The Kingdom Reformation Show

The Church Size Distraction


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The church-size debate resurfaces like clockwork. Every few years, it makes another lap around the evangelical world and we all jump back into our corners.

“Bigger is better.”

“Smaller is deeper.”

“Mega reaches cities.”

“Micro builds community.”

We chase metrics. We defend models. We argue strategy as if the Kingdom of God rises or falls on square footage and seating capacity.

But here’s what I’ve seen over and over again, across multiple nations and cultures: you can hide in a crowd of 5,000 just as easily as you can hide in a living room of 12. Size doesn’t automatically produce depth. And intimacy doesn’t automatically produce transformation.

The conversation feels strategic and intelligent, but it often allows us to debate something measurable while avoiding something far more confronting. The real issue isn’t whether your gathering looks like a stadium event or a family reunion. The real issue is what actually happens to people when they show up.

Are they being equipped? Or simply hosted?

Paul didn’t write to the Ephesians about optimizing formats or refining attendance analytics. In Ephesians 4, he described apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers doing one central thing: equipping the saints for the work of ministry. The leadership gifts were never meant to perform ministry on behalf of the church while everyone else watched. Their role was to prepare the Body to carry the mission.

The word Paul used—katartismos—is rich with meaning. It describes setting a bone back into place or mending a torn net so it can function again. It’s about restoring something to full strength and preparing it for purpose. That’s the image he chose to describe what leaders are supposed to do for believers.

This reframes the entire discussion. The question is not how impressive the gathering looks or how intimate it feels. The question is whether people are becoming spiritually functional—ready to serve, ready to go, ready to build up the Body in love.

Maturity can emerge in an arena. It can also emerge in a basement. And both settings can just as easily produce spectators instead of disciples if equipping is absent.

If we don’t return to that mandate, we’ll keep arguing about size while neglecting substance.

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The Kingdom Reformation ShowBy Glenn Bleakney