GROW
Equip believers. Multiply disciples. Grow faith.
12 followers
Equip believers. Multiply disciples. Grow faith.
12 followers
GROW helps new and mature Christians deepen their faith, disciple others, and build spiritual communities. With training modules, Bible studies, discipleship plans, leader toolkits, and content for “how to help someone who just came to Christ at every stage.

GROW feels like more than an app — it’s a spiritual companion. The way you’ve combined discipleship modules, Bible studies, leader toolkits, and mentorship pathways makes the journey of faith more accessible. I’m excited to see how individuals and small groups will use this to grow together in Christ.
What stands out to me is the structured approach: training modules for new and mature believers, discipleship plans, content for “How to help someone just came to Christ,” and leadership toolkits. The challenge will be delivering content that scales across cultural contexts and is customizable. If GROW can allow local adaptation (language, culture, context), it will be especially powerful.
In many places, access to structured discipleship is limited. GROW might bridge that gap. I imagine someone in a small community using it to walk through faith steps, share lessons with a friend, or guide someone just starting. It feels deeply needed, and I’m grateful for this launch.
From a UX perspective, balancing depth and simplicity will be key. There are many modules and content types; organizing them so users don’t feel overwhelmed is essential. Smooth navigation, offline access, clear pathways (e.g. “Start here as a new believer”) will help retention and usefulness.
Congratulations on launching GROW! Discipleship is meant to multiply — not stay stagnant. Tools that empower people to disciple others are rare and precious. May this app be a spark in many communities that leads to exponential growth in faith and in love.
Modules, Bible studies, discipleship plans, leader toolkits. GROW delivers the essentials for spiritual growth. The more you can keep the interface clear, the more users will engage. If it works reliably (offline, low-bandwidth), I see this being used globally.