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Major Religions of the World
Ranked by Number of Adherents

Last modified 6 September 2002.
(Sizes shown are approximate estimates, and are
here mainly for the purpose of ordering the groups, not providing a definitive
number. This list is sociological/statistical in perspective.)
- Christianity: 2 billion
- Islam: 1.3 billion
- Hinduism: 900 million
- Secular/Nonreligious/Agnostic/Atheist: 850
million
- Buddhism: 360 million
- Chinese traditional religion: 225 million
- primal-indigenous: 150 million
- African Traditional & Diasporic: 95 million
- Sikhism: 23 million
- Juche: 19 million
- Spiritism: 14 million
- Judaism: 14 million
- Baha'i: 6 million
- Jainism: 4 million
- Shinto: 4 million
- Cao Dai: 3 million
- Tenrikyo: 2.4 million
- Neo-Paganism: 1 million
- Unitarian-Universalism: 800 thousand
- Rastafarianism: 700 thousand
- Scientology: 600 thousand
- Zoroastrianism: 150 thousand
The adherent counts presented in the list above are
estimates of the number of people who have at least a minimal level of
self-identification as adherents of the religion. Levels of participation vary
within all groups. These numbers tend toward the high end of reasonable
worldwide estimates. Valid arguments can be made for different figures, but if
the same criteria are used for all groups, the relative order should be the
same. Further details and sources are available below and in the Adherents.com
main database.
This listing is not a comprehensive list of all religions, only the
"major" ones (as defined below). There are distinct religions other
than the ones listed above. But this list accounts for the religions of over 98%
of the world's population. Below are listed some religions
which are not in this listing (Mandeans, PL Kyodan, Ch'ondogyo, Vodoun, New
Age, Seicho-No-Ie, Falun Dafa/Falun Gong, Taoism, Roma), along with explanations
for why they do not qualify as major world religions on this list.
This world religions listing is derived from the statistics data in the Adherents.com
database. The list was created by the same people who collected and organized
this database, in consultation with university professors of comparative
religions and scholars from different religions. We invite additional input. The
Adherents.com collection of religious adherent statistics now has over 34,000
adherent statistic citations, for over 3,000 different faith groups, covering
all countries of the world. This is not an absolutely exhaustive compilation of
all such data, but it is by far the largest compilation available on the
Internet. Various academic researchers and religious representatives regularly
share documented adherent statistics with Adherents.com so that their
information can be available in a centralized database.
Statistics and geography citations for religions not on this list, as
well as subgroups within these religions (such as Catholics, Protestants,
Karaites, Wiccans, Shiites, etc.) can be found in the main Adherents.com
database.
This document is divided into the following sections:
Main list of major religions of the world
Brief explanation/introduction
Links to alternative lists of world religions
The Classical World Religions List
Parameters of this list
Parameter 1: What is a religion? (for this
list)
-- Classical World Religions Ranked by Internal
Religious Similarity
Parameter 2: How is size determined? (for this list)
Brief discussion of how the size and boundaries of
specific religions was determined
Religious groups not included on the
main list
Alternative summary listings of major world religions and numbers of
adherents:
The Classical World Religions List
There are twelve classical world religions. This is the list of religions
described most often in surveys of the subject, and studied in World Religion
classes (some of them more for historical rather than contemporary reasons):
- Baha'i
- Buddhism
- Christianity
- Confucianism
- Hinduism
- Islam
- Jainism
- Judaism
- Shinto
- Sikhism
- Taoism
- Zoroastrianism
The "World's Major Religions" list published in the New York Public
Library Student's Desk Reference is typical of world religion lists which
are functionally-oriented, yet still strongly classical (New York:
Prentice Hall, 1993; pg. 271):
- Baha'i
- Buddhism
- Confucianism
- Hinduism
- Islam
- Judaism
- Orthodox Eastern Church
- Protestantism
- Catholicism
- Shinto
- Taoism
In modern Western thought, the first writers to divide the world into
"world religions" were Christians. Originally, three religions were
recognized: Christians, Jews and pagans (i.e., everybody else).
After many centuries, with the increased Western awareness of Eastern history
and philosophy, and the development of Islam, other religions were added to the
list. Many Far Eastern ways of thought, in fact, were given the status of
"world religion" while equally advanced religious cultures in
technologically less developed or pre-literate societies (such as in Australia,
Africa, South America, and Polynesia) were grouped together as pagans or
"animists," regardless of their actual theology. It's true that by the
standards applied at the time, the Far Eastern religions Westerners encountered
were often in a different category altogether than the religions they classified
as pagan. One can not directly compare, for example, the local beliefs of the
Polynesian islands of Kiribati during the 1500s to the organizational,
political, literary and philosophical sophistication of Chinese Taoism during
the same period. But one could certainly question whether Japanese Shintoism, as
an official "world religion", was theologically or spiritually more
"advanced" than African Yoruba religion, which was classified simply
as animism or paganism.
During the 1800s comparative religion scholars increasingly recognized Judaism,
Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism as the most significant "world
religions." Even today, these are considered the "Big Five"
and are the religions most likely to be covered in world religion books.
Five smaller or more localized religions/philosophies brought the list of world
religions to ten: Confucianism, Taoism, Jainism, Shinto and Zoroastrianism.
Beginning around 1900 comparative religion writers in England began to take note
of the Sikhs which had begun to immigrate there from India (part of the British
Empire at the time). Sikhs, if mentioned at all, had been classified as a sect
of Hinduism during the first three hundred years of their history. But after the
influential British writers began to classify Sikhism as a distinct, major world
religion, the rest of the world soon followed their example.
