(sorry š¬)
Easter is one of the most attended Sundays of the year.
Some people show up who havenāt been in church in months⦠or years.
Theyāre open. Curious. Wondering if they might come back.
But hereās what usually happens:
Churches stop posting consistently
Thereās no clear follow-up plan
Visitors donāt hear from the church again
The connection fades
Not because churches donāt careā
but because theyāre tired, busy, and out of time.
The church doesnāt celebrate Easter for one day.
We celebrate it for 50 days.
A whole season of:
new life
hope
renewal
resurrection
ā thank people who visited
ā invite people to keep exploring faith
ā show what your church is really about
ā help people take a next stepāwithout pressure
You donāt need more effort.
You need a simple plan.
ā Ready-to-edit Canva social media templates
ā Post-Easter gratitude posts
ā āGet to know our churchā templates
ā Eastertide-themed captions (no ājust join usā language)
ā B-roll video ideas + text overlays
ā 3 follow-up email templates for visitors
ā Simple strategy churches can actually follow
This is not about chasing attendance
Itās about:
creating spaces of belonging
inviting people into community
sharing the story of hope in real, meaningful ways
Because people donāt come back because they feel guilty.
They come back because they feel welcomed, seen, and connected.
I created this toolkit because I understand:
what itās like to lead a church
how little time there is for content creation
how important it is to communicate with care and authenticity
Everything is designed to be:
ā simple
ā practical
ā actually doable
Imagine the time you'll save! For just $29, you get ready-to-go posts, stories, b-roll video ideas, follow-up email scripts and a suggested schedule to use in the weeks following Easter.
and I've been a pastor for 20 years and engaged in social media ministry for over 10 years.
I'm a pastor, speaker, writer and social media evangelist. I know that, when it comes to churches, social media isn't about using the latest gimmick to "go viral," but to create community and engage people in your ministry.