where to find christian young adult events in new york city
author
Evelyn Baden
01.03.2025
7 mins



Where to Find Christian Young Adult Events in New York City
When I first came to New York, I remember feeling overwhelmed by how many different ways there were to get involved and how many different resources existed to actually meet other Christians.
Some things came through church. Some were online. Some were just word of mouth.
It just felt like nothing was in one place, and if you didn’t already know where to look, it was really easy to feel like you were missing everything.
And I remember that feeling really clearly. That’s honestly what pushed me to write this.
Whether you’re visiting the city for a weekend or you’re planning on moving here, I wanted to put everything I’ve personally found into one place, just so you can actually understand the different ways people find events here, and how to find the ones that are meant for you.
1. TikTok & Instagram (Start Here Always)
This is the most real-time way to see what’s actually happening.
If you’re trying to figure out what’s going on this week, this is where you’ll find:
recurring events
smaller gatherings
things that never make it to formal platforms
Search things like:
“Christian events NYC”
“young adults NYC church”
“worship night NYC”
Then go deeper:
check tagged posts
read comments
see who’s consistently posting
A lot of events live only on Instagram stories. If you’re not checking there, you’re missing a lot.
2. Eventbrite (Best for Larger, Organized Events)
Eventbrite is still the most consistent public platform.
You’ll usually find:
worship nights
conferences or panels
larger, more structured gatherings like galas and balls
3. Partiful (Most Consistent for Community-Based Events)
This is one of the most underrated platforms.
From my experience, this is where a lot of the more intentional and community-driven events live:
Bible studies
faith-based run clubs like prodigal runners
café-style meetups
faith-based groups
It feels more relational.
Less polished, but honestly more consistent if your goal is to actually meet people and build real connection.
4. Luma (Organized, But Limited for Faith-Based Events)
We’ve hosted our last two Ark events on Luma, so I’ve worked with it directly.
It’s great for:
clean, organized event pages
more structured experiences
But realistically, it’s still dominated by:
tech
networking
startup culture
So while it’s worth checking, it’s not where most Christian events are happening right now.
Over time, that might shift but for now, I’d treat it as a secondary option.
5. Facebook Groups (Underrated but very real)
People forget about Facebook, but it doesn't hurt to check every once and a while.
You’ll find:
weekly updates
last-minute events
people actively trying to connect
A good place to start: NYC Christian Young Adults Facebook Group
We’ll be using this group to share as many Christian events as we can find across all of the platforms mentioned here. Long Island Christian Events is also another great resource posting consistently.
6. Follow Faith-Based Communities Directly
This is probably the most important one.
A lot of the best events:
never hit Eventbrite
never get formally listed
and aren’t meant to be mass-distributed
They’re shared through:
Instagram stories
group chats
email lists
For example, we share all of our updates through our Instagram.
Once you find one community you connect with, stay close to it. That’s usually how everything else starts to open up.
Final Thought
Finding community in New York isn’t about finding one place.
It’s about understanding how things move.
Start with:
Instagram
TikTok
Partiful
Then build from there.
The city isn’t lacking. It just takes intention to find what’s already there. Hope this helps!
Where to Find Christian Young Adult Events in New York City
When I first came to New York, I remember feeling overwhelmed by how many different ways there were to get involved and how many different resources existed to actually meet other Christians.
Some things came through church. Some were online. Some were just word of mouth.
It just felt like nothing was in one place, and if you didn’t already know where to look, it was really easy to feel like you were missing everything.
And I remember that feeling really clearly. That’s honestly what pushed me to write this.
Whether you’re visiting the city for a weekend or you’re planning on moving here, I wanted to put everything I’ve personally found into one place, just so you can actually understand the different ways people find events here, and how to find the ones that are meant for you.
1. TikTok & Instagram (Start Here Always)
This is the most real-time way to see what’s actually happening.
If you’re trying to figure out what’s going on this week, this is where you’ll find:
recurring events
smaller gatherings
things that never make it to formal platforms
Search things like:
“Christian events NYC”
“young adults NYC church”
“worship night NYC”
Then go deeper:
check tagged posts
read comments
see who’s consistently posting
A lot of events live only on Instagram stories. If you’re not checking there, you’re missing a lot.
2. Eventbrite (Best for Larger, Organized Events)
Eventbrite is still the most consistent public platform.
You’ll usually find:
worship nights
conferences or panels
larger, more structured gatherings like galas and balls
3. Partiful (Most Consistent for Community-Based Events)
This is one of the most underrated platforms.
From my experience, this is where a lot of the more intentional and community-driven events live:
Bible studies
faith-based run clubs like prodigal runners
café-style meetups
faith-based groups
It feels more relational.
Less polished, but honestly more consistent if your goal is to actually meet people and build real connection.
4. Luma (Organized, But Limited for Faith-Based Events)
We’ve hosted our last two Ark events on Luma, so I’ve worked with it directly.
It’s great for:
clean, organized event pages
more structured experiences
But realistically, it’s still dominated by:
tech
networking
startup culture
So while it’s worth checking, it’s not where most Christian events are happening right now.
Over time, that might shift but for now, I’d treat it as a secondary option.
5. Facebook Groups (Underrated but very real)
People forget about Facebook, but it doesn't hurt to check every once and a while.
You’ll find:
weekly updates
last-minute events
people actively trying to connect
A good place to start: NYC Christian Young Adults Facebook Group
We’ll be using this group to share as many Christian events as we can find across all of the platforms mentioned here. Long Island Christian Events is also another great resource posting consistently.
6. Follow Faith-Based Communities Directly
This is probably the most important one.
A lot of the best events:
never hit Eventbrite
never get formally listed
and aren’t meant to be mass-distributed
They’re shared through:
Instagram stories
group chats
email lists
For example, we share all of our updates through our Instagram.
Once you find one community you connect with, stay close to it. That’s usually how everything else starts to open up.
Final Thought
Finding community in New York isn’t about finding one place.
It’s about understanding how things move.
Start with:
Instagram
TikTok
Partiful
Then build from there.
The city isn’t lacking. It just takes intention to find what’s already there. Hope this helps!