The Performance Factor: Why Teens Seek Authentic Faith

Research through 2024–2026 highlights a shift in how teenagers perceive the “authenticity” of faith at home. While parents remain the primary influence on a child’s spiritual life, teens are increasingly sensitive to a phenomenon researchers call “The Sunday-Monday Gap.”

Here is the latest data on why teens perceive faith at home as inauthentic and the impact it has on their long-term commitment to following Jesus.

The “Sunday-Monday Gap” (Ritual vs. Reality)

The most common criticism from teens is not that their parents are “bad people,” but that their faith appears compartmentalized.

  • Barna (2025): Only 20% of Christian parents regularly engage in meaningful spiritual conversations with their children outside of church.

If faith only shows up on Sunday morning or in a rushed bedtime prayer, teens notice. And not in a good way.

Many teenagers say that when faith is limited to church services or memorized prayers, it starts to feel like a performance. It feels like something you put on, like a social mask, rather than something that actually guides real life. When there is no visible Monday application, no connection to how a family handles stress, money, disappointment, or conflict, teens tend to file faith away as a hobby, not a true worldview.

Gen Z and Gen Alpha have grown up in a world saturated with content, commentary, and constant exposure. They are transparency experts. Social media has trained their hypocrisy radar to be sharp. They can sense when something does not line up. And when faith language does not match everyday behavior, they pick up on the gap immediately.

What is fascinating is that teens are not looking for perfect parents. They are looking for honest ones.

They respond to apology. They notice when a parent admits doubt instead of pretending certainty. They see the power of repentance lived out at the kitchen table, not just preached from a platform. In fact, teens who regularly witness their parents apologizing, taking responsibility, and practicing humility at home are significantly more likely to stay engaged in their faith.

The opposite also leaves a mark.

When a parent passionately proclaims the love of Jesus on Sunday but spends Monday tearing down their teenager with harsh words, teens call it out. They may not always say it directly, but internally they register the inconsistency. To them, that disconnect undermines everything that was said the day before.

Research from Church Answers in 2024 highlights just how deeply this impacts young people. Teens report being especially affected when parents appear polished and spiritual at church yet come across as angry, judgmental, or emotionally distant at home. The contrast is not lost on them.

For this generation, credibility is built in ordinary moments. Faith becomes compelling when it shapes how parents handle frustration, how they speak during conflict, and how they repair relationships after failure.

In the end, it is not about flawless parenting. It is about integrated living. When faith is visible on Monday afternoon as much as it is on Sunday morning, teens are far more likely to see it not as a mask, but as a way of life.

For children of church leaders (PKs), this is intensified. 2025 Barna data shows that pastor-parents often feel pressured to hide family struggles, which their teens interpret as a lack of authenticity.

In 2025 and 2026 research, a theme keeps surfacing among Gen Z and Gen Alpha. It is what researchers are calling the Performance Factor. And for many teens, it is one of the primary reasons they describe their Christian upbringing as inauthentic.

The Performance Factor points to a version of faith that centers on social reputation and religious optics rather than inner transformation or honest struggle. It is not that teens reject faith itself. What they reject is the pressure to look “christian” rather than be one.

When faith feels like a performance, teens do not see a life changing relationship with God. They see a script. A set of lines and behaviors they are expected to follow to keep the peace, protect the image, and avoid rocking the boat.

According to research from Fuller Youth Institute in 2025, teenagers are especially attuned to what happens in the small transition moments. One of the most telling examples is the shift between the car and the church foyer.

If a family is tense, arguing, or sitting in icy silence during the drive, but instantly becomes radiant and holy the moment they walk through the church doors, teens notice. They interpret that shift as a costume change. Christianity becomes something you put on for public viewing rather than something you live.

And here is where it gets heavy.

When teens believe faith is a performance, they often feel they must perform too. They learn to manage impressions. They say the right things. They suppress doubt. They hide questions. They curate a version of themselves that protects the family’s spiritual reputation.

