
АрмИнфо. The soul of a people is often shaped in the silence between Sunday prayers, in the teachings passed from one generation to the next. But in the Armenian Church in America, that silence has grown louder. Churches are emptier, generations are absent, and scripture is neglected. Enter Khachkar Studios, whose $100 million transformation plan seeks to restore the Church not through nostalgia—but through systems change.
At the center of this five-year initiative is a model as methodical as it is profound: the “U.S. Armenian Christian Ecosystem 12 Body Parts.” Using 69 years of detailed data, this framework evaluates twelve key systems of church life—preaching high value-add role model focused ministry, lay leadership, Bible literacy, governance, spiritual development, and more.
Its diagnosis is sobering: 11 of the 12 Body Parts are failing to meet even baseline expectations. The Body Parts include philanthropic support, religious content across the spectrum of media, regular Sunday attendance, school students, bible studies, management, and leadership training. The reality is that faith has increasingly become a passive tradition rather than a daily practice.
To reverse this, Khachkar is enrolling up to 37 pilot churches and ministries to participate in a five-year reform program. Each will receive $300,000 to $400,000 in funding to implement change projects chosen from an eight-activity menu, tailored to their greatest areas of weakness. Activities include launching Bible-centered high value-add role model focused programs, training lay preachers, producing digital faith content, and creating pathways for daily scripture engagement.
Support doesn’t end with funding. Khachkar will also contribute 5,000 hours of senior management expertise, working side-by-side with parishes to diagnose, execute, and adapt their chosen reforms.
The plan has three bold targets: double the number of “Faithful” weekly attendees from 12,894 to 27,847, increase daily Bible readership from 1,000 to 41,423, achieve a 6.1x SROI (social return on investment). These metrics offer more than accountability—they signal a return to active faith.
Adding to the momentum is Khachkar’s “Good News” media campaign. The studio will create 25 times more Armenian Christian content than all current institutions combined. Including seven “Good News” workstreams: 1. Short-clips, 2. Podcasts, 3. Analyses, 4. Written Content, 5. Events, 6. News, and 7. Music will meet the diaspora where it increasingly lives—online, mobile, and in need of meaning.
In total, the plan offers a vision of transformation not rooted in fear of loss, but in hope for what can be rebuilt. For the Armenian Church in America, this may be the most important chance in generations to reclaim its role—not only as keeper of memory, but guide of the soul.