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Press
release about FACT2005
Megachurch Project
United
States Has More Megachurches Than Previously Thought
New
research shows 50 percent more megachurches in the United States
than previously thought.
Initial
analysis of a cooperative project to survey all megachurches in the
United States by Scott
Thumma of Hartford Seminary’s Hartford
Institute for Religion Research, and Dave Travis and Warren
Bird of Leadership Network uncovered at least 1,200 Protestant
churches that claim more than 2,000 weekly worship attenders.
This
figure is nearly 50 percent more than the figure of 850 commonly
assumed and quoted by both organizations and other researchers of
very large churches.
“I
would never have guessed that either of our groups could have missed
so many additional megachurches,” said Thumma, a professor of
sociology at Hartford Seminary who specializes in the study of such
churches.
Many
of the new congregations were uncovered when the two groups, which
both keep separate lists of megachurches, compared their records.
Each group knew of different sets of congregations, with the
two lists overlapping on about 600 churches.
It was the names of those that did not overlap that pushed
the total list to just over the 1,200 mark.
“Our
preliminary research for the major survey effort indicates there
could very well be another 200 to 400 megachurches in addition to
these,” Bird said. “We’ll have to see what information the
questionnaires return to know for sure.”
The
2005 Megachurches Today questionnaires are being mailed and emailed
to more than 1,700 very large congregations this coming week.
“We
hope and pray that each megachurch that receives a survey will fill
it out and return it so that we can help correct misperceptions and
better network these churches with each other," said Travis.
There
are many misconceptions about megachurches in the minds of the
general public, he said. This new study, which will be repeated at
least every two years, will shed new light on the megachurch
phenomenon that generates such attention from the media and the
religious world alike. For
more information about this survey visit the website http://hirr.hartsem.edu/megachurch/megachurchresearch.html.
Preliminary
analysis shows that the 1,200 churches represent three tenths of one
percent of all congregations. They account for more than four
million weekly attenders, however, and possibly as many as 8 to 12
million members. This pattern supports what Mark Chaves noted in his
recent book, that “the largest 10% of congregations contain about
half of all churchgoers” (Congregations in America,
pp.18-19).
There
are megachurches in 45 out of 50 states.
The states with the most megachurches are Texas with 174
(14%), California with 169 (13.7%), Florida with 83 (6.7%) and
Georgia with 64 (5.2%). Houston and Dallas alone account for 56
megachurches or 4.5% of the total.
In
terms of affiliation, the greatest number of megachurches are
Nondenominational or Southern Baptist, followed to a lesser percent
by the Assemblies of God, the Presbyterian Church USA, and the
United Methodist Church. These are preliminary indications in the
data. Much more will be
known with certainty as the questionnaires come in and are
processed.
Considerable
research on megachurches can be found at the Hartford Institute
website at http://hirr.hartsem.edu/org/faith_megachurches.html.
Thumma has been researching megachurches since 1988 and is
considered one of the leading scholars in this area.
He maintains an online database of what he formerly
considered to be most of the megachurches in the country.
His extensive online database is now being updated to include
the new information.
The
Leadership Network (www.leadnet.org)
is the foremost networking and resource organization in the country
for very large churches and their leadership. Since 1984 its mission
has been to identify, connect and help high-capacity Christian
leaders multiply their impact. Dave Travis is Senior Vice President
of the Leadership Network. Warren
Bird is Leadership Network’s Director of Leadership Community
Intellectual Capital Support as well as a prolific author.
For
further information, please contact Scott Thumma at sthumma@hartsem.edu
or Warren Bird
at warren.bird@leadnet.org.
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