List of the largest evangelical churches
This list of the largest evangelical megachurches contains evangelical Christian megachurches by weekly attendance. Large churches from other denominations, like Catholicism, are not included as they are not deemed to belong to the megachurch phenomenon which by definition is part of Protestantism. The list is not exhaustive, there are large annual changes, and there are difficulties to compare the churches as different methods to count can be used.
Characteristics
[edit]The term megachurch is used for churches with regular attendance of 2,000 people. When it has more than 10,000 people who gather together, the term gigachurch is sometimes used.[1][2][3]
Statistics
[edit]Exponential counts 270 evangelical megachurches worldwide (excluding Canada and the United States). [4] The Hartford Institute counts over 1,800 megachurches in the United States [5] and 35 in Canada.[6]
Outreach Magazine is a magazine which publishes annually a list of evangelical Christian megachurches in USA.[7]
Data accuracy
[edit]The numbers reported are not accurate by any means, as attendance and membership may be defined very differently.[8] Attendance may include people that are not legally members of the church, not baptised, non-believers, children, and may even belong to other churches. Some churches include their, sometimes loosely, affiliated churches in other places and even people that attend by electronic media. As many have several services on one day, there may be some overlap, with people attending more than one service. The exact number of people is seldom counted,[citation needed] thus estimation errors can occur. There is an obvious psychological boost from reporting growing numbers, "success", for enhanced credibility and motivation to support the work. The megachurches may quite be different from traditional evangelical congregations where clear membership records are maintained, to define who has legal right to vote in the church assembly, who can be appointed to public offices and who belongs to the flock under direct pastoral care, and the pastor can often be replaced. The megachurches are often formed around a strong leader that stays in charge for decades, it is often like his "own personal enterprise", many times with limited economic transparency, a tendency that has been questioned in various countries.[9][10][11] In notable cases the headship has been passed on from father to son, like in Lakewood Church. Many megachurches have had an affiliation to a denomination, but have become independent, thus outside the denominational supervision that is common for non-independent congregations. Thus, in cases of irregularities, a pastor may continue without disciplinary measures, due to their sheer power, and any disappointed members may leave but new people keep coming in, with reduced effect on attendance.[12]
Hence, due to inaccuracies, the same church can sometimes be reported to have attendance and membership counts that differ 5–10 times, depending on how reporting is done and who is doing it, e.g. Yoido Full Gospel Church can sometimes be mentioned with attendance numbers over 800,000.[13]
List
[edit]The list below is of the largest Evangelical megachurches with weekly attendance of more than 30,000 people.
See also
[edit]- List of the largest evangelical church auditoriums
- List of megachurches in the United States
- Worship service (evangelicalism)
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Alicia Budich, cbsnews.com, From Megachurch to "Gigachurch", USA, April 6, 2012
- ^ Ed Stetzer, Megachurch Research - Terminology, Christian Today, USA, October 9, 2008
- ^ Ruth Gledhill,Church growth: World's largest churches are getting bigger, Christian Today, USA, September 08, 2016
- ^ Warren Bird, World Megachurches, exponential.org, accessed February 5, 2025
- ^ Hartford Institute, Database of Megachurches in the U.S., hirr.hartfordinternational.edu, USA, accessed February 5, 2025
- ^ Hartford Institute, Megachurches of Canada, hartfordinstitute.org, USA, accessed February 5, 2025
- ^ a b c d e Outreach Magazine, 2023 Largest Participating Churches, outreach100.com, USA, retrieved November 2, 2023
- ^ Do Pastors Exaggerate Attendance Figures?
- ^ Kathy Lohr, Senator Probes Megachurches' Finances, npr.org, DECEMBER 4, 2007
- ^ JESSILYN LANCASTER, Controversial Megachurch Pastor Won't Discuss Finances Because of Jesus, charismanews.com, November 12, 2015
- ^ Nicola Menzie, Are Prosperity Preachers Destroying the Traditional Black Church? A Review of 'Black Church Inc', christianpost.com, June 24, 2014
- ^ Jeremy Weber, Will Europe's Third-Largest Church Punish Pastor for Multiple Affairs?, christianitytoday.com, USA, May 17, 2016
- ^ "O come all ye faithful". The Economist. Special Report on Religion and Public Life. 3 November 2007. p. 6. Retrieved 5 November 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Warren Bird, World Megachurches, exponential.org, accessed February 5, 2025
- ^ Michael Brown, How one church In India provided more than 3 million meals during the pandemic, christianpost.com, 26 May 2020
Sources
[edit]- Content on this page has been translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr:Liste de megachurches évangéliques; see its history for attribution.
- "Megachurches". Hartford Institute. 2025. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
- "World Megachurches". Exponential. 2025. Retrieved 2025-02-15.
Further reading
[edit]- Sébastien Fath. Dieu XXL, la révolution des mégachurches. France: Édition Autrement, 2008.