Christian Tech & Pop Weekly: Scripture APIs, Church AI, and the Songs Moving the Chart

Christian Tech & Pop Weekly: Scripture APIs, Church AI, and the Songs Moving the Chart

This week’s roundup covers Scripture-platform developer tools, pastors’ real-world AI use, worship-software updates, and the Christian pop songs and artist moves shaping the chart.

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Christian Tech & Pop Weekly
2026/6/23 · 12:11
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Coverage window: June 15-22, 2026.
The clearest signal this week: Christian technology is moving from “churches using generic tools” toward purpose-built platforms for Scripture, AI governance, and volunteer-friendly production. On the music side, the charts stayed crowded at the top while several artists used the week to set up July releases and fall tours.

Fast scan

StoryWhy it mattersWatch next
Gloo and YouVersion announced a global developer challenge for Scripture-based apps, running July 6-31 on Kaggle. 1Bible engagement is becoming a developer ecosystem, not just a consumer app category.The June 29 platform webinar and the July 6 opening of submissions.
Barna and Gloo reported that only 13% of U.S. Protestant pastors say they do not use AI at all. 2AI is already in ministry workflows, but churches are still drawing boundaries around pastoral authority.Whether churches turn this into staff policy before sensitive data gets copied into public tools.
WorshipTools shipped Presenter 2026.1.0 beta updates, including cloud Bible abbreviation display and a Linux x64 build in beta.16. 3Worship presentation software continues to move toward cross-platform, cloud-aware production.Stability notes as the 2026.1.0 beta line moves toward general release.
Billboard’s Hot Christian Songs chart for the week of June 20 put Forrest Frank’s “Your Way’s Better” at No. 1, followed by Elevation Worship & Chandler Moore and Josiah Queen. 4The chart’s top 10 shows a mix of pop-adjacent solo artists, worship collectives, and repeat Forrest Frank momentum.Whether Frank’s four top-10 placements hold through the next chart week.
Josh Grove released the pop/rock single “Hope” on June 19. 5It is a youth-skewing Christian pop/rock release with radio momentum behind the artist.The lyric video and streaming pickup after release week.
Jamie MacDonald announced a 17-date fall headlining run, “The Left It In The River Tour,” beginning October 20 in Elk Grove, California. 6A fast-rising Christian artist is turning streaming and radio traction into a national headlining format.Presales on June 25 and general on-sale on June 26.

Christian tech: AI guardrails and Scripture APIs are the week’s center of gravity

Gloo and YouVersion want developers building Scripture-native experiences

Gloo and YouVersion announced “Scripture in New Frontiers: A Virtual Summer Challenge,” a global developer competition for new Scripture-centered applications using the YouVersion Platform and Gloo AI Studio. The challenge runs July 6-31, with judging scheduled for August 3-7. 1
The scale matters. YouVersion says its Family of Apps has passed one billion installs, and its platform gives developers access to 1,475 Bible versions in 1,244 languages. Gloo describes AI Studio as a production-grade AI development platform with values-aligned models, governance controls, and deployment tools for faith-based and mission-driven applications. 1
Scripture platform data snapshot
Self-made newsroom graphic summarizing YouVersion Platform scale and challenge timing from the Gloo-YouVersion announcement. 1
For builders, this is the week’s most actionable Christian-tech item: it turns Scripture access into an open building prompt across AI assistants, wearables, gaming, social platforms, and emerging spatial interfaces.

Pastors are using AI, but not casually

Barna’s June 15 research release gives church leaders a more precise baseline than “AI is coming.” It says 50% of pastors use AI for brainstorming or idea generation, 37% for graphic design or visual creation, 36% for biblical or theological research, and 34% for small-group questions or administrative tasks. 2
Barna chart showing how pastors use AI
Barna’s chart puts brainstorming, visual creation, biblical research, small-group questions, and administration at the top of pastors’ AI use cases. 2
The caution is just as important as the adoption. Barna reports that 71% of pastors describe feeling cautious about AI, 40% feel conflicted, 79% worry about AI acting as a replacement for God, and 63% worry about AI replacing the role of pastors or spiritual leaders. 2
This points to a practical church-tech gap: many teams already use AI, but the policy layer is behind the behavior. The next useful product or template may not be another chatbot; it may be a lightweight approval, privacy, and theological-review workflow for staff.

WorshipTools keeps pushing Presenter toward production flexibility

WorshipTools’ Presenter 2026.1.0 beta.16, dated June 15, added cloud Bible abbreviations, color picker improvements, and a Linux x64 build, while also resolving stage-display and scripture-selection issues. 3
That follows beta.15 on June 8, which added visible slide-import progress, stage-display color customization for chords and lyrics, offline slide sync, type-ahead tags, bulk transition-time application, higher-resolution video import support, and multi-song delete. 3
For volunteer production teams, the signal is less about one feature and more about direction: presentation tools are being tuned for mixed operating systems, cloud libraries, and faster Sunday-morning fixes.

Christian pop and music: chart pressure, tour building, and new-release momentum

The chart snapshot favors repeat momentum

Billboard’s Hot Christian Songs chart for the week of June 20 ranked “Your Way’s Better” by Forrest Frank at No. 1, “God I’m Just Grateful” by Elevation Worship & Chandler Moore at No. 2, and “Demons” by Josiah Queen at No. 3. The same top 10 also included Forrest Frank’s “OKAY!,” “Thankful,” and “Jesus Is Alive!” 4
Billboard describes the chart as ranking current Christian songs across genres using streaming activity tracked by Luminate, radio airplay audience impressions measured by Mediabase and provided by Luminate, and sales data compiled by Luminate. 4
For casual listeners, the takeaway is simple: Christian pop and worship-adjacent music are sharing the same chart space, and Forrest Frank remains the clearest repeat-presence artist to watch.

Josh Grove’s “Hope” leans into pop/rock for younger listeners

Josh Grove released “Hope” on June 19, with Jesusfreakhideout identifying him as a 16-year-old Christian pop/rock artist from Kalamazoo, Michigan. The single was distributed through Syntax Creative, produced by Eric Haley, and framed around rescue, restoration, and surrender. 5
The same release notes that Grove’s recent collaboration “Rain or Shine (feat. KJ-52)” reached No. 1 on the Christian Music Weekly CHH/Rhythmic chart, giving the new single a stronger launch context than a typical independent drop. 5

Jamie MacDonald turns momentum into a headlining run

Jamie MacDonald announced “The Left It In The River Tour” on June 22. The 17-date run begins October 20 in Elk Grove, California, and includes stops such as Philadelphia, New York City, Charlotte, Cincinnati, and Birmingham. 6
The announcement says MacDonald has more than 253 million global streams, more than 179 million social views, two consecutive No. 1 singles across major radio charts, and 2026 “Artist to Watch” recognition from both Amazon Music and Spotify. 6
That is the week’s best artist-development story: the path from streaming traction to radio hits to a headlining tour is becoming visible in real time.

What to do with this week’s signals

For church leaders, the immediate move is to audit AI use before writing a policy. Ask staff where they already use AI, then set boundaries around member data, pastoral care, sermon authorship, and human review.
For Christian-tech builders, the Gloo-YouVersion challenge is worth tracking even if you do not enter. Its categories will show what the faith-tech ecosystem thinks “Scripture innovation” means in an AI era.
For music fans, keep an eye on three lanes next week: Forrest Frank’s chart durability, Josh Grove’s post-release traction, and Jamie MacDonald’s ticket demand once the fall tour goes on sale.

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