Clarity for
churches
navigating AI,
systems,
and growth.

The Clarity Practice helps pastors and ministry leaders build sustainable systems, steward technology wisely, and lead without burning out — without losing the soul of the work.

Most pastors I talk to are carrying too much.

Their volunteers are unclear. Their inbox is heavy. Their tools are scattered across six platforms that don't talk to each other. AI showed up and made the noise louder, not quieter. And every conference, podcast, and consultant seems to be selling something that doesn't quite fit a 200-person church with a part-time admin.

If that's the room you're in — welcome. You're not behind. You're just under-resourced and over-asked. That's a system problem, not a leadership failure.

The Clarity Conversation: how we begin.

Every engagement starts the same way — with a 90-minute conversation built around four questions. It's diagnostic, not pitch-driven. By the end, you'll have a clearer picture of what's actually going on, what AI can (and shouldn't) do for you, and what a faithful next step looks like.

01

Name the Pain

Where is the friction actually living?

02

Demystify AI

The practical face and the ethical face.

03

Ask the Big Questions

What does faithful growth look like for your ministry?

04

Lay Out the Path

A concrete, sustainable next step.

Who we work with.

Churches

100–500 attendance churches looking to grow with wisdom, not just velocity.

Nonprofits

Small Christian nonprofits ($250K–$2M) ready to build infrastructure that scales sustainably.

Leaders

Pastors, executive directors, and founders who want a trusted thought partner — not another platform to learn.

Christ-centered, not Christ-branded.

The Clarity Practice exists because I believe the local church is worth building well. Every recommendation we make is shaped by historic Christian theology, by years of pastoral work, and by a deep conviction that technology should serve the mission of the church — never the other way around.

Joshua Spence

A note on AI and the church.

Every generation receives an infrastructure. Rome had roads. The Reformation had the printing press. We have AI. The question isn't whether the church will use it — the question is whether we'll steward it with wisdom, or be shaped by it without noticing.

Read the full essay →

Ready to begin?

Start with a free 30-minute Clarity Call. No pitch, no pressure — just a conversation about where you are and whether we'd be a good fit to work together.

Book a free Clarity Call →