Worship
The Cheapest Growth Lever Your Small Church Already Owns
100 Strong · July 1, 2026
Photo by John Price on Unsplash
Ask people why they came back to church last Sunday, and you'll hear some version of the same thing: "I had such a good experience last week, I wanted to come back." That's it. Not a dazzling light show, not a famous preacher, not a perfect band. A good experience.
Here's the tension so many of us feel in an under-100 church. We look at bigger churches with their staff, their sound systems, and their production budgets, and we quietly assume the weekend just isn't where we can compete. But the single most powerful attendance lever in the room costs you nothing but intention. Let's talk about it.
Hope is the number one thing that attracts people
When researchers look at what churches that attract people actually have in common, the answer isn't their theology or their denomination. It's a worship theme of hope and optimism. That is the most common trait, and it's the cheapest, most repeatable lever a small church has.
Think about what that means. You don't need a bigger building to preach hope. You don't need a worship team of ten. You need to decide, week after week, that people will leave your service on a note of hope. That's a leadership duty, not a personality trait. Even a preacher having a hard week can choose to send people home believing God is at work.
Make the dominant tone of your preaching positive, encouraging, and faith-building. That one decision moves the needle more than almost anything else you could buy.
Make your preaching visitor-oriented
Below 100 members, your church grows mostly through relationships. But as you approach and pass 100, Sunday morning becomes the front door, and the service has to carry weight it didn't before. Start preparing now.
Aim your message so a not-yet-believer can follow it and respond. Drop the insider jargon that quietly tells guests they don't belong. As you grow toward 75, designate one weekly service as primarily evangelistic and shape it with guests in mind. You're not watering anything down. You're making sure the person who's furthest from God can actually understand what you're saying.
Title your series around real-life needs
Here's a practical surprise: a felt-need sermon series can lift attendance by about 20% in four weeks, and it's the title, not the content, that draws the unchurched in.
So plan series whose titles answer real questions people are actually carrying: worry, money, marriage, loneliness, purpose. When a member wants to invite a friend, an inviting title gives them something to point to. The message underneath can be as biblical as ever. The title is simply the door.
Run a service flow that lowers anxiety
A guest walks in nervous. Your job is to lower that anxiety at every step. Sequence the hour with that person in mind: easy parking, warm greeters, accessible language, a strong welcoming first fifteen minutes, and low-pressure response options that don't put anyone on the spot.
Create your free 100 Strong account to turn ideas like these into a clear plan. Track your weekly numbers, get a personalized next step, and walk the proven path to 100+ members. No cost, ever.
Create my free accountThose first fifteen minutes are the crucial window. And start on time. It sounds small, but starting on time communicates that you respect people and you're ready for them. A helpful planning checklist is the three E's: Environment, Experience, and Encounter. Walk through your service and ask whether each one is really happening.
Build worship from your own week, not someone else's
Don't copy the church down the road or the one you watch online. Your service should flow from the real lives of the people in your room. What are they carrying this week? What would meet them?
The key ingredient isn't production polish. It's inspired and inspiring worshippers. Vibrant, thought-provoking worship is a consistent marker of spiritually vital congregations, and that vitality comes from authenticity, not equipment. Scale your service format to the musicians and tech you actually have, and let it be genuinely yours.
Watch the 80% line
Here's a number that quietly caps churches: when a room is 80% full, it is full. A packed sanctuary tells guests "there's no room for you," and a church usually won't grow past about 85% of its seating capacity.
So watch that line before it becomes a wall. The fix belongs to you: add a service, add a second worship style, or add a site. One caution though. Generally, don't split into two services until you're over about 200, or you risk losing momentum by spreading a small crowd too thin. Expand capacity before the growth arrives, not after.
Let your people help
You don't have to carry the weekend alone. In small churches, lay sermon-prep and sermon-evaluation committees genuinely work, and they raise both quality and diversity. Scheduling two different preachers across weeks or services meets a wider range of needs, because the real issue in preaching often isn't size, it's diversity.
One more encouragement to keep going: as attendance grows, so does everything else. A church averaging 180 typically receives more than double the giving of one averaging 100. A stronger weekend fuels the whole ministry.
What to do next
Start with the lever that costs nothing. Preach hope this Sunday, on purpose. Then look at your next series title, walk your service flow through a guest's eyes, and quietly do the math on your seating. If you want help pinpointing where you are, the assessment at /assessment and the milestones at /milestones will show you which of these moves matters most right now.
Your challenge this week
Before you finalize Sunday's message, write one sentence naming the note of hope people will carry home. Then build the ending of your sermon around delivering it.
