tithe or give to missions, Gen Z wants to know:

  • Who is being helped?
  • What problem is being solved?
  • What’s the measurable outcome?

Create monthly impact reports with stories, visuals, and data.

Build Trust Through Radical Transparency

  • Publish your church budget in an accessible format.
  • Invite members to finance Q&As.
  • Celebrate generosity by sharing transformation, not totals.

Giving Trends: Gen Z Giving Trends and Habits

Address Mental Health & Create a Holistic Environment

We are seeing a fascinating trend: Young men are coming to Jesus in record numbers as they seek stable identity and purpose. To sustain this, the church environment must be one of holistic health—addressing the soul, the mind, and the community.

  • Mental Health Matters: Integrate theology with mental health awareness. A church that talks about anxiety and depression from the pulpit is a church that Gen Z trusts.
  • Cross-Generational Connection: Create ministries that connect youth with older members, moving away from "siloed" youth ministries toward a unified family of God.

Research Insights: Faith in Jesus is Rising in America

Conclusion: A Generation Ready for Revival

Gen Z isn’t anti-God; they’re anti-fake.

They don’t need cooler churches. They need truer ones.

As church leaders, our calling is to strip away the noise and return to authentic community, intentional discipleship, and a Gospel lived out loud.

Lead with authenticity. Empower with purpose. Invite with humility.

The harvest is ready. Gen Z is searching. Will your church be ready to meet them?

📥 [Free Resource] The "Reaching Gen Z" Playbook

Want a step-by-step guide to implementing these strategies? Download our comprehensive resource to help your leadership team engage the next generation.

Download the Resource Here

Related Articles

AUTHOR

Chris Dunagan is a marketing strategist focused on church tech and digital engagement. He helps churches grow through SEO, email campaigns, and tools like Tithe.ly and Breeze ChMS, with an emphasis on online giving, content strategy, and digital outreach.

Category

How to Reach Gen Z: A Church Leader's Guide to Engagement & Discipleship

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions About Gen Z and the Church

For more questions, visit our FAQ page

What does Gen Z want from a church?

Gen Z is drawn to churches that feel real, relational, and relevant. They are looking for authenticity in leadership, meaningful community, and clear purpose. Churches that welcome vulnerability, address hard questions, and give young people a voice in leadership tend to build stronger connections with this generation.

How can churches reach Gen Z effectively?

To engage Gen Z, churches should shift from performance to presence. This means fostering relationships over programs, inviting real conversations, and using social media to connect rather than just promote. Equipping young people for leadership now—not years from now—also helps them feel valued and engaged.

What role does technology play in Gen Z's faith journey?

Technology is where Gen Z explores identity, builds relationships, and discovers new ideas—including faith. Churches that use platforms like Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and podcasts to tell authentic stories and encourage interaction are far more likely to reach Gen Z where they are. It’s not about being flashy; it’s about being real and available in the digital space.

Is Gen Z still interested in Jesus?

Yes, absolutely. While Gen Z is skeptical of organized religion, research shows that many are spiritually open and curious about Jesus. They’re asking deeper questions about identity, truth, and purpose—and they’re drawn to a Gospel that is lived out in humility and authenticity.

What are some practical ways to disciple Gen Z?

Churches can disciple Gen Z by building mentoring relationships, creating safe spaces for tough conversations, and letting them lead mission-focused initiatives. Discipleship for this generation needs to be highly relational, justice-oriented, and centered around real-world application of biblical truth.

How can I make my church more Gen Z-friendly?

Start by creating a culture where young people feel known, heard, and valued. Invite their voices into leadership conversations. Be transparent about your values and financial practices. Communicate in ways that are clear and culturally aware. And most importantly, build a community where authenticity, purpose, and the Gospel are at the center.

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