Baha'is are the most recent entrant to the "Classical" list. The
religion is only about 150 years old, with perhaps up to 7 million adherents
worldwide. While most comparative religion textbooks produced during this
century either ignore them or group them as a Muslim sect, the most recent books
give them separate status and often their own chapter. Baha'is have achieved
this status partially through their worldwide geographical spread and increasing
numbers, and partially by constantly insisting that they are indeed the
"newest world religion."
The classical set of twelve is not necessarily the most accurate reflection of
the present, real-world religious situation. (This fact is briefly addressed
below.) We agree with the prominent comparative religion scholar Irving Hexham
(an Evangelical Christian, and a professor at the University of Calgary) who
wrote:
...there is an overemphasis on certain narrowly defined
academic traditions in Religious Studies to the neglect of studies dealing
with religion as it actually occurs in the world. In other words academics are
happy to study other academics regardless of what is actually happening in
everyday life. Thus, for example... I believe that the founder of [the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints], Joseph Smith, is a far more influential
figure and deserves as much attention as the father of modern theology,
Freidrich Schleiermacher, yet current textbooks and course offerings
invariably mention Schleiermacher but rarely pay any attention to Joseph
Smith. By recognizing the importance of living religions, popular piety and
sociological studies I hope more balance will enter Religious Studies. [Source:
Irving Hexham, Concise
Dictionary of Religion, 1998.]
The Adherents.com "Major Religions" list presented on this web page
differs from classical lists because it draws more from an extremely large body
of contemporary affiliation data, rather than relying heavily on the lists and
texts of past commentators (Hudson Smith, Noss, Barrett, etc.).
There are many distinct religions or religious movements which have more
adherents than some of the classical world religions, but which are not part
of the classical list for various reasons. These reasons include:
- the religions which are not included on the classical list are too new
(Scientology, Neo-Paganism)
- they are concentrated in only one country (Cao Dai, Ch'ondogyo,
Tenrikyo)
- they lack identifiable central organizations or unifying scriptural
literature (Neo-Paganism, New Age, Spiritism)
- their adherents primarily name a different, more established
traditional religion as their religious preference (most practitioners
of Vodoun are nominal Catholics, practitioners of New Age religions are
often nominally Protestant, Catholic or Jewish)
- their religion is still strongly associated with a major religion
from which it arose, but no longer wishes to be an official part of (Tenrikyo
and many other Japanese New Religious Movements, as well as many religions
emerging from Indian/Hindu environments)
Parameters of this List
In order to rank religions by size, two parameters must be defined:
- What constitutes a "religion"?
- How is "size" determined?
With a working definition of "a religion" and a method for measuring
size, criteria for what constitutes a "major" religion must be
determined, otherwise this list could be impractically inclusive and long.
"Major religions", for the purposes of this list, are:
- Large - at least as many adherents as Zoroastrianism
- Widespread - appreciable numbers of members live and worship in
more than just one country or limited region
- Independent - the religion is clearly independent and distinct from
a broader religion
Also, some consideration, where appropriate, was given to the Twelve Classical
World Religions. (Otherwise, the cut-off level for number of adherents may have
been set higher than the Zoroastrian level.)
What is a "religion" for the purposes of this list?
There are countless definitions of religion. But only one can be used in making
a ranked list.
We are using the groupings most widely used in contemporary comparative
religion literature (listed above). Each of these "world
religions" is actually a classification of multiple distinct movements,
sects, divisions, denominations, etc. None of these world religions is a single,
unified, monolithic organization. The diversity within these groupings varies.
Hinduism is often described as a collection very different traditions, bound by
a geographical and national identity. So broad is this religious
"umbrella" that it includes clearly polytheistic, tritheistic,
monotheistic, pantheistic, nontheistic, and atheistic traditions.
The Babi & Baha'i tradition, on the other hand, is probably the most unified
of the classical world religions. It is almost entirely contained within one
very organized, hierarchical denomination, the Bahai Faith, based in Haifa,
Israel. But there are small schismatic groups, such as the Baha'is Under the
Provisions of the Covenant, the Arizona-based "Orthodox" Baha'is,
Azali Babis (probably defunct), and four or five others.
All adherents of a single religion usually share at least some commonalities,
such as a common historical heritage and some shared doctrines or practices.
But these rules can't be pushed too far before being overburdened by exceptions.
A listing of doctrinally and organizationally meaningful divisions or
denominational "branches" (such as Catholic, Eastern/Orthodox
Christian, Sunni Islam, Shiite Islam, Evangelical Christian, Mahayana Buddhism,
Theravada Buddhism, etc.) would clearly be useful, but that is the subject of a different
list: Major Branches of
Major World Religions.
In the following list the classical world religions are listed with the most
cohesive/unified groups first, and the religions with the most internal
religious diversity last. This list is based primarily on the degree of
doctrinal/theological similarity among all the various sub-groups which belong
to these classifications, and to a lesser extent based on diversity in practice,
ritual and organization. (Obviously these classifications include both majority
manifestations of these religions, as well as subgroups which larger branches
sometimes label "heterodox.")
Classical World Religions Ranked by Internal Religious Similarity:
Most Unified to Most Diverse
- Baha'i
- Zoroastrianism
- Sikhism
- Islam
- Jainism
- Judaism
- Taoism
- Shinto
- Christianity
- Buddhism
- Hinduism
No "value judgement" is implied by this list. There are adjectives
with both positive and negative connotations which describe both ends of this
spectrum. From an academic, comparative religions viewpoint, there is no basis
for "prescribing" whether it is better for a religion to be highly
unified, cohesive, monolithic, and lacking in internal religious diversity, or
whether it is better to be fragmented, schismatic, diverse, multifaceted and
abounding in variations on the same theme.
