8 December, 2025

What Should We Make of All the Revival Talk Among the Youth?

by | 18 November, 2025 | 5 comments

By Tyler McKenzie

My Instagram algorithms are telling me that college campuses are in a state of revival. You probably heard about Asbury, but apparently the Spirit isn’t contained to only Christian campuses. There are mass conversions going on at Big Five party schools! There’s a Christian group called UniteUS. They had 5,000 students show up at Auburn and 200 baptisms. At Florida State, the second biggest party school in the nation, they had 4,500 students show and 350 baptisms. They saw similar results at Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, and South Carolina. They just did one at Kentucky. There were 8,000 in attendance and 2,000 responses. I’ve heard similar stories at Ohio State, Texas A&M, Purdue, South Florida, and Cincinnati. Is it possible that a historic generational move of God is happening in our midst?  

Wuddup with the kids, y’all? 

Some Encouraging Data 

If you are like me, you have been pleasantly surprised (maybe even a bit skeptical) by all the recent revival talk among the youth. Before the pandemic, we were talking about “the nones” and the prospect of losing an entire generation. Millennials were deconstructing. Gen Z was pronounced the first post-Christian generation in our nation’s history. The future was bleak. Fast forward to 2025, we aren’t out of the woods yet, but many indicators suggest that there is an encouraging surge of curiosity in the supernatural, spiritual hunger, commitment to Jesus, and church attendance. Here’s a bit of Barna’s recent work. 

  • Mark Matlock and Barna report that 90% of Americans have some degree of curiousity in the supernatural realm. AApproximately 54% are moderately to very curious.
  • People aren’t just spiritually hungry, they are hungry for Jesus specifically. Four years ago, we hit a low point in Christian commitments, but there has been a 12% climb since. This is an estimated change of 30,000,000 adults! 
  • When they say 30,000,000 adults, what they mean is largely young adults! No one is attending church more than Gen Z! Millennials are second!

How should we respond to all this? 

I have asked our staff and congregation to respond to this with hopeful optimism. We are choosing to believe the best and pray for even bigger and better! Our church is unique in that about half our congregation is 18 or under. Faced with this stewardship alongside the murmurs of a generational outpouring, we are committed to investing disproportionately in the emerging generation. I think you should too.  

Argentinian scholar, Luis Bush, pioneered a theory called the “4 to 14 Window.” It has become a standard concept in missiology textbooks. The “4–14 Window” refers to the age range from 4 to 14 years old when most people first become Christians. Fun fact, Bush also coined the “10/40 Window” in the 1990s—which was the geographic region of least-reached people at the time. Bush noticed that while mission efforts focused heavily on geography (the “10/40 Window”), we weren’t thinking strategically about age. He proposed focusing on children between ages 4 and 14, arguing they were both most receptive and most neglected in global Christian outreach. 

Just about all the data I could find affirms that 70-80% of professing Christians report making a faith commitment by the age of 18. This isn’t just an American phenomenon; it’s a global one. Barna has argued that kids begin forming their worldview young, around 15 to 18 months old. By the time someone reaches the age of thirteen, their worldview is mostly in place and it tends to remain fairly fixed unless there is a major life event.  

Rethinking Evangelism 

It is time to actively reframe how our congregations think about “evangelism.” If someone were to say something like, “I evangelized someone,” “I led someone to Jesus,” what sort of situation comes to your mind? For most of us, we think of adult-on-adult evangelism. Maybe someone shared the gospel with a friend at work or with neighbor who is struggling. Statistically speaking, adult-on-adult evangelism, while important, is rare.  

I want to suggest that we need to expand our basic associations of evangelism if we are going to steward this potentially historic moment well. We need a broader imagination of what evangelism is. We need to start teaching that evangelism is also adults passing down faith to our kids. I tell parents of young children all the time, “If the only people you lead to Christ over the next decade are your littles, you have done well!” 

I was listening to Zach Meerkreebs talk about the Asbury revival on a podcast recently. He is the preacher who delivered the chapel sermon before the revival snapped in February 2023. After the sermon, the worship service kept going for 16 days. There were around 70,000 people who converged on the campus in Wilmore, Kentucky. It was mostly youths. Over two hundred schools had students there. Young people were leading it. They were confessing sins, staying through the night to pray and worship, sharing testimonies, and longing for the presence of God. 

MeerKreebs said that after he finished preaching the initial chapel sermon, he texted his wife and said, “Hey, I laid a stinker. I’ll be home soon for a nap.” If you’re a preacher, you know this feeling. Only nineteen students stayed after … but then God started to move. He said four hours later, he sent his wife a voice memo weeping, “Get our daughters out of daycare and get them to Asbury! God is here in a way I have never experienced!” When he said that, I started to weep too. It lit my heart on fire. I want that for my kids. Don’t you? Imagine the excitement of saying to your spouse, “Get the kids out of school and bring them to the church! God is doing something like I’ve never seen.” That’s the vision! And hey, look at it this way, if there is no revival, then at least we gave our kids the very best we got.  

Tyler McKenzie serves as lead pastor at Northeast Christian Church in Louisville, Kentucky. He also produces a fun Bible podcast for parents and their kids called “the Preacher and the Piano man”. 

Christian Standard

Contact us at cs@christianstandardmedia.com

5 Comments

  1. Ryan Akers

    Great article with thorough research! Just like the old saying goes, youth care more about our availability to walk alongside them in this discovery of Christ rather than our ability to fast-track them in a declaration of faith. It’s not about how many people we baptize as much as it is to maximize their understanding of disciple making. Thanks again for an inspiring article.

  2. Michael Bratten

    Excellent synopsis of what is and how we should respond. God help us to continue lighting fires of truth and revival.

  3. Bob Stacy!

    As most of you know, my life has been ministering to youth. When we founded CHRIST IN YOUTH in ’68 and when the first CIY Conferences began in ’70, our churches and Bible colleges saw a resurgence of interest and enthusiasm for Christ and His church among our youth. I can do nothing but praise God for what’s happening today in the world of young adults. It is my prayer that our churches will take advantage of the fertile soil and will plant the seed of the Word in anticiparion of a great harvest. Thanks to Tyler McKenzie for this eye-opening article which points us to the challenge we face “right now.” Please! Let’s not miss it.

  4. Rob Tuttle

    In our small community we are already coordinating efforts with Life Wise, Church camp, Ohio University, and high schools. Churches are paying the tuition for Life Wise kids to come to camp, and O.U. Christian athletes are giving their testimonies, I think it’s more than revival, it’s an awakening! Young people are waking up to the propagation of deception from the media, politicians and are pursuing truth, Thank you Prager U, Hillsdale College, Turning Point USA and a host of others!

  5. Diane Mitchell

    Ninth grade Jr High. I don’t remember how, but I started questioning who I was, why was I here, what was my purpose. I was reared in a moral home without mention of God, Bible or prayer. We celebrated the commercial Christmas and Easter. My father was reared Methodist. My mother was reared Baptist. My father told my brother and I, we could choose what we wanted when we grew up. Choose what? Anyway, one day a group of girls in Jr High were talking about their churches. I volunteered I was an atheist. I really had no idea what an atheist was. One girl was shocked. She loved Jesus, she loved her church, she invited me to her church. She kept after me here and there to come to church. Her parents picked me up and took me to church when I said I didn’t want to bother my parents. I was baptized at 18. It’s 50 years later. Much has happened. God is good. A son is a minister of the Gospel. Because in Jr High a child invited another child to church.

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