Resource every church.
Unify your district.
Keep the local voice.
Provide every church in your denomination with a premium discipleship engine—built automatically from their own weekly sermons. Rooted in your shared theology, applied in their local context.
The hardest part of denominational leadership
is resourcing diverse churches effectively.
- You want to provide high-quality discipleship resources so pastors aren't burning out building from scratch.
- You need visibility into the spiritual health of your churches beyond Sunday attendance numbers.
- Every congregation is different. A one-size-fits-all curriculum rarely lands with local members.
- Pastors want to disciple their people using the specific messages God has given them to preach.
The system scales.
The message stays local.
Provide the infrastructure without dictating the content. Multiply turns every local pastor's unique sermon into a premium digital discipleship experience.
A full week of discipleship branded to their specific church.
- Interactive mobile deep-dives
- Small group discussion guides
- Concrete "Live It Out" action tracking
See the spiritual health of
your entire district.
Stop relying on lagging indicators like Sunday attendance or annual giving. Get real-time, macro-level insights into the spiritual activity happening across your denomination.
For the first time, denominational leaders can see aggregate data on discipleship engagement across the district without asking pastors to fill out another report.
You can see which churches are seeing the highest action-commitment rates, track how denominational themes are landing locally, and identify emerging leaders and healthy congregations across the region.
District View · Q3 Report
Action Commitments
Total Commitments
Decisions made beyond Sunday morning across 42 active churches.
+15% from last monthPrimary Growth Area
"Community Service" was the leading category for action steps this week.
How denominations partner with Multiply.
Give your pastors a tool they will actually use. Because they don't have to build it.