Your church website is often the first visit before the first visit.
People search “church near me,” skim your site on their phone, and quietly ask, “Would I belong here?” The best church websites answer that question with both clarity (times, location, kids, next steps) and warmth (voice, welcome, gospel-centered mission).
At Tent Apps, we’ve helped churches across the country do exactly that. Here are six real Tent Apps church websites that are getting it right in 2026—and what you can learn from them.
1. Live Oak Community Church – Lubbock, TX

Why it works
Live Oak’s site is built around one simple idea: help people take their next step. Navigation, copy, and structure all support that.
Highlights
- Instant clarity for guests
Service times, location, and “New Here” content are easy to find without scrolling. A first-time visitor doesn’t have to hunt for the basics. - Age-specific ministry pages that lower anxiety
Parents and students can see exactly what to expect, where to go, and how to get involved. - Connected ecosystem
Sermons, events, giving, and the mobile app are tied together so people can engage from anywhere.
Lesson: Design your homepage so a new person can answer: When do you meet? Where are you? What happens with my kids? in under 30 seconds.
Visit Live Oak Community Church →
2. First Methodist Church – Carlsbad, NM

Why it works
First Methodist’s site feels like a personal invitation, not a bulletin board. The tone is pastoral and hopeful, but the layout stays clean and modern.
Highlights
- “Plan Your Visit” that actually pastors people
Parking, what to wear, kids’ environments, and service styles are clearly explained in friendly language. - Service options explained, not dumped
Multiple services and formats are framed in a way that helps guests choose what fits them best. - Events and calendar that feel alive
The site functions as a current hub for what’s happening, not a static list of ministries.
Lesson: Use your site copy to shepherd, not just inform. Write like you’re talking to someone who’s nervous about visiting church for the first time.
Visit First Methodist Carlsbad →
3. Engage Church – Mandan, ND

“No matter where you are, or where you’ve been, you can ENGAGE here.”
Why it works
Engage’s site makes a big promise to real people with real stories: you belong here. The content backs that up.
Highlights
- Plainspoken, honest welcome
“What to Expect” answers the actual questions people have about length, style, and feel of the service—in normal, everyday language. - Visible heart for diverse communities
Spanish-language ministry and multicultural awareness are clearly presented, signaling who they’re intentionally trying to reach. - Clear next steps beyond Sunday
Groups, serving, and connection points are obvious and action-oriented.
Lesson: Don’t be afraid to say who your church is for and how you’re ready to welcome people with messy stories.
Visit Engage Church →
4. Holy Trinity Lutheran Church – Edmond, OK

“Love God. Love One Another. Love Your Neighbor.”
— Holy Trinity Edmond
Why it works
Holy Trinity’s website is rooted and warm. It showcases a clear identity without feeling rigid or insider-only.
Highlights
- Mission woven into the site, not hidden on one page
Their Love God / Love One Another / Love Neighbor framework shows up in navigation and content, not just in a single paragraph. - Sunday morning spelled out
Service times, worship style, and what a typical Sunday looks like are laid out with enough detail to calm nerves. - Family-friendly clarity
Kids and student ministry info is accessible and practical: where to go, safety, and age-appropriate discipleship.
Lesson: Let your theological and missional center of gravity shape your site structure and headings, not just your “About” page.
Visit Holy Trinity Edmond →
5. The Way LBK – Lubbock, TX

“The Way LBK is a Christ-centered family of GRACE where all persons are welcome and wanted.”
— About Us, The Way LBK
Why it works
The Way LBK shows how to combine modern design with old-school hospitality.
Highlights
- Guest experience that feels like a warm handshake
Their “What to Expect” content talks about greeters, coffee and donuts in the Holy Grounds Café, modern worship, and no awkward “stand up and introduce yourself” moments. - Simple, repeated Sunday clarity
“Discussion 9:30am | Worship 10:30am” and a clear LIVE STREAM – 10:30 make it easy for both in-person and online attenders. - Real discipleship pathways
Kids, youth, adults, and missions each have clear next steps. The Missions page highlights partnerships like The Bucket Ministry and local outreach. - Mobile app integration
Their app is featured as a way to stay up to date, listen to sermons, manage signups, and give.
Lesson: Treat your website like your lobby—show people what it will feel like to be there, not just what time to arrive.
Visit The Way LBK →
6. First Baptist Church – Durango, CO

“Love God. Love People. Make Disciples.”
— First Baptist Durango
Why it works
First Baptist Durango uses their website as a ministry backbone, not just a digital sign.
Highlights
- Mission-first homepage
“Love God. Love People. Make Disciples.” sits front and center, with immediate CTAs to NEW HERE?, Who We Are, SERMONS, and Events. - A clear framework: Gospel, Community, Word, Mission
Their About page explains what they believe, how they live together, and why they’re in Durango in language that’s both accessible and doctrinally grounded. - Digital bulletin + robust resources
A Digital Bulletin links Sunday to weekday life. Resources like sermons, gospel communities, membership, benevolence information, and RightNow Media make the site genuinely useful. - Leadership bios with real testimonies
Elder and staff stories give newcomers a sense of who’s leading and how God has worked in their lives.
Lesson: A strong church website serves both guests and members—welcoming new people in while resourcing your existing congregation.
Visit First Baptist Durango →
What Do the Best Church Websites Have in Common?
Across these six churches, a pattern emerges. The best church websites in 2026:
- Make Sunday obvious
- Service times, location, and “what to expect” are non-negotiables above the fold.
- Sound like real people
- Warm, pastoral tone instead of corporate or institutional language.
- Serve both first-time guests and long-time members
- Guests: New Here, Plan Your Visit, kids info.
- Members: events, giving, groups, digital bulletins, sermons, app.
- Reflect the church’s actual mission
- The words on the site match the words from the pulpit.
Want a Church Website Like This?
All of these examples were designed on the Tent Apps platform, specifically for churches.
We help churches:
- Clarify their message and structure their site around next steps
- Launch clean, modern sites that are easy for non-technical staff to update
- Integrate giving, sermons, events, and mobile apps into a unified experience
If your current website feels dated, confusing, or hard to manage, it may be time for a redesign that better serves your mission.
Ready to explore what a new Tent Apps site could look like for your church?
Let’s start a conversation.





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