Why summer discipleship matters (especially when things feel scattered)

Summer has a way of rearranging everything. People travel, kids are in camps and sports and weekends can fill up fast. The routines that usually hold faith together get a little … wonky. And without meaning to, churches can slip into the mindset of "we’ll really focus again in the fall."

But what if summer is actually one of the best discipleship opportunities of the year? Not because everyone suddenly has extra time. But because summer puts real life right in front of us. And discipleship was always meant for real life. Vacations, ballfields and backyards. Quiet mornings and loud evenings. Unplanned conversations with neighbors you finally see because you’re outside more.

Discipleship doesn’t require a whole new program in the summer months, it just requires a plan that travels well.

Why summer discipleship matters (especially when things feel scattered)

When summer schedules change ... people don’t stop needing community. And they don’t stop needing to grow with Jesus.

If anything, summer reveals what’s true: Our faith doesn’t grow because our calendar is perfect. Faith grows when we practice it consistently, even imperfectly.

Summer is one of the those seasons where people are in environments that can be ripe for formation. More time with family (even if it’s chaotic). More time around neighbors. More time outside the usual church rhythms, which is exactly where discipleship is tested and strengthened.

If the only discipleship we know how to lead requires everyone to be in the building every week, summer will always feel like a loss. But if we can equip people with discipleship practices they can carry with them, summer becomes a momentum builder.

Discipleship Rhythms That are Portable and Repeatable

Instead of building more summer events, build a summer rhythm. Instead of asking for more commitment, offer a clearer next step. Instead of trying to “keep attendance up,” decide what spiritual wins you’re aiming for.

A few examples of meaningful summer wins beyond attendance:

  • People engaging with Scripture more consistently (even in small ways).
  • Families having spiritual conversations at home.
  • More prayer and worship woven into everyday moments.
  • People serving their neighbors and community.
  • Deeper relational connection, not just event participation.

Clarity and Consistency

If you’re on a comms team, summer can feel like you’re constantly reacting. That’s why a summer discipleship plan can’t just live in someone’s head. It needs a playbook.

A realistic summer comms playbook does a few important things:

  1. Narrows the focus to a small number of clear next steps.
  2. Repeats the same invitation across channels (without sounding like noise).
  3. Gives your church language that feels encouraging, not guilt-driven because people aren't always in the building.
  4. Makes it easy for leaders and volunteers to stay aligned.
  5. Creates one simple hub people can return to all summer long.

What could your summer discipleship look like this year?

Here are a few “discipleship on the go” ideas that work because they’re simple and repeatable:

  • 5-minute faith practices (a short Scripture plan, a prayer prompt, a worship playlist)
  • One meaningful conversation a week (with a spouse, a friend, your kid, your neighbor)
  • One act of service a month (choose something doable)
  • Hospitality as discipleship (invite someone to a meal or your backyard)
  • A weekly rhythm your church reinforces (same invitation, same link, same heartbeat)

None of these require perfect attendance.

They require intention. And a church that communicates them consistently. If summer has felt like a blur in the past, this is your chance to walk into it with clarity.

Want help building that playbook?

That’s exactly what we’re doing at our next Table event on Wednesday, April 22. Learn more and register at fishhook.us/thetable!