In a practical sense, most people actually practice only one form of whatever
religion they belong to. Buddhism, for example, if viewed as a whole, can be
understood to have a large amount of internal variation, including the Theravada
and Mahayana branches, all of their sub-schools, various revivalist sects, as
well as Tibetan and modern Western forms. But most actual Buddhists are not
actually involved in all of these; rather they practice one, internally
cohesive, fairly unified form, such as the Geluk order of Tibetan Buddhism, or
Japanese Amida-Buddha worship.
How is classification done for official government figures? It is
important to note that data for the size of various religions within a given
country often come from government census figures or official estimates. Such
governmental endeavors are interested primarily in physical population
demographics, such as how many people live in a household and how many
telephones there are per person. These studies are not theological treatises.
They merely classify Hindus as all people who call themselves Hindu, Muslims as
all people who call themselves Muslim, Christians as all people who call
themselves Christian.
From a sociological and historical perspective, most religions have arisen from
within existing religious frameworks: Christianity from Judaism, Buddhism from
Hinduism, Babi & Baha'i faiths from Islam, etc. For the purposes of defining
a religion we need to have some cutoff point. Should Sikhism be listed as a
Hindu sect (as in many older textbooks), or a world religion in its own right?
To manage this question we have chosen once again to use the most
commonly-recognized divisions in comparative religion texts. These definitions
are primarily sociological and historical, NOT doctrinal or theological in
nature.
We recognize that within many religious traditions there are deeply felt
arguments for excluding certain groups from their description of their religion.
For example, councils of Muslim leaders have voted to no longer accept Ahmadis
as valid Muslims, although Ahmadis consider themselves orthodox Muslims. Many
Evangelical Protestants churches exclude all non-Evangelical or non-Protestant
groups from their definitions of Christianity. On the other hand, some Hindu
writers are so inclusive that they claim as Hindus adherents of any religion
that arose in a Hindu environment, including Buddhists, Jains and Sikhs. These
definitions are theological in nature and of little use in this statistical
context.
Groups such as Rastafarians, Mandeans, Tenrikyo, and the Church of Scientology
are too small, too new or too unimportant in world history to be included in
most surveys of "major world religions." Thus, in including such
groups in this listing it is not always possible to appeal to a consensus within
comparative religion literature. Where classification is unclear, we've used two
criteria:
- Does the faith group consider itself to be part of (or the definitive
version of) a larger religion?
- Does the larger religion consider the faith group to be part of its
tradition?
If the answer to both of these questions is no, then the faith group is
probably a distinct religion. If the answer to both questions is yes, the
faith group is a division within the larger religion (and thus not a world
religion, but a division of a world religion). If the answer to only one of the
questions is yes, there is a judgment call to be made, but of course we give
more weight to a group's self-concept.
For example, Tenrikyo arose in the 1830s in Japan in a Shinto context. The
founder explained that her new revelations came from various Shinto kami (gods).
Thus, Tenrikyo was classified by the Japanese ministry of religion as a Shinto
sect for about one hundred years. Then the leaders of Tenrikyo asked that the
faith no longer be classified as a Shinto faith. Outsiders would agree that
Tenrikyo has emerged as something identifiably distinct from traditional Shinto
religion, although many world religion writers include Tenrikyo in chapters on
Shinto or Japanese religion for simplicity's sake. (These books can only have a
limited number of chapters.) Based on these facts (and because we have no limit
on the number of religions we can include on this list), we include Tenrikyo as
a distinct religion.
Even fairly contemporary and progressive writers have "youth cut-off"
requirement for their listings of major world religions. Many writers will
classify newer movements as NRMs ("New Religious Movements"), and
reserve the label of "world religion" for "long established"
religions. (Given the content of these lists, one must assume "long
established" means "at least as old as the Babi & Baha'i
faiths.") This is a valid criterion, although for the most part we are not
using it here. Many of the movements that seem like distinct new religions may
die out within a few generations. Many of the most recent movements, such as
Seicho-No-Ie, Ananaikyo, Ch'ondogyo and other Asian new religious movements are overtly
syncretistic or universalist, similar in some ways to but originating many
years later than the Baha'i faith. Other new religious movements of this century
have primarily remained within established world religions, such as new
Buddhist (Western Buddhist Order), Hindu (Hare Krishna), Muslim (Nation of
Islam), Jewish (Reconstructionism), and Christian (Pentecostalism,
neo-Evangelicalism, Calvary Chapel) movements and denominations. Other new
religious movements of the 20th century, especially recently, have been new
formulations of long-dormant faiths, such as Neo-Pagan and neo-Shamanist
groups. Scientology, is one of the few movements of the 20th century that
has grown large enough and escaped its predecessor religious matrix thoroughly
enough to be considered a distinct world religion. Even its oft-criticized
differences lend credence to the notion that it is truly a unique, new religion,
and not a part of Hinduism, Buddhism or some other faith.
But Ahmadiyya (a recent offshoot of Islam), is not included on this list as a
separate religion because its adherents claim to be Muslim, view themselves as
completely Muslim, and wish to be classified as part of Islam.
Also, in keeping with the sociological perspective of Adherents.com, we are
applying Emil Durkheim's classical definition of religion as "a
unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, that is to
say, things set apart and forbidden--beliefs and practices which unite into one
single moral community..."
To this definition, we add its more recent reformulation describing religion as
an ultimate concern with transformational/motivational effect. With these
sociological (non-theological) definitions we could include in this list schools
of thought which aren't always considered "religions," such as
atheism, humanism, Communism/Marxism/Maoism, and Confucianism.