Over time, that constant self editing takes a toll. Many experience what researchers describe as spiritual burnout before they even graduate. Not because they have wrestled deeply with theology, but because they feel there is no safe space to be their true, messy selves within a faith context.

The tragedy is that Christianity at its core invites honesty, confession, and transformation. But when it is modeled as image management, teens absorb a very different message.

They are not walking away from authenticity. They are searching for it.

The Digital Performance Layer

By 2026, the Performance Factor has only intensified, largely because of social media.

What used to be limited to the church foyer now lives online.

When parents post polished family photos at church, inspirational Bible verses, or captions about grace and redemption while home life feels chaotic or harsh, teens experience what many describe as a Digital Performance. It is not just inconsistency anymore. It is inconsistency on display.

For Gen Z and Gen Alpha, who have grown up fluent in digital culture, this disconnect feels especially jarring. They know how easy it is to curate an image. They understand filters, angles, captions, and branding. So when their lived experience at home clashes with the spiritual persona presented online, the gap feels intentional.

If a parent posts about God’s mercy and forgiveness but at home responds with constant shaming, explosive anger, verbal attacks, or even physical aggression, teens do not struggle to interpret that contradiction. They label it plainly. To them, it is hypocrisy.

And that word carries weight.

What is striking is that this reaction is not rooted in rebellion. It is rooted in a deep hunger for integrity. Teens are not expecting flawless parents. They are expecting alignment. They want the faith that shows up in a caption to also show up in a conflict.

Interestingly enough, Jesus had strong words about this kind of image management. In the Gospels, he consistently challenged religious leaders who prioritized outward appearance over inward transformation. In Matthew chapter 23, he rebukes those who clean the outside of the cup while neglecting the inside. His harshest critiques were not aimed at doubters or questioners, but at those who performed righteousness for public approval while ignoring justice, mercy, and faithfulness in private.

Teens today are echoing a similar critique.

When faith becomes a brand instead of a lived reality, they disengage. Not necessarily from Jesus, but from the version of faith that feels staged. The more curated the image, the more suspicious they become.

In a digital age, integrity is no longer tested only in physical spaces. It is tested in posts, comments, captions, and conversations behind closed doors. And for this generation, nothing undermines credibility faster than a gospel of grace online paired with cruelty at home.

They are not rejecting faith because it asks too much. They are rejecting performances that ask them to pretend.

The “Repentance” Solution

The most recent studies suggest a simple antidote: Parental Repentance. Teens who see their parents apologize to them (“I’m sorry I lost my temper; I’m still learning how to follow Jesus in my anger”) rate their home faith as 80% more authentic than those who never hear an apology.

Here is the sobering reality.

The way you parent your children quietly shapes the way they understand God. And this is especially true of fathers.

For better or worse, parents become the first mirror through which a child forms their concept of a heavenly Father. That is not a small assignment. It is sacred. It carries weight.

When fathers are consistently angry, children often assume God is angry. When fathers are harsh or relentlessly critical, children begin to imagine God that way too. Long before a child can articulate theology, they are absorbing it through tone of voice, facial expressions, and everyday interactions.

Two significant things tend to happen in this dynamic.

First, children notice the disconnect when a parent says one thing about God but lives another way. If you speak about grace yet lead with rage, they see the inconsistency. To them, it feels like hypocrisy.

Second, they are left trying to reconcile who God actually is. If their primary spiritual reference point feels unpredictable, condemning, or cold, they often project that onto God. That internal confusion can carry weighty consequences into adolescence and adulthood.

We all know the Ten Commandments, but consider Exodus 20:7: “You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God, for the Lord will not leave anyone unpunished who misuses His name.”

At first glance, that may seem unrelated to parenting. But misusing the name of God is more than careless speech. It includes any use of His name that empties it of its true weight. That can happen through words, through vows, through worship, and through lifestyle.

