You walk into Wednesday night Bible study expecting your usual 20 people. Seven show up.
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Your mind immediately races: What's wrong? What are we doing poorly? Should I cancel tonight?
But here's a question nobody's asking that might change everything: What if those seven people are about to experience something the 23 from last week never could?
What if smaller isn't the problem—it's the opportunity?
Here's how we typically think about small group discipleship: bigger groups mean better groups. More people equals more impact. If attendance is down, ministry is down.
But Jesus modeled something completely different.
He had crowds for teaching, but circles for transformation. The twelve got what the five thousand didn't. Intimacy creates what visibility never can.
"For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them." - Matthew 18:20
Notice Jesus didn't say "where 20 or 30 gather." He understood that God's presence isn't dependent on crowd size but on hearts genuinely gathered in His name.
Summer hits, and suddenly your thriving small groups feel like ghost towns. Here's what typically happens:
The shame spiral begins before the opportunity is even recognized.
Listen carefully: Wanting people to show up isn't wrong. Your frustration at low attendance isn't necessarily wrong either. But when you miss what happens when fewer people show up—that's where the problem lies.
Smaller groups create psychological safety that crowds destroy. Here's what becomes possible when your Bible study shrinks:
People share struggles in a group of seven that they'd never voice in a room of 25. The mask comes off when there's nowhere to hide behind a crowd.
You can actually know names, stories, and real needs. Prayer becomes personal instead of performative. That generic "pray for those who are hurting" transforms into "pray for Sarah's marriage" and "support Mike through his job search."
Those burning questions that would stay buried in bigger settings finally surface. Doubt gets discussed. Faith gets examined. Growth happens.
"Because we loved you so much, we were delighted to share with you not only the gospel of God but our lives as well." - 1 Thessalonians 2:8
Here's your new summer small group strategy: celebrate the intimacy instead of apologizing for the numbers.
The numbers will return in the fall—they always do. (And remember, you're probably taking vacation time too, so extend some grace.)
Instead of shrinking back, lean in:
Here's what most church staff miss: Jesus didn't disciple crowds—he discipled disciples who later discipled crowds.
Deeper beats wider every single time.
Those seven faithful people in your summer Bible study? They're not leftovers from a bigger group. They're potential leaders who could multiply your ministry impact exponentially.
Intimate groups produce confident disciples. Confident disciples create more intimate groups. It's not addition—it's multiplication, and it's happening right under your nose if you lean in this summer.
"Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people." - Acts 2:46-47
Your staff needs to understand this paradigm shift. Don't put everything on hold for summer—actually lean in during this season.
Train your team to see small as strategic, not shameful. Equip them with different tools for intimate settings. Celebrate the deep conversations happening in your ministry, not just the head count.
Help them resist the urge to entertain when they should be connecting.
Small groups aren't failed big groups—they're discipleship laboratories where transformation happens at the speed of trust.
Your faithful few aren't a consolation prize. They're your secret weapon.
Here's what I want you to do: Identify your smallest, most consistent group this week. Instead of trying to grow it, focus on deepening it. Ask yourself: "What can we do with eight people that we could never do with eighty?" Then do that thing.
Don't waste the intimacy by wishing for a crowd.
The deep, life-changing ministry you've been praying for might be sitting right there in your "disappointing" attendance numbers, waiting for you to recognize the opportunity instead of lamenting the obstacle.
What's your experience with small group discipleship during slower seasons? I'd love to hear your story and any insights you've discovered. Email me at podcast@chemistrystaffing.com—I read every message.
If you're struggling with staffing decisions or team development during this season, let's talk. We offer free 30-minute consultations to help church leaders build healthier teams. Just reach out and tell me your story.