Those interested in reading further about the sociological definition of
religion and its relationship to culture may read Denise Cush's article in DISKUS
(vol. 5, 1999)
. Useful information about cultures can also be found in John B. Gatewood's Intracultural
Variability and Problem-Solving, which repeats the Kluckhohn-Murray aphorism
(1953):
Every human is in certain respects
a. like all other humans.
b. like some other humans.
c. like no other human.
How is the size of a religion determined for the purposes of this list?
When referring to the "size" of a religion, what is usually meant is
its number of adherents. Other measurements, such as how many churches or
meeting places a faith group owns or how many congregations/meeting groups there
are, can also be instructive, but are usually not used as a measure of overall
size. Measures of religiosity and the degree to which a religious tradition has
a meaningful impact on its adherents may be more important than raw adherent
counts, but such measures are not as readily available nor are they easily
comparable between groups.
A detailed description of what an adherent is, and the different types/levels of
adherents can be found on the FAQ
page.
How are adherents counted?
There are five main methods for determining the number of adherents in a faith
group:
- Organizational reporting: Religious bodies (such as churches or
denominations) are asked how many adherents or members they have. This is
the simplest and least expensive method, but it can be highly unreliable.
Different faith groups measure membership differently. Some count as members
only those who are actively attending services or who have passed through a
lengthy initiation process. Others groups count all who have been baptized
as infants and are thus on the church records, even though some of those
people may have joined other faith groups as adults. Some groups over-report
membership and others under-report membership. When asked what religion they
consider themselves to be a part of, many may name a religion that does not
have them on their rolls. In the United States, for instance, three times as
many people claim to be Unitarian Universalists than are actually on church
records.
- Census records: Many countries periodically conduct a comprehensive
household-by-household census. Religious preference is often a question
included in these census counts. This is a highly reliable method for
determining the religious self-identification of a given population. But
censuses are usually conducted infrequently. The latest census may be too
old to indicate recent trends in religious membership. Also, many countries
either have no accurate census data, or do not include questions regarding
religious affiliation. It has been over fifty years since the United States
included such a question in its national census, but Canada, India, New
Zealand, Australia and other countries have very thorough, recent census
data on the topic.
- Polls and Surveys: Statistical sampling using surveys and polls are
used to determine affiliation based on religious self-identification. The
accuracy of these surveys depends largely on the quality of the study and
especially the size of the sample population. Rarely are statistical surveys
of religious affiliation done with large enough sample sizes to accurately
count the adherents of small minority religious groups.
- Estimates based on indirect data: Many adherent counts are only
obtained by estimates based on indirect data rather than direct questioning
or directly from membership roles. Wiccan groups have traditionally been
secretive and often their numbers can only be estimated based on magazine
circulations, attendance at conferences, etc. The counts of many
ethnic-based faith groups such as tribal religions are generally based on
the size of associated ethnic groups. Adherents of some tribal religions
(such as Yoruba) are sometimes counted simply by counting the members of the
tribe and assuming everybody in it is an adherent of the religion. Counts of
Eastern Orthodox religious bodies are often done the same way. Such
estimates may be highly unreliable.
- Field work: To count some small groups, or to count the number of
adherents a larger group has within a specific geographical area,
researchers sometimes do "field work" to count adherents. This is
often the only way to count members of small tribal groups or
semi-secretive, publicity-shy sects. Field work may involve contacting
leaders of individual congregations, temples, etc., conducting interviews
with adherents, counting living within enclaves of the group, or counting
those participating in key activities. There is substantial overlap between "estimates"
and "field work."
For the purposes of this list of major religions, We have used adherent
counts or estimates based on self-identification. We have also favored
inclusive rather than exclusive adherent counts (meaning all people who are part
of a religious community, children as well as adults, rather than "full
communicants"). It should be remembered, however, that self-identification
is not the only legitimate measure of a religious group's size. In collecting
census or survey data based on self-identification statisticians find that
nearly everybody claims to belong to a religion. Some people claiming
membership in a certain denomination may actually attend religious services
regularly, contribute resources to the group, and be influenced by its
teachings. Other people may name the denomination, but choose it as their
religion only because they recall its name as the church their grandfather had
gone to as boy. Detailed analysis of the size of individual groups requires a
knowledge of both self-identification data as well as data based on
organizational reporting.
Finally, let me make it clear that these definitions are simply working
definitions for the purposes of making this list. They should not be taken as
definitive outside of this context. Many of our reasons for defining the
parameters as we have done have to do with the availability of data. Other
definitions and parameters may be more meaningful or useful in other situations.
Notes on the Size of Specific Religions
NOTE: The following material is not intended to provide
descriptions or summaries of these religions. This material is only intended to
describe the reasoning for listing groups as "major religions" and
determining their general size. (To learn more about these faith groups, we
suggest the Adherents.com links
page which will direct you to other web sites.)
Christianity: David B. Barrett's World Christian
Encyclopedia (1994 update) gives an oft-cited figure of 1.9 billion
Christians (or about 33% of the world population), and has projected that by the
year 2000 there will be 2.1 billion Christians in the world. Regardless of the
degree of accuracy of this figure, Christianity, if taken as a whole, is
unarguably the largest world religion.
See also: The
Christian Family Tree by Rev. Epke VanderBerg (Episcopal minister, Grand
Rapids, MI); Classifying
Protestant Denominations (General Social Survey project directed by James A.
Davis and Tom W. Smith. Funded by the National Science Foundation.); Largest
Christian Populations (lists the Top 10 Countries with the Most Christians
and the Top 10 U.S. Most Christian U.S. States); Famous
Christians.
