Author: Nivea Laskosky
Generation Z, born between 1995 and 2010, already represents more than 30% of the world’s population – around 2 billion people. They grew up immersed in smartphones, social media, and digital environments, which makes them highly autonomous, but also anxious and sensitive to economic and social instability.
Why involve Gen Z in missions?
Although many are considered “post-Christian,” especially in Western countries, research shows that this generation is seeking purpose and spirituality, and is drawn to causes that align with their values: ethics, social justice, and care for the environment.
According to the Barna research, 82% of committed Gen Z Christians believe it is important to share the gospel, and many are willing to do so in personal and digital ways. However, there are challenges to engaging this generation in missions:
- Worldview and scientific skepticism: Gen Z values evidence, logic, and authenticity. For many, faith without intellectual grounding or without connection to real social issues feels empty.
- Rejection of institutions: they are naturally skeptical of traditional religious structures and demand transparency, consistency between words and actions, and tangible impact in society.
- Digital overload: fragmented attention calls for more visual, dynamic, and interactive content formats, fleeing from static and purely expository methods.
- Internal diversity: many point out that the concept of Generation Z can be superficial or even irrelevant outside marketing contexts. There is great social and cultural diversity within this group.
By involving this generation in missions, we gain creative and digital energy. Zoomers are fluent in YouTube, TikTok, social media, podcasts, and more; they are creative communicators and effective in online evangelism. They demonstrate cultural sensitivity, they are open-minded and have a strong concern for inclusion and justice. This is a generation that seek engagement with global causes such as poverty, environmental care, and human rights – becoming highly relevant missionary agents. They are also, by nature, the emerging leadership, as they will soon occupy key roles in social and cultural spheres.
Engaging Generation Z in missions is a strategic move for the future of the global cause.
What can we do to engage Generation Z?
I once heard a young missionary say during a training session: “We are called to use the internet as a missionary platform, expressing ourselves without fear, sharing faith and building bridges”. This reflects and reinforces the idea that they do not seek only traditional mission, but they also see digital networks as effective channels for impact.
That is why authentic relationships, genuine and empathetic dialogue, shared life, and honest testimony are so important with this generation. Interactive learning should explore engaging methods such as flipped classrooms, practical projects, debates, and collaborative work/study spaces. Then, content must be adapted accordingly: multisensory, with short videos, visual resources, and real, contextualized missionary storytelling.
Mobilizing Generation Z for missions has unique challenges – it requires innovation, authenticity, and sensitivity. But the gains go far beyond that. With their involvement, lives are impacted, evangelism becomes more realistic and powerful, and we can finally leave a missionary legacy suited to the 21st century.
As we invest in these young people today, we are preparing a generation capable of transforming cultures, breaking barriers to become a living instrument in God’s hands.



