By Charlotte Kramon
The Associated Press/Report for America

ATLANTA (AP) โ€” After Atlanta pastor Philip Anthony Mitchell stopped dwelling on growing his congregation about three years ago, its attendance surged. Now, lines packed with young adults snake outside 2819 Church, some arriving as early as 5:30 a.m. to secure a spot for Sunday worship.

Christian rap and contemporary music blast like a block party as volunteers cheer into megaphones for around 6,000 weekly churchgoers โ€” up from fewer than 200 in 2023, the church reports. Inside the sanctuary, the atmosphere turns serious. Many drawn to 2819โ€™s riveting worship are hungry for Mitchellโ€™s animated intensity and signature preaching: No sugarcoating the Bible.

After spirited prayers and songs leave many crying, Mitchell ambles onstage in his all-black uniform, sometimes in quiet contemplation or tears, before launching into a fiery sermon. His messages, unpolished and laden with challenges to revere God and live better, often spread quickly online. A recent prayer event drew far more people than State Farm Arena could handle, with many flying in.

Pastor Philip Anthony Mitchell preaches at 2819 Church on Nov. 16, 2025, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

Crying, shouting, storming across the platform and punching the air, Mitchell preaches with his whole body โ€” and an urgency to bring people to faith before they die or what he calls Jesusโ€™ impending return to Earth.

โ€œIt is life or death for me,โ€ Mitchell told The Associated Press, comparing preaching to the front lines of war. โ€œThere are souls that are hanging in the balance. โ€ฆ I think about the fact that in that room somebody might hear the Gospel, and that might be their last opportunity.โ€

The church โ€” whose name references Matthew 28:19, a Bible verse commanding believers to go โ€œmake disciples of all the nationsโ€ โ€” is nondenominational and theologically conservative, with beliefs opposing abortion and in support of marriage only between a man and a woman.

The congregationโ€™s growth has attracted people of many races and ages, but itโ€™s predominantly young Black adults. Their youth is notable since Americans ages 18 to 24 are less likely than older adults to identify as Christian or attend religious services regularly, according to Pew Research Center.

Sharp sermons and moving worship

Warren Bird, an expert on fast-growing churches, believes the right leader is key to a churchโ€™s growth โ€” along with Godโ€™s help โ€” and described Mitchell as โ€œspeaking a languageโ€ that connects with young people who other pastors havenโ€™t reached.

Churchgoers say Mitchellโ€™s message resonates because he carefully walks them through scripture and talks candidly about his spiritual transformation, including his past dealing drugs, paying for abortions and attempting suicide.

โ€œIโ€™m still a little rough around the edges, right? I still got a little hood in me,โ€ said Mitchell, who still speaks with a regional New York accent.

Many at 2819 want more than motivational speeches and say Mitchellโ€™s sermons are counterweights to the feel-good American preaching he criticizes.

โ€œIโ€™m preaching without watering that down, without filtering out things that we think might be too controversial,โ€ said Mitchell, who wants people to mature spiritually and insists they canโ€™t deal with sin and its consequences without Jesus.

โ€œI think that there is a generation that is gravitating towards that authenticity and truth,โ€ he said. โ€œAs a result of that, we are seeing lives being radically transformed.โ€

Christian podcaster Megan Ashley said she brought a friend to 2819 who had stepped away from her faith, and Mitchell had an impact. The friend told Ashley, โ€œWhen he speaks, I believe him.โ€

Brandi Porter, left, and Kennedy Onley, right, engage in a call and response with churchgoers as they wait in line on Nov. 16, 2025, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

The tougher messages might hurt some peopleโ€™s feelings, said Donovan Logan, 23.

โ€œBut thatโ€™s what itโ€™s supposed to do. If you donโ€™t come to church and want to change, then thatโ€™s not the church youโ€™re supposed to be going to,โ€ Logan said.

Elijah McCord, 22, said Mitchellโ€™s sermons about sin touch on whatโ€™s happening around him in Atlanta, and Mitchellโ€™s story shows that โ€œthereโ€™s life in what God has commanded.โ€ He also values Mitchellโ€™s pleadings to wait until marriage to have sex.

