Numbers of adherents;
names of houses of worship;
names of leaders;
rates of growth...
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Number of adherents of world religions:
According to David Barrett et al, editors of the "World
Christian Encyclopedia: A comparative survey of churches and religions - AD
30 to 2200," there are 19 major world religions which are subdivided into a
total of 270 large religious groups, and many smaller ones. 34,000 separate
Christian groups have been identified in the world. "Over half of them are
independent churches that are not interested in linking with the big
denominations." 13 Most people in the world follow one of the religions listed in the table below.
Included is the name of the religion, the approximate date of its origin, its
main sacred or
ethical texts (if any) and its estimated numerical strength (both in absolute numbers and
as a percentage of the world's population.)
These data are based on census or public opinion data.1Thus, a person is considered to be of a
particular religion if they say that they are of that faith. Thus, about 75%
of the adults in both the U.S. and Canada are Christians. Many individuals and
religious groups have much more strict definitions for membership. Many
conservative Christians believe that one has to be "born again"
in order to be counted as a Christian. Using this definition, only about
35% of Americans would be counted as Christians. This difference
in definitions between conservative Christians and the rest of the
population causes much confusion. Some of the approximately 1,000
Christian faith groups in the U.S. and Canada believe themselves to be the
only true Christian denomination. Thus, depending on the definition used,
the percentage of Christians in the U.S. are between 0.1 and 75% of the total
population.
Note 1: Persons with no formal, organized religion include agnostics,
freethinkers, humanists, secularists, etc.
Note 2: We have included Wicca even though their
numbers are small because such a large percentage of our site's visitors are
of that faith. There is no reliable measure of their
numbers. Some Wiccans believe that their faith can be traced back to the
origins of the Celtic people; other suggest it is a
recently created religion.
Note 3: There is no consensus on the data of founding of Judaism.
Some claim that Adam and Eve were the first Jews, and lived circa 4000 BCE;
others suggest that they never existed. Some would place the date at the
time of Abraham, circa 1900 BCE; others consider Abraham to be a mythical
character. Some date it to the Exodus from Egypt circa 1490 BCE; others say
that no Exodus happened, and the ancient Hebrews were originally a group
that gradually separated from the main body of Canaanites and developed a
different culture.
Names of the places of worship and English titles by which local leaders are
called:
We receive many Emails from visitors to this web site about the above data;
some are quite irate.
Many Emails come from Christians who have the impression that
Christianity is rapidly growing around the world and that the number of
Christian adherents is steadily growing as a percentage of the world's total
population. Christianity certainly is growing. Noted Christian author George
Weigel notes that: "There were only 558 million Christians in
the world in 1900 and there will be approximately 2 billion
Christians by the middle of this year [2002], a huge increase."
However, Christianity has been in a very slow decline for years as a percentage of world population.
Weigel states: "...Christians were 34.5 percent
of world population in 1900, and will be 33.1 percent in 2002."
6
We receive many Emails from Muslims and Hindus who honestly believe that
their religion is the largest in the world. The available data seems to
indicate that they are wrong. However, at current rates of change,
Islam will overtake Christianity as the world's
dominant religion later in the 21st
century.
Various information sources are in general agreement that the three largest
religions in the world are currently, in order, Christianity, Islam and
Hinduism.
Numbers of adherent, in billions, are listed as:
Data Source
Christianity
Islam
Hinduism
Adherents.com 10
2.1
1.3
0.9
British Broadcasting Corp. 9
2.0
1.2
0.75
Encyclopedia Britannica Book of the Year (1966) 12
1.9
1.1
0.78
Encyclopedia Britannica Book of the Year (2003) 5
2.0
1.2
0.8
International Bulletin of Missionary Research 11
2.0
1.2
-
Wikipedia Encyclopedia 13
2.1
1.3
0.9
There is reasonable agreement among information sources about the total
number of adherents of the world's largest religions. However, the data should
not be considered precise.
Rate of change of Christians and Muslims:
Of the two largest religions, the "market share" of Christianity appears to
be fairly constant:
U.S. Center for World Mission
estimated in 1997 that the percentage of humans who regard
themselves as Christians rose from 33.7% in 1970 to 33.9% in 1996. 2 Its total
number of adherents is growing at about 2.3% annually. This is approximately equal to the growth
rate of the world's population. Islam is growing faster: about 2.9% and is thus increasing its
market share.
"World Christian Encyclopedia: A comparative
survey of churches and religions - AD 30 to 2200," estimates that as
of 2000, Christians make up 33% of the world's population, with close to
two billion followers.
Author Samuel Huntington disagrees: "The percentage of Christians in the world peaked at about 30 % in the 1980s,
leveled off, is now declining, and will probably approximate to about 25% of the world's
population by 2025. As a result of their extremely high rates of population growth, the
proportion of Muslims in the world will continue to increase dramatically, amounting to 20
percent of the world's population about the turn of the century, surpassing the number of
Christians some years later, and probably accounting for about 30 percent of the world's
population by 2025."
3
The UK Christian Handbook has lower figures. They estimate that
28.3% of the world's population identified themselves as Christians in 1990.
They expect this to drop to 27.7% by the year 2000, and to 27.1 in 2010. 4
They attribute the drop to the lower birth rate among Christians
compared to followers of other religions.
Within Christianity, not all denominations have the same growth rate. Some annual
growth rates are:
Pentecostals: 8.1%
Evangelicals: 5.4%;
All Protestants: 3.3%
Roman Catholics and Others: 1.3%
Since the growth rate of humanity is above 1.4%, the "market
share" of Roman Catholicism and others appears to be slowly dropping.
Missiologist Ralph Winter estimated in early 2001 that there are 680
million "born again" Christians in the world, and that
they are growing at about 7% a year. This represents about 11% of the
world's population and 33% of the total number of Christians. 6
Reference books on world religion:
The ultimate reference book is the two volume monumental
set, World Christian Encyclopedia, released in mid-2001, by Oxford University
Press. It contains 1699 pages with information about religion in the 238
countries of the world:
Greg H. Parsons, Executive Director, "U.S. Center for World Mission,"
Pasadena, CA; quoted in Zondervan News Service, 1997-FEB-21.
Samuel Huntington, "The Clash of Civilizations and the remaking of world
order," Touchstone Books, (1998), Pages 65 to 66. Read reviews
or order this book safely from Amazon.com online book store. This is a controversial
book which argues that world divisions and conflicts in the future will be based on culture, ethnicity
and religion.
Quoted in Religion Today's Current News Summary for 1999-OCT-19.
Data from the World Almanac and Book of Facts, 2004, Page 612.
Derived from the "Encyclopedia Britannica Book of the Year, 2003.
Based on the UN projected world population of 6.301 billion for
mid-2003.
David B. Barrett, et al., "World Christian Encyclopedia : A
Comparative Survey of Churches and Religions in the Modern World," Oxford
University Press, (2001). Read
reviews or order this book