Here’s what most church leaders get wrong about the exodus of young people: they blame screens.
Too much TikTok. Too many distractions. Shorter attention spans. So the response is better lighting, louder music, slicker production. As if the problem is a production budget.
It’s not.
LOVE stories by church media expert Phil Cooke? Click here.
Young people are actually some of the most sophisticated media consumers alive. They can smell inauthenticity from three zip codes away. They’ve grown up watching people perform online 24/7, so they know the difference between someone who actually believes something and someone running a program designed to look like belief.
That’s the real problem. Not technology. Performance.
When a 22-year-old sits in a service and watches a leader say one thing from the stage and live something completely different the other six days of the week — they notice. When a church’s Instagram looks like a luxury brand but the leadership is quietly managing a scandal — they notice. When the sermons are polished but never actually cost anyone anything — they notice.
Younger generations aren’t fleeing faith. Many of them are genuinely hungry for something true. They want leaders who’ve actually been through something. Who have real questions, real failures, real scars.
It’s about trust
What they won’t sit still for is managed distance. A pastor who’s always “on.” A church that communicates carefully but never vulnerably.
The early church didn’t grow because it had better content than the Romans. It grew because people watched Christians live in ways that made no sense unless they were real.
That’s still the only strategy that works.
So before your church hires another creative director, ask a harder question: Do the people in the seats trust us?
Because trust — not technology — is what keeps people in the room.
EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was originally published by philcooke.com.