For statistical purposes: Groups which self-identify as part of
Christianity include (but are not limited to): African Independent Churches (AICs),
the Aglipayan Church, Amish, Anglicans,
Armenian Apostolic, Assemblies
of God; Baptists,
Calvary Chapel,
Catholics,
Christadelphians, Christian
Science, the
Community of Christ, the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Coptic Christians, Eastern
Orthodox churches, Ethiopian Orthodox, Evangelicals, Iglesia ni Cristo, Jehovah's
Witnesses, the Local Church, Lutherans,
Methodists,
Nestorians, the New Apostolic Church, Pentecostals, Plymouth Brethren, Presbyterians,
the Salvation Army,
Seventh-Day Adventists,
Shakers, Stone-Campbell churches (Disciples of Christ; Churches
of Christ; the "Christian Church and Churches of Christ"; the
International Church of Christ); Uniate churches, United
Church of Christ/Congregationalists, the Unity Church, Universal Church of
the Kingdom of God, Vineyard churches and others. These groups exhibit varying
degrees of similarity, cooporation, communion, etc. with other groups. None are
known to consider all other Chrisian sub-groups to be equally valid. David
Barrett, an Evangelical Christian who is the compiler of religion statistics for
the Encyclopedia Britannica, includes all of the groups listed above in
the worldwide statistics for Christianity.
Contemporary sociolgists and religious leaders generally consider
pan-denominational classifications based not on historical denominational
divisions but on current theological positions, organizational alignments, etc.
to be more relevant. Such groupings include: Evangelicals, Pentecostals,
"Great Commission Christians", "C. S. Lewis Christians",
Liberal Protestants, Conservative Protestants, Fundamentalists, etc.
Islam: Contemporary figures for Islam are usually between 900
million and 1.3 billion, with 1 billion being a figure frequently given in
comparative religion texts, probably because it's such a nice, round number. The
largest and best known branches of Islam are Sunni and Shi'ite.
More.
Many Muslims (and some non-Muslim) observers claim that there are more
practicing Muslims than practicing Christians in the world. Adherents.com has no
reason to dispute this. It seems likely, but we would point out that there are
different opinions on the matter, and a Muslim may define "practicing"
differently than a Christian. In any case, the primary criterion for the
rankings on this page is self-identification, which has nothing to
do with practice.
Secular/Nonreligious/Agnostic/Atheist:
This is a highly disparate group and not a single religion. Although atheists
are a small subset of this grouping, this category is not synonymous with
atheism. Atheists actually make up less than one-tenth of one percent of the
population in many countries where large numbers claim no religious preference,
such as the United States (7.5% nonreligious) and Australia (15% nonreligious).
One portion of this broad grouping includes those who are best described as
"nonreligious," i.e., those who are essentially passive with regards
to religion, generally affirming neither belief nor disbelief. They may be
neither contemplative about philosophy and spirituality nor involved in a
religious/faith/philosophical community. Although a certain percentage of people
in many countries classify themselves as nonreligious in surveys, there are few
data indicating how many of these fit the passive "nonreligious"
criteria described above, versus those who actually do contemplate such matters,
but simply have their own personal philosophy and no stated affiliation with an
organized religion.
For the purposes of this list, this grouping also includes more proactive or
well-defined philosophies such as secular humanism, atheism, agnosticism, deism,
pantheism, freethought, etc., most of which can be classified as religions in
the sociological sense, albeit secular religions.
The "Secular/Nonreligious/etc." category is probably the most
speculative estimate in this list, as this segment of society is difficult to
count. The vast majority in this grouping are not aligned with any kind of
membership organization. Most figures come from census and survey data, which
most countries conduct only infrequently.
The highest figure we have for "Nonreligious" is 20% of the world
population, or about 1.2 billion: "Over 20 percent of the world's
population does not claim any allegiance to a religion. Most are agnostics.
Others are atheists, who deny the existence of God." (O'Brien, Joanne &
Martin Palmer. The State of Religion Atlas. Simon & Schuster: New
York (1993). Pg 41.) But such a high figure is difficult to support with current
country-by-country statistics, and perhaps reflects Communist-era official
government statistics. Most current estimates of the world number of
secular/nonreligious/agnostic/atheist/etc. are between 800 and 1 billion.
Estimates for atheism alone range from 200 to 240 million. But these come
primarily from China and former Soviet Union nations (especially Russia). Prior
to Communist takeovers of these regions and government attempts to eradicate
religion, both places had very high levels of affiliation with organized
religions (especially Islam, Christianity, Buddhism and Taoism), as well as high
levels of participation in and belief in traditional local traditions such as
shamanism, ancestor ceremonies, spiritism, etc. Since the fall of Communism in
former Soviet nations and the relaxation of anti-religious policies in China,
observed religious affiliation and activity has increased dramatically,
especially in Christianity, Buddhism, and Islam.
China probably does have the largest number of actual atheists of any country in
the world and many Russians clearly remain atheists. But at this point, it is
impossible to accurately determine how many of those classified as atheists or
nonreligious during Communist-era USSR and by the current Chinese government are
actually atheists according to their personal beliefs, and how many are
unregistered religious adherents or participants in less-organized traditional
systems that are oriented around ancestors, animism, shamanism, etc. Many people
are unaware, for instance, that China has one of the largest, most active
Christian communities in the world, and that in many former Soviet nations
religions such as shamanism, Islam and Russian Orthodoxy remained even while
official government reports announced the elimination of religion in these
regions.
