The Seventh-day Adventist Church claims 22.8 million members worldwide.
Global Sabbath attendance: approximately 9 million.
That means 60% of members on the books are not present on any given Sabbath. In North America, it may be worse — possibly fewer than 20% of book members attend regularly, though only 60% of NAD churches even report attendance figures.
In the Inter-American Division, only 21% of registered members show up for Sabbath services.
The church lacks a standardised definition of 'active' membership, a systematic process for auditing rolls, or a reporting framework that distinguishes engaged members from names on paper.
This isn't just a statistical curiosity. It affects everything:
- Governance: Constituency meetings elect leaders based on membership numbers. But if 60% of those members are disengaged, who exactly is being represented? - Resource allocation: Budgets calculated on per-member figures are based on phantom numbers. - Strategic planning: You can't plan for a church you can't accurately measure.
Some divisions clean their rolls regularly. Others don't. The result is a membership number that looks impressive in Annual Statistical Reports but bears limited relationship to the actual worshipping community.
22.8 million is the number we report. 9 million is the number that shows up.
Which number should we be planning around?