"I Don't Trust the Church With My Kids": Safety, Screens, and Forming the Next Generation
- Layne McDonald
- 3 days ago
- 5 min read
Those six words hit different when you hear them from a parent who genuinely wants their kids to know Jesus, but something feels broken about how we're doing church with children these days. Maybe it was a safety incident that got brushed under the rug. Maybe it's watching their teenager get more spiritual formation from TikTok than Sunday school. Or maybe it's the growing gap between what the church teaches and what actually equips families to thrive.
Parents are scared, and honestly, some of their fears are completely valid.
The Digital Reality We Can't Ignore
Here's what every church leader needs to understand: your kids' discipleship is happening 24/7, and most of it isn't happening in your building. The average teenager spends over seven hours a day on screens, consuming content that's actively shaping their worldview, values, and identity.
While we're debating whether to use PowerPoint or projectors, algorithms are teaching our kids about sexuality, purpose, relationships, and spirituality. YouTube influencers have more access to their hearts than youth pastors do. Gaming platforms are providing community that churches struggle to match.
This isn't about demonizing technology: it's about recognizing that digital discipleship is happening whether we participate in it or not.

Deuteronomy 6:6-7 says, "These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up."
Notice something? God's plan for raising kids was never a one-hour-a-week program. It was constant, integrated, life-on-life formation. But our current church model often leaves parents feeling like they've outsourced their kids' spiritual development to professionals.
Building Safety That Actually Works
The safety concerns are real, and churches that ignore them do so at their own peril. Recent data shows that predators specifically target churches because they perceive them as having easier access to children with minimal screening. That should make us furious enough to do better.
But here's what comprehensive safety actually looks like:
Beyond Background Checks: While background checks are essential, they only catch people who've been caught before. Real safety includes the "two-adult rule" (no adult alone with a child), mandatory reporting training, clear check-in and check-out procedures, and: this is crucial: a culture where children's voices are heard and believed.
Relational Safety: Physical safety is just the starting point. Emotional and spiritual safety means kids feel valued for who they are, not just how well they behave. It means age-appropriate teaching that doesn't shame or manipulate. It means adults who understand child development and trauma-informed care.
Digital Safety: Churches need policies for social media interaction between adults and minors, guidelines for technology use during programs, and training for leaders about online predators and digital citizenship.

Family Integration: The safest church environments are the ones where families are integrated into ministry, where parents know the leaders personally, and where there's transparency about what's being taught and how.
Empowering Parents, Not Judging Them
Too many churches have fallen into one of two ditches: either they take a hands-off approach ("parenting isn't our job") or they become overly prescriptive ("here's exactly how you should raise your kids"). Both approaches leave parents feeling unsupported.
Proverbs 22:6 reminds us to "Start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it." But that verse isn't just about children: it's about the community's role in supporting families.
Here's what parent empowerment actually looks like:
Practical Training: Offer classes on digital parenting, age-appropriate conversations about faith and sexuality, conflict resolution, and family worship. But make them accessible, not guilt-inducing.
Resource Sharing: Create libraries of books, apps, and tools that parents can actually use. Curate content instead of leaving families to figure it out alone.
Mentorship Networks: Pair newer parents with experienced families who can offer real-world wisdom and support. This isn't about judgment: it's about community.
Grace-Based Culture: Acknowledge that there's no perfect parenting formula. Create space for parents to share struggles without fear of condemnation.

The Formation Revolution
The truth is, we're not just competing with entertainment: we're competing with entire worldview systems that are packaged better, delivered more consistently, and often more emotionally engaging than anything we offer on Sunday morning.
But that's not necessarily bad news. Matthew 19:14 shows us Jesus saying, "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these." The heart of God is already inclined toward children. Our job is to remove the hindrances.
What if instead of creating programs that compete with culture, we equipped families to engage culture together? What if we taught kids to be disciples who happened to use technology, rather than technology users who occasionally think about God?
Integrated Formation means helping families see every moment as a discipleship opportunity. The car ride to school becomes prayer time. The family dinner table becomes a place for biblical conversations. Screen time becomes an opportunity to discuss values and wisdom.
Community Formation means the church becomes the place where families learn together, serve together, and grow together. Instead of segregating by age groups all the time, we create meaningful intergenerational experiences.
Mission Formation means kids learn that following Jesus isn't just about personal salvation: it's about being part of God's work in the world. They get to contribute, not just consume.
A Clear Path Forward
Churches that want to rebuild trust with families need a comprehensive approach:
Start with Safety: Implement robust child protection policies and train every volunteer. Make safety procedures visible to parents: transparency builds trust.
Audit Your Culture: Are you accidentally communicating that parents aren't spiritual enough to disciple their own kids? Are you creating guilt or empowerment? Is your children's ministry supporting families or replacing them?
Embrace Digital Reality: Instead of fighting technology, teach families how to use it wisely. Create content that competes in the digital space. Train leaders in digital discipleship.
Build Support Systems: Launch regular parent equipping sessions that focus on practical tools and biblical wisdom. Create small groups specifically for parents navigating similar stages.

Measure Formation, Not Just Attendance: Instead of counting how many kids show up, start tracking whether families are growing in their ability to disciple together.
The Grace Revolution
At the end of the day, this isn't about creating perfect families or perfect churches. It's about creating communities where imperfect people can grow together toward spiritual maturity.
Parents who say they don't trust the church with their kids are often saying they've been hurt, disappointed, or left feeling inadequate. They're not the enemy: they're families who need support, encouragement, and practical help.
The church that earns trust is the one that says, "We know you love your kids, and we want to help you succeed as a family. We're going to keep your children safe, support your role as the primary spiritual influence, and walk alongside you as you navigate the challenges of raising kids in a complex world."
That's not just good ministry: it's the heart of God for families.
If you're a parent struggling to trust church environments or a church leader wanting to build stronger family partnerships, you don't have to figure it out alone. Visit laynemcdonald.com for coaching, resources, and support in creating the kind of community where families can truly thrive.

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