Tuesday, March 13, 2012

CHRISTIANS BY NUMBERS AROUND THE WORLD


 

Report Sees Shift in Global Distribution


 

ROME, DEC. 23, 2011 (Zenit.org).- Christians account for almost a third of the world's population. This was one of the findings in a report published Monday by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.

The data from the 2010 survey of more than 200 countries found that worldwide, there are 2.18 billion Christians, nearly a third of the estimated global population at that time of 6.9 billion.

The report looked at what has changed in the past century. Since 1910 the number of Christians nearly quadrupled, from about 600 million to more than 2 billion. In that time, however, world population rose sharply, from around 1.8 billion in 1910 to 6.9 billion. So, the percentage of Christians dipped a bit, going from 35% to 32%.

Christians, nevertheless, remain the world's largest religious group. Muslims, according to previous studies by the Pew group, account for a bit under a quarter of the world's population.

The survey found that almost half, 48%, of Christians live in the 10 countries with the largest number of Christians. Three of the top 10 countries are in the Americas -- the United States, Brazil and Mexico. Two are in Europe -- Russia and Germany. Two are in the Asia-Pacific region -- the Philippines and China. And three are in sub-Saharan Africa -- Nigeria, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia.

In spite of so many being in a small number of countries, Christians are still a majority of the population in 158 countries and territories, about two-thirds of all the countries and territories in the world.

Distribution shift

The spread of countries reflects a major shift in where Christians are to be found. In 1910, about two-thirds of the world's Christians lived in Europe. A century later only 26% of Christians live in Europe. More than a third are now found in the Americas, 37%. While just under a quarter, 24%, live in sub-Saharan Africa. The Asia-Pacific region accounts for 13%.

Taking Europe and the Americas together these two still make up a majority of Christians, with 63%. That is, however, a notable decline from the 1910 level of 93%. In both regions the numbers of Christians have dropped. In 1910, 95% of Europe's population was Christian, but by 2010 it was only 76%. In the Americas over the same period it went from 96% to 86%.

This decline contrasts with the dramatic change in sub-Saharan Africa. In 1910 only 9% were Christians, but a century later the Christian faith had exploded, making up 63% of the population.

While the overall numbers in Asia and the Pacific are still low, the percentage more than doubled, from 3% to 7%.

The Middle East and North Africa are the regions with the lowest number of Christians. They account for only about 4% of the population, or around 13 million people.

In fact, the report pointed out, there are more Christians in Indonesia, which has a Muslim majority, than there are in all the 20 countries in the Middle East and North Africa.

And the changes in Africa mean that Nigeria now has more than twice as many Protestants as Germany, where the Protestant Reformation originated.

Church groups

There are 1.1 billion Catholics worldwide, according to the report. This means they account for half of the global Christian population.

Brazil is the country with the largest number of Catholics, at 134 million. This means there are more Catholics in Brazil than in Italy, France and Spain combined.

Catholics are a majority of the population in 67 countries. The Americas accounts for 48% of the global number, with almost 40% in Latin America alone. Europe comes second with 24% of the world's Catholics, while sub-Saharan Africa makes up 16% and the Asia-Pacific region has 12%.

The broad definition of Protestants the report uses means they number 801 million worldwide, or 37% of the global Christian population. Protestants form a majority of the total population in 49 countries.

Despite the European origins of the Protestant churches the survey found that only two of the 10 countries with the largest Protestant populations are European.

The country with the largest number of Protestants is the United States, with about 160 million, making up 20% of the worldwide total. Nigeria comes second, with nearly 60 million Protestants, and China is in third place with approximately 58 million.

China, in fact, has the world's seventh-largest Christian population, which the report estimated at 67 million. The report acknowledged the difficulty of obtaining reliable data on religion in China, but according to its results, in Asia only the Philippines, with 87 million, has more Christians.

There are about 260 million Orthodox Christians, the study found, which accounts for 12% of the global Christian population.

Russia is home to the largest group of Orthodox with 39% of them. Ethiopia has the second-largest population, 13.4% of the global number. While Constantinople is the seat of the Patriarch of Constantinople, Turkey's Orthodox population is small, at about 180,000. Despite Ethiopia's large numbers Europe remains the center of Orthodox Christianity, with 77% of the global numbers.

The report gives a more precise idea of what observers have been commenting on in recent years regarding the shift of Christianity to the Global South. The rapid growth of Christians in Africa and China will likely contine.


