About Augustine WP Theme

Augustine is a WordPress theme built by Mikado-Themes, designed specifically for churches, religious organizations, and faith-based communities. It ships with a clean, dignified layout that balances tradition with modern web standards. The theme includes a sermon archive, events calendar, ministry pages, and donation integration — all built into the core structure without requiring heavy third-party plugins.

Mikado-Themes is known for well-coded, feature-rich themes, and Augustine follows that pattern. It works with Elementor and includes the Mikado Core plugin for extended functionality. Out of the box, you get multiple homepage layouts, a giving section, staff profiles, and gallery support. For a church or nonprofit that wants a professional online presence without starting from scratch, Augustine covers a lot of ground quickly.

Get matched with a Augustine developer in under one day

Brief 01

Tell us about your Augustine project. Small fixes, Augustine theme customization, or a full website build, whatever you need, we've got it covered.

Connect 02

We'll connect you to the right Augustine developers, define the scope, and get everything 100% clear.

Collaborate 03

You'll get one estimate, hire your preferred developer, and start collaborating.

Augustine has Mikado-specific architecture that behaves differently from standard themes. The Mikado Core plugin, custom post types, and shortcode system all have quirks that take time to learn. A developer who already knows the theme skips that learning curve entirely.

Through Codeable, you get access to vetted WordPress professionals with real Augustine experience. Post your project, get a clear estimate within 24 hours, and only move forward if the scope and price work for you. No guesswork, no risk. See our full WordPress development services for what’s possible.

Pros

  • Purpose-built church features including sermon archive, events, and giving sections are included out of the box
  • Multiple pre-built homepage layouts reduce setup time for new church websites
  • Compatible with Elementor, giving editors a familiar drag-and-drop interface for page building
  • Staff profiles, ministry pages, and gallery post types are built into the theme structure without extra plugins
  • Mikado-Themes provides regular updates and maintains compatibility with current WordPress versions

Cons

  • Relies on the Mikado Core plugin, which creates a dependency that complicates future theme migrations
  • The theme options panel is extensive but not always intuitive, especially for non-technical site administrators
  • Demo import can be slow and occasionally incomplete, requiring manual cleanup after installation
  • Sermon and event post types are custom to Augustine, making it harder to switch themes without losing structured data
  • Out-of-the-box page speed scores are middling due to theme assets loading globally rather than conditionally

Who is Augustine for?

Local Church Websites

Augustine is built for local congregations that need a professional web presence fast. Sermon archives, service times, staff pages, and an events calendar come pre-configured. A developer can connect your giving platform, customize the homepage to reflect your community, and make sure the site is easy for your admin team to update week to week.

Nonprofit Religious Organizations

Faith-based nonprofits running outreach programs, food banks, or community services benefit from Augustine’s donation-ready structure. The theme’s giving section can be wired to GiveWP or similar platforms. Custom campaign pages, volunteer sign-ups, and impact reporting sections can all be built into the existing layout without fighting the theme’s design system.

Christian Schools and Ministries

Christian schools and standalone ministries often need a mix of informational pages, event registration, and media content. Augustine handles that range well. A developer can extend the theme with an application form, small group finder, or course listing section while keeping the visual identity consistent across every page of the site.

Podcast and Sermon Libraries

Churches producing weekly sermon audio or video get real value from Augustine’s built-in sermon post type. A developer can configure filtering by speaker, series, or scripture reference, and connect the archive to a podcast feed. This turns the site into a searchable content library that serves both in-person attendees and online visitors.

Retreat Centers and Faith Communities

Retreat centers and intentional faith communities need pages that communicate atmosphere as much as information. Augustine’s visual layouts support full-width imagery and clean typography well. A developer can build booking inquiry forms, schedule pages, and location-specific landing pages that match the tone of the community and convert visitors into registrants.

Customizing Augustine

Augustine gives you a solid starting point, but most churches need adjustments that go beyond the theme options panel. Sermon filtering, custom giving forms, event registration workflows, and branded color schemes all require hands-on work to get right.

An Augustine expert can set up the theme to match your congregation’s identity — configuring the sermon post types, connecting a donation gateway like GiveWP or Stripe, and building out ministry or small group pages that actually reflect how your church is organized. Custom homepage sections, multilingual support for diverse congregations, and performance tuning are all common requests. Working with someone who knows Augustine’s Mikado Core dependency saves time and avoids conflicts down the line.

Recommended plugins for Augustine

Augustine pairs naturally with a few key plugins. GiveWP handles online donations cleanly and integrates without layout issues. The Events Calendar plugin works alongside Augustine’s built-in events structure. For sermon podcasting, Seriously Simple Podcasting is a reliable add-on.

If your church site is growing, consider investing in WordPress performance optimization to keep load times fast as your media library fills with sermon audio and video. For churches running outreach campaigns or publishing regular devotionals, WordPress SEO work can help new visitors find you through organic search.

Not sure which plugins to use? This WordPress plugins directory covers the most popular options with reviews and setup guides.