In the Western world, Europe is by far the place with the most self-avowed
nonreligious, atheists and agnostics, with the nonreligious proportion of the
population particularly high in Scandinavia. The Encyclopedia Britannica
reports approximately 41 million atheists in Europe. The self-described
nonreligious segment of society in Australia and New Zealand is also high, at
around 15%. In Australia less than a tenth of one percent described themselves
as atheists in the latest national census (1996). In the U.S. about 7.5% of the
population describe themselves as nonreligious, 0.7% describe themselves as
agnostic, and a smaller number describe themselves as atheist (Kosmin, National
Survey of Religious Identification, 1990).
All those who profess religious belief are not necessarily registered members of
a church or denomination, but in the U.S. the majority of professed Christians
and adherents of other religions are also officially affiliated with an
organization. The majority of agnostics, atheists and of course nonreligious are
not members of an organization associated with their position.
It may also be noted that the estimated figures presented in this particular
"Major Religions" summary list are based on self-identification. Among
all groups there exists a proportion (sometimes significant and sometimes small)
which are only nominal adherents. This segment may identify themselves as
members of a certain religion and accept the religion as their primary
philosophical system, yet not actively practice the religion in the normative
sense. This segment may be thought of as being functionally nonreligious or
"secularized," but this segment is not what is meant by the
"nonreligious" category on this Major Religious list. Accurate
estimates of the size of this group are difficult to obtain because national
government censuses only ask about preferred affiliation, not about religious
practice. There are data available from non-census sampling surveys that ask
about practice and belief, but these are usually limited in scope to narrow
questions such as church attendance, and do not entirely reveal the proportion
of society which is non-attending, but nevertheless privately practicing and/or
believing. In many countries (Germany is a good example) there is also segment
of the population which is counted as adherents of a religion, but which do not
personally profess belief in that religion. (Adherents.com
has some such data in its main list under "attendance" and under
"poll".) See also: Top
10 Countries with Most Atheists.
The use of the term "nonreligious" or "secular" here refers
to belief or participation in systems which are not traditionally labeled
"religions." Of course, in the absence of traditional religions,
society exhibits the same behavioral, social and psychological phenomena
associated with religious cultures, but in association with secular, political,
ethnic, commercial or other systems. Marxism and Maoism, for instance, had their
scriptures, authority, symbolism, liturgy, clergy, prophets, proselyting, etc.
Sports, art, patriotism, music, drugs, mass media and social causes have all
been observed to fulfill roles similar to religion in the lives of individuals
-- capturing the imagination and serving as a source of values, beliefs and
social interaction. In a broader sense, sociologists point out that there are no
truly "secular societies," and that the word "nonreligious"
is a misnomer. Sociologically speaking, "nonreligious" people are
simply those who derive their worldview and value system primarily from
alternative, secular, cultural or otherwise nonrevealed systems
("religions") rather than traditional religious systems. Like
traditional religions, secular systems (such as Communism,
Platonism, Freudian psychology, Nazism, pantheism, atheism, nationalism, etc.)
typically have favored spokespeople and typically claim to present a universally
valid and applicable Truth. Like traditional religions, secular systems are
subject to both rapid and gradual changes in popularity, modification, and
extinction.
These are some of the factors which make estimating the size of the secular
(nonreligious, agnostic, atheist, etc.) segment of society difficult.
Detailed statistics on atheism can be found in the paper by Andrew Greeley and
Wolfgang Jagodzinski: The
Demand for Religion: Hard Core Atheism and "Supply Side" Theory.
Hinduism: The highest figure we've seen
for Hinduism (1.4 billion, Clarke, Peter B., editor), The Religions of the
World: Understanding the Living Faiths, Marshall Editions Limited: USA
(1993); pg. 125.) is actually higher than the highest figure we've seen for
Islam. But this is an abberation. World Hinduism adherent figures are usually
between 850 million and one billion. More.
Buddhism: World estimates for Buddhism
vary between 230 and 500 million, with most around 350 million. More.
Chinese traditional religion: In older
world religion books the estimates of the total number of adherents of Confucianism
range up to 350 million. Other books, including older versions of the Encyclopedia
Britannica, have listed Chinese religionists under "Taoism," with
adherent estimates up to about 200 million. But these figures are all based on
counts of the same segment of Chinese people throughout the world -- people
practicing what is, sociologically, more accurately called Chinese
traditional religion, and often called Chinese folk religion.
The word "traditional" is preferable to "folk" because
"folk" might imply only the local, tribal customs and beliefs such as
ancestor worship and nature beliefs. But "Chinese traditional
religion" is meant to categorize the common religion of the majority
Chinese culture: a combination of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism, as well as
the traditional non-scriptural/local practices and beliefs. For most religious
Chinese who do not explicitly follow a different religion such as Islam or
Christianity, these different ancient Chinese philosophies and traditions form a
single, seamless composite religious culture and worldview.
Communist laws banning most religion and recent rapid changes introducing
increasing openness make accurate estimates difficult to obtain. Recent figures
for the number of "Chinese religionists" include 220 and 225 million.
In comparative religion texts Confucianism, Taoism and Chinese Buddhism are
sometimes addressed in three separate chapters, and sometimes treated in one
chapter as "Chinese religion." Even today there are very valid reasons
for distinguishing Taoism from Confucianism, and distinguishing both from
Chinese Buddhism and non-scriptural Chinese folk religion. For religious,
philosophical, historical and scriptural purposes, distinguishing between these
separate traditions is quite manageable. There are a number of people who
identify themselves specifically as "Taoist" (In 1990-1991 there were
23,000 in the U.S., 1,720 in Canada, and 324 in New Zealand, for example.) There
are a smaller number of people, including non-Chinese, who consciously practice
a "pure" form of Taoist religion (often Tao-Te-Ching-based),
unconcerned with Confucianism, Chinese folk practices, ancestor devotion, etc.