 

Dates

War in Which American Colonists or
United States Citizens Officially Participated

Major Combatants

July 4, 1675 -
August 12, 1676

King Philip's War

New England Colonies vs. Wampanoag, Narragansett, and Nipmuck Indians

1689-1697

King William's War

The English Colonies vs. France

1702-1713

Queen Anne's War War of Spanish Succession)

The English Colonies vs. France

1744-1748

King George's War (War of Austrian Succession)

The French Colonies vs. Great Britain

1756-1763

French and Indian War(Seven Years War)

The French Colonies vs. Great Britain

1759-1761

Cherokee War

English Colonists vs. Cherokee Indians

1775-1783

American Revolution

English Colonists vs. Great Britain

1798-1800

Franco-American Naval War

United States vs. France

1801-1805; 1815

Barbary Wars

United States vs. Morocco, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli

1812-1815

War of 1812

United States vs. Great Britain

1813-1814

Creek War

United States vs. Creek Indians

1836

War of Texas Independence

Texas vs. Mexico

1846-1848

Mexican-American War

United States vs. Mexico

1861-1865

U.S. Civil War

Union vs. Confederacy

1898

Spanish-American War

United States vs. Spain

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1914-1918

World War I

Triple Alliance: Germany, Italy, and Austria-Hungary vs. Triple Entente: Britain, France, and Russia. The United States joined on the side of the Triple Entente in 1917.

1939-1945

World War II

Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan vs. Major Allied Powers: United States, Great Britain, France, and Russia

1950-1953

Korean War

United States (as part of the United Nations) and South Korea vs. North Korea and Communist China

1960-1975

Vietnam War

United States and South Vietnam vs. North Vietnam

1961

Bay of Pigs Invasion

United States vs. Cuba

1983

Grenada

United States Intervention

1989

US Invasion of Panama

United States vs. Panama

1990-1991

Persian Gulf War

United States and Coalition Forces vs. Iraq

1995-1996

Intervention in Bosnia and Herzegovina

United States as part of NATO acted peacekeepers in former Yugoslavia

2001

Invasion of Afghanistan

United States and Coalition Forces vs. the Taliban regime in Afghanistan to fight terrorism.

2003

Invasion of Iraq

United States and Coalition Forces vs. Iraq

Source: The New York Public Library Desk Reference, 3rd Edition.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

women's history month


 

                                        By Harry E. Berndt


 


 

Watching my grandson's wife, I suppose she is my granddaughter-in-law, I was struck by the fact that she is eight months pregnant and very beautiful. It occurred to me that this is March, the month set aside to honor women and their accomplishments. I don't recall, however, reading about giving birth as one of women's accomplishments. It is just something that we seem to take for granted. But thinking about it caused me to think more about women and what they mean to all societies.


 

Many women each year die during pregnancy or childbirth. Knowing that it is possible that one may die in the process of bringing a child into the world indicates something about women that is seldom mentioned. Women are courageous. In addition to life endangerment, pregnancy can be and often is uncomfortable. Women face the discomfort courageously. The postpartum experience can be terribly painful, causing anxiety and even suicide. And, after all of that, many women become pregnant again – and even again and again. Women are courageous.


 

Around the world today there are wars caused by men. Women and the children women protect and try and keep safe are most often the victims. Often, women give their lives to protect their children from the horrors caused by men. Women are in the forefront of anti-war demonstrations and are often abused, imprisoned, or worse for their convictions. Women have always been in the forefront of human rights activities and have suffered abuse there, also. All of this takes courage.


 

By now, the twenty first century, it is well known that women can do almost anything that men can do. Women can be warriors, for example, and some are, but they are more likely to be nurturers. It is right that we point to the accomplishments of women in science, law, medicine and the arts, but we should not forget that above all else, women are courageous. In the United States, we often hear about men opening up the West. Had not women been willing to face the dangers of childbirth, often without the care of either doctors or even midwives, we would still be in Pittsburgh. It has always taken courage for women to be our mothers and wives and to make our societies civilized places in which to live. So, in this month set aside to honor women's accomplishments, let us honor their courage.


 

March 8, 2012

Cardinal Dolan, the Christian Evangelicals, and the Republican Party claim that there is an attack in this country on "Freedom of Religion". I see no evidence of such an attack, including the mandate from the Department of Health and Human Services. On the other hand, there is ample evidence of an attack on "Women's Rights" from all of the above. (Women in Texas Losing Options for Health Care in Abortion Fight. NYTimes March 7, 2012)

Harry E. Berndt