Study: Christianity Grows Exponentially In Africa By G. Jeffrey MacDonald, Religion News Service

A baptism
A bap­tism

With 2.18 bil­lion adher­ents, Christianity has become a tru­ly glob­al reli­gion over the past cen­tu­ry as rapid growth in devel­op­ing nations off­set declines in Christianity’s tra­di­tion­al strong­holds, accord­ing to a report released Monday. Billed as the most com­pre­hen­sive and reli­able study to date, the Pew Research Center’s “Global Christianity” reports on self-iden­ti­fied Christian pop­u­la­tions based on more than 2,400 sources of infor­ma­tion, espe­cial­ly cen­sus and sur­vey data.

Findings illus­trate major shifts since 1910, when two-thirds of the world’s Christians lived in Europe. Now only one in four Christians live in Europe. Most of the rest are dis­trib­uted across the Americas (37 %), sub-Saharan Africa (24 %) and the Asia-Pacific region (13 %). “In two out of three coun­tries in the world, the major­i­ty of the pop­u­la­tion iden­ti­fies as Christian,” said Conrad Hackett, lead researcher on the “Global Christianity” report. “I had no idea about that. … I was surprised.”

The report con­firms Christianity’s stand­ing as the world’s largest reli­gion, with 32% of the glob­al pop­u­la­tion. Islam is sec­ond with about 23%, accord­ing to a 2009 Pew report.

A close look at the details reveals a few ironies:

• Although Christianity traces its begin­nings to the Middle East and North Africa, only 4% of res­i­dents in these regions claim the Christian faith today.

• Meanwhile, the faith has grown expo­nen­tial­ly in sub-Saharan Africa, from just 9% of the pop­u­la­tion in 1910 to 63% today. Nigeria, home to more than 80 mil­lion Christians, has more Protestants than Germany, where the Protestant Reformation began.

Chris
Christianity in Ethopia

As a result of his­toric mis­sion­ary activ­i­ty and indige­nous Christian move­ments by Africans, there has been this change from about one in 10 (sub-Saharan Africans) iden­ti­fy­ing with Christianity in 1910 to about six in 10 doing so today,” Hackett said.

For its part, Europe is more reli­gious­ly diverse than it was in 1910, when 94% was Christian. Still, Europe has­n’t aban­doned its Christian her­itage, accord­ing to the report. Today, 76% of Europeans self-iden­ti­fy as Christian.

Many peo­ple may have the impres­sion that a small­er per­cent­age of Europe claims to be Christian” than is actu­al­ly the case, Hackett said.

The report also sheds light on the dif­fi­cult ques­tion of how many Chinese are Christians. Researchers have strug­gled to get reli­able num­bers since China’s poli­cies on reli­gion are thought to dis­cour­age Christians from self-iden­ti­fy­ing as such in offi­cial surveys.

Adjusting for such vari­ables, Pew researchers believe Christianity has flour­ished despite a pol­i­cy for­bid­ding Christianity among Communist Party mem­bers. Researchers esti­mate the Christian com­mu­ni­ty in China includes 5% of the pop­u­la­tion, or 67 million.

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