Fifty years ago religious Taoism was one of the largest, strongest institutions
in China. Since the Cultural Revolution and the government's campaign to destroy
non-Communist religion, Taoism lost, for the most part, the main mechanism
through which it remained distinct from the larger Chinese religious
environment: its large numbers of temples and Taoist clergy. Although Islam,
Buddhism and Christianity have bounced back and even surpassed pre-Communist
levels in China, Taoism has not. Today, despite the existence of some
self-identified Taoists and pure Taoists in the West, Taoism is difficult to
isolate as a large, independent religion from a statistical and sociological
perspective. Hence, in this list, which is explicitly statistical and
sociological in perspective, Taoism should be thought of as a major branch of
Chinese traditional religion.
The situation is similar with Confucianism. In the latest edition of the Encyclopedia
Britannica lists over 5 million Confucianists in its summary table of world
religions. Their note explains that these are Confucianists outside of
China, mostly in Korea. (The Encyclopedia lists "Chinese folk
religion" separately.) It is true that recent census data show about five
million Koreans name Confucianism as their religion, and there are even some
Confucian schools and institutes in Korea. But the Adherents.com list leaves
these Confucianists under the "Chinese traditional religion" grouping,
rather than separating them based only on what country they live in.
primal-indigenous: Alternatively termed
"tribal religionists, "ethnic religionists," or
"animists," estimates range from 100 million to 244 million. This
group also includes, but is not limited to, people whose native religion is a
form of shamanism or paganism (such as millions of people in traditional
Siberian shamanist cultures). Obviously this is broad classification, not a
single religion. This grouping includes thousands of distinct religious
traditions, mostly the religious-cultural worldviews of peoples who have been
grouped together in one category because they are pre-literate or less advanced
technologically than Western/European cultures. There are similarities among
many primal-indigenous religions/cultures, such as use of an oral rather than
written canon, and a lack of rigid boundaries between the sacred and secular
(profane) aspects of life. But few, if any, generalizations hold for all groups.
Previously, adherents of African traditional religion were grouped here, and
many religious statisticians would continue to do so. But adherents of African
traditional religions and diasporic derivatives are currently listed ennumerated
separately on this page. [See below.] Most remaining
primal-indigenous religionists are in Asia (including India).
African Traditional & African Diasporic
Religions: It may seem incongruous to distinguish African primal
(traditional) religions from the general primal-indigenous category. But the
"primal-indigenous" religions are primarily tribal and composed of
pre-technological peoples. While there is certainly overlap between this
category and non-African primal-indigenous religious adherents, there are
reasons for separating the two, best illustrated by focusing specifically on
Yoruba, which is probably the largest African traditional religious/tribal
complex. Yoruba was the religion of the vast Yoruba nation states which existed
before European colonialism and its practitioners today -- certainly those in
the Caribbean, South America and the U.S.-- are integrated into a technological,
industrial society, yet still proclaim affiliation to this African-based
religious system. Cohesive rituals, beliefs and organization were spread
throughout the world of Yoruba (and other major African religious/tribal groups
such as Fon), to an extent characteristic of nations and many organized
religions, not simply tribes. Historians might point to Shinto and even Judaism
as the modern manifestations of what originally began as the religions of tribal
groups who then became nations.
Just as Yoruba may legitimately be distinguished from the general
"primal-indigenous" classification, valid arguments could be made that
other religious traditions such as Native American religion (less than 100,000
self-identified U.S. adherents) and Siberian shamanism should also be separate.
But African traditional religion has been singled out because of its much larger
size, its considerable spread far beyond its region of origin and the remarkable
degree to which it remains an influential, identifiable religion even today.
African Diasporic Religions are those which have arisen, typically in the
Western hemisphere, among Africans who retained much of their traditional
culture and beliefs but adapted to new environments. These include Santeria,
Candomble, Vodoun, Shango, etc. In many areas or subgroups the African elements
exist alongside an overlay of European-based elements borrowed from the
economically dominant culture, from influences such as Catholicism and Kardecian
spiritism. The fact that these religions exist within technologically advanced
cultures alongside "classical" organized religions (such as
Christianity) is one of the reasons for grouping these adherents separately from
the general "primal-indigenous" category. Adherents of African
diasporic religions typically have no real tribal affiliation, may be converts
to African-based religion, and are not necessarily African or black in their
race and ethnicity.
Regarding Santeria alone: It is difficult to determine worldwide numbers of
Santerians, as the religion is syncretistic, goes by different names (including
Lukumi, and Camdomble in Brazil) and has been actively suppressed by the
Communist government in the country where it is perhaps the largest: Cuba.
Estimates of Santerians include 800,000 in the U.S. and one million in Brazil,
plus 3 million in Cuba (although many Cuban practitioners identify themselves
officially as Catholics or Communists/atheists). A worldwide number of people
who at least sometimes self-identify as adherents of this loosely-organized
religious category might be 3 million, but this is just an estimate.
Regarding Vodoun: For the most part, Voodoo (or "Vodoun") is not an
organized religion, but a form of African traditional religion practiced
primarily in Haiti, Cuba and Benin. Often blended with Catholicism. Other
methods of counting adherents could count practitioners as general
primal-indigenous religionists (tribal) and/or Christians. Vodoun is typically
classified as an Afro-Caribbean and/or Afro-Brazilian syncretistic religion,
along with Santeria (Lukumi) and Candomble. Some sources refer to Vodoun as the
Haitian form of Santeria; other sources refer to Santeria as a form of Vodoun.
