Librería Samer Atenea
Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
Kálamo Books
Librería Perelló (Valencia)
Librería Elías (Asturias)
Donde los libros
Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
Most pastors never say it out loud-but many feel it deeply.When did church growth stop being a blessing and start feeling like a burden?When did numbers begin to define faithfulness?And who decided that size determines success?In When Growth Becomes a Burden, veteran pastor and bishop Antonio M. Palmer addresses the quiet pressure pastors carry-especially those leading churches under 100 members in a ministry culture obsessed with metrics, visibility, and comparison.Drawing from over 30 years of pastoral ministry and his current role as a bishop and spiritual father to more than 80 churches, Palmer offers a timely, biblical, and deeply pastoral re-examination of church growth-one rooted not in trends, but in Scripture, wisdom, and lived experience.This is not a book against growth.It is a book against false measures of success.Inside This Book, You’ll Discover:Why numerical size has never been Jesus’ primary metric for evaluating His churchWhat the seven churches of Revelation reveal about faithfulness, health, and obedienceHow the early church actually grew-and why modern models often miss the pointThe hidden strengths of small and mid-sized churches that are frequently overlookedCommon church 'shenanigans' that sabotage healthy growth and burn out pastorsThe difference between quality and quantity-and why discipleship must come firstHow pastors can pursue healthy, Spirit-led growth without pressure to perform or compareWritten for Pastors Who Are:Faithful but discouragedTired of comparison cultureLeading churches that don’t fit the megachurch moldSeeking biblical clarity instead of borrowed strategiesLonging to finish ministry faithful-not famousPalmer writes not as a critic, consultant, or celebrity pastor-but as a shepherd who understands the weight of ministry and the cost of obedience. His voice is seasoned, compassionate, and clear, offering both encouragement and correction without condemnation.