I visited a local megachurch recently. My friend described it as, “You know, one of those big-box churches with one-word names, super-loud music, huge video screens, and long sermons.” Currently, 1300 U.S. congregations qualify as megachurches, averaging more than 2000 in weekly attendance. The one I visited has more parking-lot volunteers than my church has members.
I’ll say one thing for megachurches: they can afford quality. The sermon was both entertaining and insightful, the super-loud music flawless (I declined the earplugs that were considerately offered at the welcome booth), and those parking volunteers got us in and out in record time.
Yet the majority of Americans, like me, still attend churches with less than 200 members. We show up on Sundays to hear less entertaining sermons and less professional music—though we have no trouble finding a parking place. Why? Smaller towns don’t have the option of megachurches, of course, and big crowds make some people nervous. I found one more reason when I came across this paradoxical observation in G. K. Chesterton’s book Heretics:
The man who lives in a small community lives in a much larger world…. The reason is obvious. In a large community we can choose our companions. In a small community our companions are chosen for us.
Precisely! Given a choice, I tend to hang out with folks like me: people who have college degrees, drink dark roast coffee, listen to classical music, and buy their cars based on EPA gas mileage ratings. Yet after a while I get bored with people like me. Smaller groups (and smaller churches) force me to rub shoulders with everybody else.
Henri Nouwen defines “community” as the place where the person you least want to live with always lives. Often we surround ourselves with the people we most want to live with, which forms a club or a clique, not a community. Anyone can form a club; it takes grace, shared vision, and hard work to form a community.
The Christian church was the first institution in history to bring together on equal footing Jews and Gentiles, men and women, slaves and free. The Apostle Paul waxed eloquent on this “mystery, which for ages past was kept hidden in God.” By forming a community out of diverse members, Paul said, we have the opportunity to capture the attention of the world and even the supernatural world beyond. (Ephesians 3:9-10)
In some ways the church has sadly failed in this assignment. (Yes, Billy Graham, 11 o’clock Sunday is still the most segregated hour in America.) But even monochrome churches show diversity in age, education, and economic class. Church is the one place I visit that brings together generations: infants still held at their mothers’ breasts, children who squirm and giggle at all the wrong times, responsible adults who know how to act appropriately at all times, and senior citizens who may drift asleep if the preacher drones on too long.
I know one megachurch that tries to seat people based on their commonality: senior citizens down front where they can hear better, single adults over there where they can meet each other, families with young children in the back where they can exit quickly if the kids make noise. That strikes me as all wrong. I deliberately seek a congregation comprising people not like me, and I find such people less avoidable in smaller churches.
hesterton’s insight about small communities appears in a chapter on “The Institution of the Family,” which gives a whole new slant on family values. “The common defence of the family,” he writes, “is that, amid the stress and fickleness of life it is peaceful, pleasant, and at one. But there is another defence of the family which is possible, and to me evident; this defence is that the family is not peaceful and not pleasant and not at one.”
The smallest units in society, families offer an ideal laboratory in which to test out Chesterton’s principle that “the smaller the community, the larger the world.” Reflecting on my own family’s reunions, I must agree that the institution of the family forces me into close contact with characters I would otherwise avoid. I have no choice about such encounters; we share a gene pool.
Several of my family members have served stints in prison. Some carry on feuds that go back generations. A few spin elaborate tales to cover up unwed pregnancies. Geographically, my family extends from Philadelphia to San Jose to Australia. It includes a drug addict and a professional football player with an estranged gay son, a Ph.D. in Philosophy as well as several who never graduated from high school. Methodists, Church of Christ, Unitarian/Universalists, Independent Baptists, atheists─they all come together at our reunions.
I have learned more about grace, forgiveness, diversity─and, yes, social deviance─from my family than from all the theology books I have read. Chesterton’s point, exactly. Troublesome issues like divorce and homosexuality take on a different cast when you confront them not in a state legislature but at a family reunion.
Those Christians who trumpet “family values” need to make clear that we are not proposing a lobotomized society of Stepford wives and their offspring. We recognize that families consist of imperfect human beings. We simply contend that the family, the smallest social unit, represents a good place to confront those imperfections.
