From Denver Catholic
By George Weigel
The annual “Status of Global Christianity” survey published by the International Bulletin of Missionary Research
is a cornucopia of numbers: some are encouraging; others are
discouraging; many of them are important for grasping the nature of this
particular moment in Christian history.
This year’s survey works from a baseline of 1900 A.D., and makes
projections out to 2050. Within that century and a half there’s some
good news about the global human condition that ought to be kept in mind
when remembering the bad news of the 20th century and the early 21st.
For example: in 1900, 27.6 percent of adults in a world population of
1.6 billion were literate. In 2015, 81 percent of the adults in a global
population of 7.3 billion are literate, and the projection is that, by
2050, 88 percent of the adults in a world of 9.5 billion people will be
literate—a remarkable accomplishment.
Of the 7.3 billion human beings on Planet Earth today, 89 percent are
religious believers, while 1.8 percent are professed atheists and
another 9 percent are agnostics: which suggests that Chief Poobah of the
New Atheists Richard Dawkins and his friends are not exactly winning
the day, although their “market share” is up from 1900.
There were some 267 million Catholics in the world in 1900; today,
the world Church counts 1.2 billion members, with a projected growth to
1.6 billion by the middle of the century. Yet in the last quarter of the
20th century Catholicism was displaced by Islam as the world’s largest
religious community, as the global Muslim population grew from 571
million in 1970 to today’s 1.7 billion.
The most extraordinary Christian growth over the past century has
come in Africa: home to 8.7 million Christians in 1900, 542 million
today, and perhaps 1.2 billion by 2050, when there will be as many
African Christians as Latin America and European Christians combined.
Twenty-first century Christianity is also a far more urban reality than a
century ago. In 1900, 29 percent of the world’s Christian population
lived in cities; it’s 65 percent today, although that’s projected to
decline to 59 percent by 2050. But perhaps the most astonishing numbers
in the survey involve Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians. There were
981,000 of these souls in 1900; there are 643,661,000 of them today;
and there are projected to be over 1 billion Charismatics and
Pentecostals in 2050. In raw numbers, then, Charismatic and Pentecostal
Christianity is the fastest growing phenomenon in world religious
history.
These three phenomena—African growth, urbanization and the rise of
Pentecostalism—also help account, I suspect, for the greater
fragmentation of the Christian world. What might be called
entrepreneurial Christianity—founding your own church—is very much a
part of all three, and that helps explain why the number of Christian
denominations grew from 1,600 in 1900 to 45,000 today, with projections
of 70,000 in 2050.
For all the admirable growth noted in the survey, Christianity seems
stuck in something of a rut, if the measure is
Christians-as-a-percentage-of-world-population. Christians were 34.5
percent of global population in 1900, 33.3 percent in 1970, 32.4 percent
in 2000, and 33.4 percent today, with projections to 33.7 percent in
2025 and 36 percent in 2050.
Figuring out how much of this is due to the decline of European
Christianity as a percentage of world Christianity would require
number-crunching beyond my capabilities. But it’s worth noting that, in a
century of dramatic, aggregate Christian growth, European Christianity
had the lowest annualized growth rate (0.16 percent), and the European
share of world Christian population has shrunk from 66 percent in 1900
to 23 percent today—thus raising more questions about the warrant by
which European Christian leaders, Catholic and Protestant, pass judgment
on the pastoral practice of fellow-Christians around the world.
One more disturbing number: according to the survey’s projections,
only 14 percent of non-Christians today know a Christian—a number that
speaks to both the isolation of religious groups from each other and the
failures of evangelization. So there’s a lot of work to do in
fulfilling the Great Commission, especially with those who have no
contact with the faith.
George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy
Center in Washington, D.C. His column is distributed by the Denver
Catholic.
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