Calling on the name of God while living in open contradiction to His character is one of the clearest forms of misuse. True faith is demonstrated through action. A verbal profession alone is not enough if it is disconnected from a life that reflects God’s heart. Hypocrisy does not just confuse children. It damages the witness of the church.

In Titus 1:16 it plainly says: “They claim that they know God, but their actions deny it.”

That is a sobering verse for any professing Christian parent.

Parenting is not a free pass to behave however we want behind closed doors simply because we profess to be a Christian in public. Our children see the private moments. They absorb the patterns. They connect the dots.

The goal is not perfection. It is authentic transformation.

Your children do not need a flawless parent. They need a repentant one. They need to see confession. They need to hear apologies. They need to watch you align your life with the very God you proclaim.

So be quick to repent.

Not because you are trying to protect your image, but because you are shaping someone’s understanding of who God is.

For years, the team at Fuller Youth Institute has studied what they call “Sticky Faith”, the kind of faith that actually lasts beyond high school and into adulthood.

Their 2024 and 2025 updates highlight something both simple and profound. The single most important factor in developing a sticky faith is not parental perfection. It is parental vulnerability.

Let that sink in.

It is not flawless Bible knowledge.
It is not perfect church attendance.
It is not having all the right answers.

It is a parent who is willing to say, “I was wrong.”

When a mom or dad apologizes for losing their temper, for being harsh, or even for acting hypocritically, they are doing more than repairing a relationship. They are modeling the Gospel. They are demonstrating that Christianity is not a performance for the polished but grace for sinners.

That moment of apology preaches louder than a sermon.

It tells a teenager that faith is not about pretending to have it all together. It is about recognizing when you do not and turning back toward God anyway. It shows that repentance is not a one time event at conversion but an ongoing posture of the heart.

Research shows that teens who perceive their parents as authentic, defined simply as being willing to admit fault and repent, are significantly more likely to remain engaged in church and faith communities. Why? Because they do not feel pressure to fake it.

They learn that belonging is not based on image management. It is rooted in grace.

When parents cling to perfection, teens often feel they must do the same. They hide doubts. They mask struggles. They curate a spiritual version of themselves to maintain acceptance. But when parents lead with humility, they create an atmosphere where honesty is safe.

Sticky faith does not grow in an environment of pressure.
It grows in a home where grace is practiced out loud.

The irony is beautiful. The very thing many parents fear will undermine their authority, admitting weakness, is often the very thing that strengthens their spiritual influence.

Perfection impresses no one for long.
Vulnerability builds faith that lasts.

Young people are watching closely. They are less persuaded by polished performances and more moved by authenticity. When faith is practiced around the dinner table, in moments of conflict, in forgiveness and grace, it becomes tangible.

The sacred is not confined to a building. It often shows up in the ordinary rhythms of home. And when parents choose vulnerability over perfection, they turn everyday moments into holy ground.

❤ Jen

There’s Something We’ve Missed About Mary And Martha

Most of us are familiar with the story in Luke of Mary and Martha. I can say that every teaching I’ve heard on Mary and Martha went something like this: “Martha shows us how anxiety and stress over household responsibilities can take our eyes off of Jesus. Mary chose to forego her household responsibilities to spend time with Jesus, and that’s what we need to choose too. While true, that Jesus is to be our priority and I agree 100% – at the same time we’ve missed a very important cultural shift that took place and empowered women. Jesus doesn’t see women as second class citizens or less than men in the Kingdom of God.

In Luke 10:38-42:

38Now as they went on their way, Jesusd entered a village. And a woman named Martha welcomed him into her house. 39And she had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet and listened to his teaching. 40But Martha was distracted with much serving. And she went up to him and said, “Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help me.” 41But the Lord answered her, “Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, 42but one thing is necessary.e Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her.”

