Faith meets fintech: How churches are betting on AI and crypto
Church leaders in the US are investing more in AI and other tech.
Some churches are also leveraging cryptocurrency.
Over 1,700 church leaders discussed how they view and use technology in a recent report.
Don't have cash for the offering plate at church on Sunday? Just use bitcoin.
Weaving bitcoin into the same conversation as Sunday service might seem odd, but it's now a reality for some churches in the United States, where church leaders are embracing modern technology.
Last month, Pushpay, a financial services company for churches, published the 2025 State of Church Tech report. It surveyed over 1,700 church leaders across the United States from ministries of different sizes, denominations, and budgets.
"The most tech-forward churches are starting to think of tech not just as operational or administrative. They see it as part of the mission," Gruia Pitigoi-Aron, PushPay's chief product officer, told Business Insider.
Recent breakthroughs in artificial intelligence and other fields have reshaped the global landscape, making such advancements impossible for industries to ignore. Churches are no different.
The report said 45% of respondents now use artificial intelligence, an 80% jump from last year. Most church leaders use AI for communication-based tasks like writing content, editing, and generating graphic designs. However, 18% said they used it to develop sermons.
Earlier this month, the newly elected Pope Leo XIV discussed AI during his first address to the College of Cardinals, saying it posed "new challenges."
"In our own day, the Church offers to everyone the treasury of her social teaching in response to another industrial revolution and to developments in the field of artificial intelligence that pose new challenges for the defence of human dignity, justice and labor," the first US-born pope said.
Pitigoi-Aron said church leaders who leverage technology don't want to replace people or the human aspects of worship. Rather, it's meant to amplify their mission and create community.
Livestreaming also proved to be a popular tech tool for church leaders during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the report. Nearly 90% of surveyed church leaders said they live-streamed worship services or events.
"Paul the Apostle took ships from place to place and told people about Jesus, right? Now you're livestreaming," Pitigoi-Aron said.
Technology has also influenced how the church navigates donations.
"Online giving continues to be the most popular digital solution among all churches — not surprising, considering 70% of leaders believe technology has increased generosity in their church. That proven impact is likely responsible for the fast-growing interest in accepting cryptocurrency and stock donations," the report said.
Only 10% of surveyed church leaders said they're leveraging cryptocurrency, but 39% said it will become "strategically important to their church in the next two to three years." That's a 44% increase from 2024, but 62% of respondents said they "don't know" or "need to learn more" about the benefits of cryptocurrency.
Pitigoi-Aron said non-traditional giving, like stocks and cryptocurrency, could be a "huge opportunity" for churches. In the digital age, where nearly everything is one click away, accepting new platforms can lower the barrier of entry for some congregants hoping to donate and connect.
Similarly, some church leaders are now using QR codes.
"Tangentially, QR codes are being utilized more than ever, often to drive community members and streaming viewers to next steps via a simple scan or tap," the report said.
The increasing focus on modern technology isn't just talk for church leaders. Over half said they increased their tech budgets over the last two years.
Read the original article on Business Insider
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
18 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Bankruptcy Was Good for 23andMe
Sometimes a public company has a controlling shareholder who wants to take it private by buying out all of the other shareholders, and that's always messy. 1 The controlling shareholder will to some extent be negotiating with herself: She will want to buy the company for a low price, but the company's shareholders will want to get a high price, but she's the controlling shareholder and can vote for the low price. There are standard solutions to the problem, but they are only partial solutions: In the past few months, I have written a few times about 23andMe Holding Co. as an illustration of these problems. 23andMe is a publicly traded genetic testing company that was once worth about $6 billion, but it has now fallen on hard times. Its founder, Anne Wojcicki, owns about 49% of the voting power of the stock, making her effectively a controlling shareholder. She offered to buy all the stock she didn't own, to take the company private and fix its problems 'outside of the short term pressures of the public markets.' But the board of directors, whose job was to find an 'actionable proposal that is in the best interests of the non-affiliated shareholders,' didn't think her offer was good enough.