โ€œHe biblically talks about sin and repentance and how thereโ€™s actually hope in the Gospel,โ€ McCord said.

Churchgoers say 2819โ€™s draw goes beyond Mitchell. Itโ€™s the entire worship experience.

Passing the dancing greeters, the Sunday crowd enters the dark auditorium. Itโ€™s permeated with prayer and bold instrumental music before the service, which 2819 calls a gathering, officially begins, with hands already lifted amid shouts of praise. Tissue boxes sit at the end of aisles, ready to aid those moved to tears.

โ€œThe worship is crazy. The Holy Spirit is just there. Like, tangible presence. You feel it!โ€ said Desirae Dominguez, 24.

Mitchell feels โ€˜ill-equippedโ€™ to lead 2819

Mitchell spent 10 years preaching, racking up unfruitful notes from church growth conferences, and eventually started struggling with depression. During that time, he took a transformative trip to Israel where he said encounters with God and other Christians changed him. Then, in 2023, he changed the churchโ€™s name to 2819.

Mitchell, who has spent three years preaching just from the Book of Matthew alone, said God told him to preach without bringing prepared notes onstage. Although he attended Bible college, he sometimes doubts himself because of his past.

โ€œI shed a lot of tears because I feel often ill-equipped, undeserving,โ€ said Mitchell. โ€œI would not have called me if I was God to steward something like this, and sometimes I donโ€™t know why my preaching is reaching (people). โ€ฆ Iโ€™m still shocked myself.โ€

When preparing to preach, โ€œIโ€™m thinking about the brokenness of the people in the room, the troubled marriages, the one who is suicidal. Iโ€™m thinking about the young lady whoโ€™s battling crippling insecurities and donโ€™t know that she has a father up there that loves her more than any man sheโ€™s going to find down here.โ€

When not preaching, Mitchellโ€™s demeanor is quieter. He and his staff are โ€œhere to serve,โ€ he often says.

His large online platform exposes him and sometimes his family to public critique, pushback, and even threats. Some accuse him of self-righteousness or say heโ€™s too harsh. He also issued a public apology earlier this year for comments in a sermon about obeying authority that were seen as dismissive of police brutality.

At times, he says he is deeply affected by criticism and said he repents for some of what critics decried. But Mitchell also finds solace in better understanding Jesus by enduring it.

Staff constantly adjusts for growth

The church recently moved into its own building, having outgrown the charter school where they held the services, and added a third one. On the first two Sundays at the new location, they added an impromptu fourth gathering because so many people came.

The staff faced similar conundrums at Access, the churchโ€™s October prayer event that drew an estimated 40,000 people. State Farm Arena was filled to capacity, as was an overflow space in a nearby convention center, leaving thousands outside, the church reported.

โ€œWeโ€™re constantly tinkering. Weโ€™re constantly fixing things,โ€ said Tatjuana Phillips, 2819โ€™s ministries director.

Logistical challenges, such as packed parking lots and swamped staff, are common at fast-growing churches, said Bird, the church growth expert.

Despite its size, the church encourages community through its small groups, called โ€œsquads,โ€ that give about 1,700 people a place to discuss sermons and support each otherโ€™s personal growth. Staff also engage with about 75,000 people weekly who watch gatherings online.

The long lines also yield friendships. Ashley Grimes, 35, said thatโ€™s where sheโ€™s โ€œmet so many brothers and sisters in Christ that I now get to do life with.โ€

Many of those new friends can be found shuffling into the churchโ€™s auditorium on Sundays while volunteers, called servant leaders, pray over each seat before Mitchell preaches.

On a recent Sunday, Mitchell told the crowd that they can turn to Jesus regardless of what theyโ€™ve done. It worked for him. God, he said, โ€œused failure to transform my life.โ€

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This story corrects that the school where gatherings were held was a charter school.

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Kramon is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APโ€™s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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