Your Church Is More Than a Link in a Bio
Most churches live online as a scatter of other people's apps held together by one bio link. Here's the case for a real front door — and how you already have one.

Try to find your church online. Really try.
You'll probably land somewhere like this: an Instagram bio with one link, and that link is a Linktree somebody set up in 2022. On it — a Google Form for prayer requests, a WhatsApp invite that may or may not still work, a YouTube channel with four sermons, and a service time that's three months out of date.
This is how most churches live online. Not on a website — scattered across other people's apps, held together by one bio link and a lot of hope.
A front door made of tape
It's not that churches don't care about how they look online. It's that a real website is a project — a budget, a developer, a thing that breaks and that nobody can remember the login for. So instead, the church's front door becomes whatever free tool was nearest: a form here, a chat invite there, a link in a bio.
And the people trying to reach you — the family that just moved to town, the visitor wondering when you meet, the person who needs prayer at 1 a.m. — have to assemble your church out of fragments.
So every church gets a page
On BethelFlow, your church has a page. Yours, at your name: yourchurch.bethelflow.com.
Not a scatter of links — a home. Who you are, when you meet, how to get there. The quick links you actually use, in one place. A way to send a prayer request that goes somewhere real instead of into a form nobody checks. It's there the moment you sign up, and it stays current because it's wired to the same place the rest of your church already lives.
It's already yours
Every organisation gets a public page at its own subdomain — service info, quick links, and a prayer-request link — with no website project required.
The front door says something
A church's front door matters more than we like to admit. It's the first thing a stranger meets — usually long before they meet a person. And a front door made of mismatched links quietly says we're holding this together with tape, even when the church behind it is warm, organised, and alive.
You deserve a front door that matches the room behind it.
Here — this is us
Try to find your church online. Soon the honest answer should be: here — this is us. One link. Current. Yours.
Not a bio, linking to a Linktree, linking to a form.
A home.
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