In Luke 10, we read that Jesus entered the house of Martha, and “she had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet listening to what he said.” To sit at the feet of a rabbi meant you were a disciple of that rabbi.[1] Luke says Martha was “distracted by all the preparations.” This isn’t about Martha wanting help cutting the vegetables or setting the table. In her Middle Eastern culture, she is upset over the fact that her sister is seated with the men and has become a disciple. And Martha is horrified! Indignant, Martha appeals to Jesus, “Lord, don’t you care that my sister has left me to do the work by myself?” In other words, “Don’t you care that she’s not staying in her place…in the kitchen….rather than out here with the men?” But Jesus says that Mary has chosen the good and it won’t be taken from her. Jesus defends Mary’s choice to be his disciple, sit at his feet, and learn. He affirms her decision to go against culture, step outside her expected role, and do that which was culturally viewed as a “man’s place.”

According to N.T. Wright, a New Testament scholar, Mary sat at Jesus’ feet in the male part of the house, not in the back rooms with the other women.

He goes on to say that when Mary sat at the Master’s feet, this phrase did not mean what it would mean today because she had “cut clean across one of the most basic social conventions.” It is a sign of your “studentship” when you sit at your teacher’s feet, taking in the wisdom and learning of the teacher. [2]

As a student, it was a given that you would not just study for the purpose of informing yourself, but also to be a teacher, a rabbi, when you were studying. He goes on to say that he doubts any 1st century reader would have missed the point. This is why Wright believes so many women held positions of leadership, initiative and responsibility in the early church. See Romans chapter 16 for a list of names.

It has been emphasized for years that Martha’s busyness is not the best example to follow – but Mary was being allowed to sit and learn at the feet of her Rabbi – to become educated so she could then teach others! That was a huge shift towards women being given more opportunity in that ancient culture.

Another example we can refer back to is when Jesus appeared to women as His first resurrected encounter. Despite women being deemed unreliable witnesses in ancient court proceedings, Jesus chooses them to bear witness to the greatest miracle of all.

Next time you hear about Mary making the better choice over Martha, remember that back in those days – women did not have the same privileges as men. So Jesus allowing Mary to sit at His feet while teaching, was Him designating Mary as His student – to sit at His feet was an honor, previously reserved only for men.

The purpose of this blog is to illustrate that God has created both men and women to work together in harmony to advance His kingdom. The very important position of Mary at the feet of the Master is often overlooked. There is a tendency for teachers/preachers to emphasize Mary’s decision to do what was best — she was “listening to His words, sitting at His feet.” (Luke 10:39). Our primary purpose in life is to love God, so we must spend time with Him by praying, reading, and obeying His word. That is absolutely true! In Martha’s house, however, there was something significant happening… something that isn’t typically discussed in this passage. A major cultural shift that is often overlooked is the fact that by sitting at Jesus’ feet, who was a Rabbi in that Jewish culture, Christ recognized Mary as His student, an important shift in a tradition where women were not traditionally educated.

[1] Kenneth E. Bailey, Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008) 192

[2] N.T. Wright, Surprised by Scripture, New York, NY: Harper Collins, 2014

-Jen ❤

Choosing God’s Narrative

109393787_birdsWhat narrative are you believing? What labels do you allow to identify you?

The stories people tell about us, become our identity when we don’t purposely CHOOSE God’s narrative.

God says, ” I love you for who you are, not for what you can do.” Man says, ” I love you for what you do and not for who you are.”

Knowing this, we still fall into the roles we use to hang our worth on. Beautiful. Smart. Competent. Go-Getter. Tenacious. Superwoman. Got-It-All-Together. Perfect Wife. Efficient. Perfect Mom. Career. Wealth. Generous. ____________Fill in the blank.

We fear that if people really knew we weren’t the epitome of our labels, we would be rejected and lonely. If we aren’t hustling and achieving, then who is going to give accolades to feed our need for affirmation? We’ve shifted our focus on filling our tank with man pleasing instead of sitting at the feet of Jesus.

