Easter, the Super Bowl for Churches, is coming. How is your Outreach Campaign going?
If you’re like most pastors and communicators, you’re already feeling that familiar weight: the blank cursor blinking at you, the social posts you need to write, the graphics that need designing, the landing page your web developer still hasn’t touched, and the growing pile of tasks that all need to happen before people start Googling “churches near me Easter service.”
Are you treating AI like a random collection of tools instead of a coordinated system? You ask ChatGPT to write something. You use Canva for a graphic. Maybe you upload a video somewhere. But nothing connects. Nothing multiplies. You’re still doing everything manually, just with fancier software.
An AI Stack changes that completely. Instead of juggling disconnected tools, you’re building a system where each capability feeds into the next. Your Easter message cascades across every channel without you rewriting, redesigning, or recreating anything from scratch.
What if your Easter sermon became the launchpad for your social content, your email sequence, your promotional podcast, your video clips, and your visitor landing page?
Stop scrambling, and start connecting!
What Is An AI Stack (And Why Should You Care)?
An AI Stack is a set of AI capabilities that work together in a specific sequence to multiply your content.
Without a Stack: You write a sermon. Then you sit down and write social posts. Then you open Canva and make graphics. Then you think about email. Then you remember you need video clips. Each task starts from zero. Each one takes hours. By the time you’re done, you’ve spent 40+ hours creating disconnected content.
With a Stack: You prepare your sermon. Then you run it through a sequence of AI capabilities that extract key ideas, generate variations, create visuals, produce audio, edit video, and build web pages. Your message multiplies across formats through connected automation. Total time: 3-4 hours.
The shift happens in how they connect.
Why Individual AI Tools Fail You
Individual tools solve individual problems. ChatGPT writes text. Canva makes graphics. Your video editor (if you have one) creates clips. But none of them talk to each other. You’re still the bottleneck translating between them.
It’s like having five staff members who never attend the same meeting. Everyone’s working, but nobody’s coordinated.
The result:
- Social graphics that don’t match your email messaging
- Video clips that weren’t designed for the platform they’re posted on
- A landing page that says something slightly different than your bulletin
- Email copy that feels disconnected from what you actually preached
- Podcast content (if you even get to it) that rehashes instead of extends your message
You’re creating a collection of random content that happens to be about Easter, not a coordinated campaign.
What An Integrated AI Stack Actually Enables
When your AI capabilities work together:
One sermon becomes 40+ pieces of coordinated content.
Your Sunday message generates Monday’s social carousel, Tuesday’s email, Wednesday’s podcast episode, Thursday’s video clips, and Friday’s visitor FAQ page. Same core message, different expressions, zero duplication of effort.
Audio content exists without a production studio.
Your research, teaching notes, and written content transform into podcast-style audio that promotes your Easter services and reaches people who won’t read a blog post.
Video clips multiply without editing skills.
Your full-length sermon becomes a library of shareable video content optimized for Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, and Facebook. You never learned Premiere Pro.
Landing pages launch without waiting on developers.
You build Easter-specific web pages with visitor FAQs, service times, and next steps in under an hour, not the three weeks your web team quoted you.
The difference between scattered AI experiments and a functioning stack? Multiple hours of your life and a campaign that actually works together.
The 5 Capabilities Every Easter Stack Needs
Five capabilities matter most for Easter:
Capability 1: Professional design on demand.
Create social media graphics, carousels, and simple visual content without design skills. Easter is visual. Your content should look as good as what people scroll past on Instagram, or they’ll keep scrolling past yours, too.
Capability 2: Content repurposing at scale.
Extract key ideas from your sermons and teaching and reformat them for different channels. Your Easter message shouldn’t be rewritten six times. It should be remixed intelligently for email, social, web, and everything else.
Capability 3: Audio content creation.
Turn written material into engaging audio content. Not everyone will read your blog posts or watch your videos, but they’ll listen to a podcast on their commute. Easter content needs to meet people where they already are.
Capability 4: Video repurposing without editing.
Convert your long-form sermon into short-form video clips that work on social platforms. One 35-minute sermon should become numerous shareable clips without you touching editing software.
Capability 5: Rapid web page creation.
Build landing pages without waiting on developers. Visitors research churches online before they show up. If your Easter information isn’t clear, accessible, and easy to find, they’ll go somewhere else.
These five capabilities need to work together, not in isolation. The system is in the stack.
Your Next Step
If you’re ready for an AI Stack that makes Easter campaign building easier than ever, join a live workshop on Tuesday, February 24, 2025, at 2-3 pm ET and get the five-tool stack and workflow I recommend.
5 AI Tools To Attract Visitors For Easter, and in 60 minutes, you’ll get:
- The complete tool stack (all five capabilities revealed)
- Live demonstrations of each tool in action
- The exact workflow that connects them
- A step-by-step blueprint you can implement immediately
- Real-world examples from churches using this approach
You will get the recommended stack, the workflow, and the actual shortcuts.
Easter is 8 weeks away. Stop scrambling. Start strategizing.