Some commentators have attacked the entire institution, blaming society’s problems on the dysfunctions of the family. Such jeremiads miss the point: family is not a perfect institution by any means but simply a place that accepts its members on a single criterion, shared DNA. From such a tiny group we can learn the principles of true community needed in larger groups.
We have many examples of what happens when enlightened people get together and devise large institutions to improve on the family. These social engineers want everyone to be alike, sharing common values and beliefs. Consider extreme versions of the “politically correct” movement on university campuses. Consider the thought police in Communist North Korea. Making people more like they “ought to be” is the great experiment of modern times.
Any parent could tell you that making just one child more like he or she “ought to be” is a dicey proposition at best. If the smallest unit in society has trouble reforming individuals, should we trust the largest institution, the government? Better to work things out in small communities, where we may have less choice about our companions─but so does everyone else.

For me, I think the article is more about community than mega church … yes Jesus preached to 5000 and more. But He did community with just a few. He said to go and make disciples … I’m not a critic of the Mega Church or the Smaller Church, I just find that whether I belong to one or the other the process of discipleship still takes place in smaller groups where you can invest into people through living in community and that is where you have all shapes and sizes, where you sometimes need longsuffering.
Many thanks Phillip, very insightful piece. I have a simple question that I have pondered on for years – ” How do you choose a church ?” whether mega or small, the phenomenon of why we go to the churches we go to has bothered me for years. I have heard people who say ” that church does not meet meet my needs” and it makes me wonder whether we choose a church based on whether it meets our needs or not? On the opposite end of the spectrum are those who say ” the church is not there to serve you but you are there to serve the church” – So I’m thinking, which one is it.
I was once walking through a local mall and saw a huge crowd gathering up ahead. I joined the masses to see what everyone was looking at. As I craned my neck and peered through a gap, I could see a busker doing his routine. I watched for a while, but he didn’t seem to be anything special. I wondered how he had managed to attract such a large throng of people. Then it hit me: he had, at some point, reached a critical mass of followers, after which many more people had joined the congregation, probably to see what the fuss was about—the same reason I had become involved. The mega-church phenomenon can work the same way. Sometimes, a church becomes ‘mega’ simply because a sufficient number of people are already part of it. The crowd itself is the drawcard.
I also see, however, that a mega-church’s teaching can be at the heart of its appeal. Prosperity theology is generally preached more fervently in mega-churches. It plays well to the fallen human tendency toward Self, and may therefore draw a crowd. In turn, this makes a church ‘mega,’ enabling its senior leader to present himself as a case in point: ‘God prospered me, and he will prosper you too.’ If he has a dynamic personality and can sell the message convincingly, all the better.
Mega-churches do have a place. Not all their teaching is bad; sometimes they actually preach the Gospel, and do a reasonable job of it too. Their worship music can be amazing—a beautiful, meaningful, fragrant offering to God. They have the wherewithal to put on a show—and people (including me) do love a show. What is more, they are able to provide resources for smaller churches that simply cannot be obtained any other way.
But, like you, Philip, I prefer small. As a rabid introvert, I am less likely to feel lost and alone when there are less people around me, and I am more likely to become involved in a conversation that goes deeper than the weather or the football. Big is good for hiding; small is good for being found. Give me small any day.
http://www.rivergate.org.au/blog
Hi Philip! I’m brazilian and I attend a kind of “micro-small church”… (considering the number of members that I’ve seen on comments above). On Sundays we are happy when arrive more than 20 people. The “vision” of my church is to create a lot of small churches instead of one megachurch. But… we are realizing that the most of people are choosing the megachurches. Is it a bad thing? I’m not sure. We wouldnt like to see any chair empty, obviously. It’s hard to begin a service with 5 people… (despite to know that… “two or three gathered together in my name”…).
So… I would like to thank you for the text. You help me to understand the purpose of church (micro or mega). Thank you for your books… (sorry for my english… I would like to find your books in english to study more)
In Christ,
Gustavo