Have you ever thought about life, living in total freedom to be you? The YOU that God created, not the you that you try to be? I love the picture of the birds in this blog post. Such a good reminder of the uniqueness and way God designs each of us. Only we can be us. Only you can be you. Only they can be them. Why try to be a copy when you were made an original? Sure, not overtly copy another person, but inwardly harbor envy over another person’s strengths or gifting. Meanwhile your unique strengths and gifting is laying dormant at the door of a falsely created identity. Internal turmoil breeds in dissatisfaction.

When we choose God’s narrative, there is peace and freedom. It’s where abundant life is found. When we look back at our own narrative that we tried to write, we’re tired, anxious and most likely endured a lot of pain in the process.

I’m not saying, God’s narrative is pain-free or conflict-free. What I am saying is that He promises to work all things together for our good. We can’t do that on our own.

When we get to the root of wanting to write our own story, ultimately it’s rooted in fear, and lack of trust. We struggle letting go of the pen because we can’t grasp fully that He is for us. That He is good and that He knows what is best. We believe, we do.

Stop striving, stop looking for that next affirmation from those around you, stop over-compensating and over-thinking. Stop hustling for man’s accolades and sit at the feet of Jesus. Stop. Breathe in and stop.

Being set free and walking in freedom are very different things. One was done for us and the other one we choose. Choose to give up control and walk in freedom. We create burdens that we were never meant to carry when we write the story.

Let go of the pen and allow God to write the story of your destiny. Your purpose, ultimately fulfilled in Him. “God intended that they would seek Him and perhaps reach out for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us. 28‘For in Him we live and move and have our being.” Acts 17:27-28

❤ Jen

Speak Life To Yourself

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Did you know we can mentally affirm things and not really believe them? We do this all the time. For instance when someone pays us a compliment, “You look amazing!”….. we respond (most likely) with a sheepish nod and “thanks.” How about when we read the Bible and come across a verse like “You are fearfully and wonderfully made”, we mentally agree, but the reality is we don’t believe it.

What we believe comes out in our actions. And, by our actions, we prove that we don’t really believe that we are fearfully and wonderfully made. Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks. And, by our speech, we prove that we don’t really believe it either because of the things we say to ourselves.

Walking in freedom and wholeness requires action on our part. Jesus set us free, but we have to choose to walk in it. We choose to move forward.

Transformation takes place as the mind is renewed. Renewing the mind is NOT a one time event. It requires daily maintenance. Without daily maintenance, the mind is over-taken with negativity.

Here’s the deal:

Your perspective is how you think about things, but there is a very important step that takes place before perspective and that is perception. Perception is how you see things. Matthew 6:22, Jesus tells us

“Your eye is a lamp that provides light for your body. When your eye is good, your whole body is filled with light. But when your eye is bad, your whole body is filled with darkness. And if the light you think you have is actually darkness, how deep that darkness is!”

If you can’t see things clearly, you’ll never think about things correctly.

Perception affects Perspective.

We need to back up and check our perception lenses, I like to call it “Perception Deception”- because, if the enemy can keep your perception blurred, you’ll never walk in true freedom and wholeness.

Start cleaning the lens of your perception today by speaking life to yourself. Say it over and over again until it moves from your head to your heart.

❤ Jen

The Best Guide

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The best guide in community is someone who has been through the valley. I would trust someone who has been through the valley, versus someone who knows about the valley.

There is credibility in experience.

The experience of going through gives credibility, and the fact that they survived & can lead you through the same valley is a beautiful example of how healed people heal people.

People who have been THROUGH some stuff, can go back and help other people THROUGH their stuff.

See, when we hit a point in our journey where things are challenging and we are facing the unexpected, we have a choice. We can try to navigate our way through uncharted territory with the advice of someone who may know about the path, but never walked it. Or, we can find someone to take our hand and lead us down the path they have already traveled.

“He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us.” 2 Cor 1:4

God comforts us and we comfort others. This is how the body of Christ is supposed to work.

It’s built on compassion.

❤ – Jen