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
MongoDB Soars 14.2% After Crushing Q1 -- $1B Buyback, AI Push, and Customer Surge Spark Rally
MongoDB (NASDAQ:MDB) is off to a fast start in fiscal 2026and investors might want to take a closer look. The company reported $549 million in Q1 revenue, up 22% from last year, with its cloud product, Atlas, growing 26% and now making up 72% of total sales. Management added 2,600 new customers, marking the biggest quarterly gain in six years. The share is up 14.2% at 12.09pm today. CEO Dev Ittycheria pointed to strong traction from both enterprises and startups as AI workloads and modern app development continue to drive demand for flexible, cloud-native databases. Behind the scenes, MongoDB is becoming a cash machine. The company more than doubled non-GAAP operating income to $87.4 million and posted $105.9 million in free cash flowup 74% year-over-year. With $2.5 billion in cash and short-term investments on hand, it just authorized another $800 million in share repurchases, taking its total buyback program to $1 billion. That kind of financial firepower could give MongoDB more room to support long-term growth while returning capital to shareholders. On the AI front, MongoDB isn't just playing defense. It rolled out new retrieval modelsVoyage 3.5 and 3.5 Litethat improve accuracy and efficiency for building AI-powered apps. It also debuted its Model Context Protocol Server, which connects MongoDB to tools like GitHub Copilot and Anthropic's Claude, letting developers use natural language to interact with their data. With FY2026 revenue guidance raised up to $2.29 billion and full-year non-GAAP EPS projected to hit as high as $3.12, MongoDB could be shaping up as a quiet leader in the AI infrastructure race. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


New York Times
18 minutes ago
- New York Times
Live Updates: Trump-Musk Alliance Dissolves as They Hurl Personal Attacks
Pinned President Trump and Elon Musk's alliance dissolved into open acrimony on Thursday, as the two men hurled personal attacks at each other after the billionaire had unleashed broadsides against the president's signature domestic policy bill. While meeting with Friedrich Merz, Germany's new chancellor, in the Oval Office, Mr. Trump broke days of uncharacteristic silence and unloaded on Mr. Musk, who until last week was a top presidential adviser. 'I'm very disappointed in Elon,' Mr. Trump said. 'I've helped Elon a lot.' As the president criticized Mr. Musk, the billionaire responded in real time on X, the social media platform he owns. 'Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate,' Mr. Musk wrote. 'Such ingratitude,' he added, taking credit for Mr. Trump's election in a way that he never has before. Mr. Musk had been careful in recent days to train his ire on Republicans in Congress, not Mr. Trump himself. But he discarded that caution on Thursday, ridiculing the president in a pattern familiar to the many previous Trump advisers who have fallen by the wayside. What started as simply a fight over the domestic policy bill sharply escalated in just a few hours. Within minutes of one another, Mr. Trump was making fun of Mr. Musk's unwillingness to wear makeup to cover a recent black eye, and Mr. Musk was raising questions about Mr. Trump's competency as president. The public break comes after a remarkable partnership between the two men. Mr. Musk deployed hundreds of millions of dollars to support Mr. Trump's 2024 presidential campaign. After Mr. Trump won, he gave Mr. Musk free rein to slash the federal work force. And just last week, Mr. Trump gave Mr. Musk a personal send-off in the Oval Office. The president praised Mr. Musk as 'one of the greatest business leaders and innovators the world has ever produced' and gave him a golden key emblazoned with the White House insignia. Mr. Musk promised to remain a 'friend and adviser to the president.' But now Mr. Musk, who has left his temporary role, has turned into the most prominent critic of a top presidential priority. Mr. Musk has lashed out against the far-reaching policy bill in numerous posts on X. He has called it a 'disgusting abomination,' argued that the bill would undo all the work he did to cut government spending and hinted that he would target Republican members of Congress who backed the legislation in next year's midterm elections. Mr. Trump on Thursday said Mr. Musk's criticism of the bill was entirely self-interested, saying he only opposed the legislation after Republicans took out the electric vehicle mandate, which would benefit Tesla, Mr. Musk's electric vehicle company. (Mr. Musk has previously called for an end to those subsidies.) The president also downplayed Mr. Musk's financial support for him during the campaign, arguing he would have won Pennsylvania without Mr. Musk, who poured much of his money and time into the critical battleground state. Mr. Musk also on Thursday rebutted Mr. Trump's statement that Mr. Musk 'knew the inner workings of the bill better than anybody sitting here.' 'False, this bill was never shown to me even once and was passed in the dead of night so fast that almost no one in Congress could even read it!' Mr. Musk wrote, sharing a video of Mr. Trump saying he was disappointed in Mr. Musk.