Augustine common issues

Augustine theme demo content not importing correctly

Demo import failures in Augustine are usually caused by a PHP memory limit that’s too low, a timeout during the import process, or missing Mikado Core plugin activation. First, confirm Mikado Core and all required plugins are active. Increase PHP memory to at least 256MB in your hosting settings. If the import still stalls, try importing the XML content file manually through the WordPress importer rather than using the one-click option. A developer can clean up partial imports and rebuild missing sections quickly. For persistent issues, see our WordPress bug fixing service.

Augustine sermon post type not showing on frontend

If Augustine’s sermon post type isn’t appearing on the front end, the most common cause is a permalink flush that didn’t happen after theme activation. Go to Settings > Permalinks and click Save Changes without changing anything. Also check that the Mikado Core plugin is active, since sermon post types are registered through it. If you’re using a caching plugin, clear the cache after flushing permalinks. If sermons still don’t appear, check whether the page template assigned to the sermon archive matches the expected slug.

Augustine theme breaking after WordPress update

Augustine breaking after a WordPress core update usually points to a conflict between the Mikado Core plugin and the updated WordPress version. Check the Mikado-Themes changelog to see if a compatible theme or plugin update has been released. Temporarily disable non-essential plugins to isolate the conflict. If the theme was purchased through ThemeForest, re-download the latest version and update manually. For sites where downtime isn’t acceptable, a developer can test updates in a staging environment first. Regular WordPress maintenance prevents these surprises.

Augustine Elementor sections not displaying as expected

Augustine’s Elementor sections sometimes display incorrectly because the theme ships with its own Mikado Elementor extension that needs to be active alongside Elementor itself. Check that both plugins are installed and up to date. Conflicts can also occur if you’re using Elementor Pro features that overlap with Mikado’s custom widgets. Try switching to Elementor’s default Hello theme temporarily to confirm whether the issue is theme-specific. A developer familiar with Augustine’s widget layer can resolve these conflicts without stripping your existing layout.

Augustine theme redesign

Time to refresh your Augustine site?

A good theme only gets you so far. If your site isn't converting, the problem is usually the design — not the theme. We can fix that.

Get a redesign estimate

Augustine FAQ

Yes. Augustine is one of the more practical choices for small churches specifically because it includes sermon management, events, and giving sections without needing a stack of separate plugins. The pre-built homepage layouts mean you can launch a clean, functional site quickly. Smaller congregations with limited budgets and no in-house developer can get real value from how much comes configured out of the box.

Augustine is compatible with Elementor. Mikado-Themes also ships an Elementor extension through the Mikado Core plugin that adds custom church-specific widgets. You can build and edit pages using Elementor’s interface. That said, some Mikado-specific sections are built with their own shortcode system and don’t translate directly into Elementor blocks, so there’s a learning curve when mixing both approaches on the same site.

No. The Mikado Core plugin is required for Augustine to function properly. It registers the custom post types for sermons, events, and staff, and it powers a significant portion of the theme’s functionality. Deactivating it will break post type archives and likely several page sections. This is worth knowing before purchasing, since it means your content structure is tied to that plugin for as long as you use the theme.

Augustine’s built-in giving section is a display element, not a payment processor. To take actual donations, you need to connect a giving plugin. GiveWP is the most compatible option and integrates cleanly with the theme’s layout. You can also use Stripe through a form plugin. A developer can configure donation forms, set up fund designations, and embed giving pages that match your site’s design without looking like a third-party add-on.

Migrating away from Augustine is possible but requires planning. The sermon and event content is stored in Mikado-specific custom post types, which won’t automatically carry over to another theme’s structure. You’d need to either migrate that content manually or use a plugin to transfer it. If migration is likely in your future, document your content structure early. Our WordPress migration service covers this kind of structured content move.

Hire an Augustine WordPress Expert

Whether you need a full Augustine setup, a custom feature added, or an existing site fixed, working with a specialist saves time and avoids costly mistakes. Every project starts with a free, no-obligation estimate so you know exactly what you’re getting before any work begins.

Get your free estimate and get matched with an Augustine developer within 24 hours. 100% risk-free through Codeable’s vetted network.

#ACF
#Avada
#Contact Form 7
#Custom WP Themes
#Elementor
#Gutenberg
#Custom API Integration
#Site Migration
#WP Speed Optimization
#Theme Customization
#Custom Post Type
#PHP
#Laravel
#Plugin Development
#MYSQL
#Wp Rocket
#SEO
#Gravity Forms
#JavaScript
#Learndash
#Headless WordPress
#Payment Gateways
#Ninja Forms
#BuddyPress
#Slider Revolution
#Full Site Builds
#Anything Backend
#Anything Frontend
#Bookly
#GamiPress
#React JS
#Design
#ADA Compliance
#DIVI
#Genesis
#Enfold
#FacetWp
#WP Rest API
#Multisite
#Vue JS
#Maintance
#WooCommerce
#Hacking Cleanup
#BuddyBoss
#Hosting Transfer
#CSS

You'll need a free Codeable account so developers can ask questions and send their quotes.