From a worldwide and historical perspective, Vodoun is properly classified as a
branch of African diasporic religion, in the same way that Lutheranism is a
subset of Christianity.
Regarding the number of practitioners, the ReligiousTolerance.org web page about
Vodoun states: "50 million. Estimates of the number of adherents are
hopelessly unreliable. Some sources give numbers in the range of 2.8 to 3.2
million." A figure of 50 million is doubtful because this is primarily a
Caribbean religious movement and there are only 30 million people in the
Caribbean, the majority of whom are clearly self-identified Christians.
In the Americas (especially the Caribbean, Brazil and the United States), there
is a large number of people who practice some form of Yoruba diasporan religion,
especially forms of Santeria and Vodoun. But it should be noted that many
practitioners of Voodoo would name something else, i.e. Catholicism, as their
religion. Even those who practice Santeria or Voodoo more often then they
practice Catholicism mostly identify themselves as Catholic.
We asked an expert for feedback about our comments on Yoruba religion.
Osunmilaya, a practitioner and scholar on the subject wrote:
I would make only a few changes. Instead of the term "Santerian"
perhaps the term "ab'orisha," which refers to both initiated and
uninitiated devotees, would be more acceptable. Some practitioners don't like
the term Santeria at all because it implies that the tradition is a minor,
heretical sect of Catholicism.
Vodoun is more properly classified as Dahomean and Fon in origin, not Yoruba.
It does not appear in Brazil in the Haitian form, to my admittedly limited
knowledge of this tradition. However, some Candomble houses may identify as
Dahomean nation.
A critical component of the spiritist influence upon the Yoruba traditions as
practiced in the Western hemisphere is the pervasive influence of the BaKongo
tradition, known as Palo Monte and Umbanda. What I have seen in practice has a
lot of Kardecian influence, but I expect to see what I observed with the
Santeria tradition: that as one becomes more immersed into the actual
tradition, that the outer layer of Catholicism peels away to reveal a
tradition that, in reality, is very much unsyncretized. (See Wande Abimbola's
discussion in Ifa Will Mend Our Broken World.)
Osunmilaya's comments are very helpful. The only comment we might add is that
there are knowledgeable historians of Yoruba religion in the West who believe
Yoruba, in addition to the Dahomean and Fon traditions, played a major role in
the development of modern Africa-Haitian religion.
The point about use of the term "Santerian" is an important one to
keep in mind. Although "Santeria" is commonly used in comparative
religion/academic literature, and it is becoming increasingly accepted among
practitioners of the Western Yoruba/Orisha religious tradition, it is a
term imposed by outsiders and its etymological roots have meaning that many in
the tradition find offensive or at least inaccurate.
Spiritism: According to the 1997 Encyclopedia
Britannica Book of the Year, there were 10,292,500 adherents of "Spiritism"
in the world. But a recent census from Brazil indicates 15 million professed
spiritists (practitioners of Umbanda, for instance), as well as a fringe
following (not officially professed, but possibly quite avid) of up to 50
million. But many of those can be classified in the Yoruba religion category. As
a newer and somewhat less organized grouping than some other "major
religions," accurate numbers for Spiritism are difficult to come by. An
estimate of 20 million worldwide seems justifiable--a grouping which would
include but not be limited to strictly Kardecian groups. But a worldwide number
which eliminated adherents who are primarily Yoruba religionists more so than
Spiritists would be smaller, and more in line with the Encyclopedia
Britannica estimate. Key aspects of Spiritism, or Spiritualism, are widely
accepted in popular society in many countries beyond the bounds of those who are
officially adherents of these movements. The boundaries between Spiritism and
other categories, especially Christianity (especially Catholic and Baptist),
Yoruba religion and primal-indigenous religions, can be quite uncertain.
Sikhism: The highest estimate we have
for the number of Sikhs in the world is 20 million, from www.sikhs.org. Most
estimates are between 16 and 18 million. About 80% of the world's Sikhs live in
the province of Punjab, in India. Barrett's latest publication estimates 23
million Sikhs worldwide. More.
Juche: Juche is the only
government-authorized ideology in North Korea, to the point of excluding all
other religions. "Juche" means "self-reliance" in the Korean
language. Some writers cited in the Adherents.com database (under "Juche"
as well as "Kimilsungism") classify Juche as a North Korean form of
Marxist Communism. Juche began in the 1950s and is the official philosophy
promulgated by the North Korean government and educational system. Its promoters
describe Juche as simply a secular, ethical philosophy and not a
religion. But, from a sociological viewpoint Juche is clearly a religion, and in
many ways is even more overtly religious than Soviet-era Communism or Chinese
Maoism.
For more information, here is a Juche-sponsored
web site. Also, any day's news available from the Korean
Central News Agency of DPRK is filled with mention of Juche.
Thomas J. Belke has written a book describing Juche as the newest world
religion, with "more adherents than Judaism, Sikhism, Jainism or
Zoroastrianism" (JUCHE: A Christian Study of North Korea's State
Religion, Publisher: Living Sacrifice Books, Bartlesville, OK; published
July 1999; available at Amazon.com.
Note: Any researchers interested in Juche or religion in North Korea will
need to read this volume, but be aware that the "Christian Study" part
of the title is not to be taken lightly. This book is not an objective
ethnographic survey of Juche. Belke presents a wealth of fascinating factual
information you won't find anywhere else, but the perspective is overtly
Evangelical. Some readers who are not Evangelicals -- and some who are -- may be
annoyed by this approach, but most serious researchers will recognize that the
book has value to sociologists both in the unprecedented window it opens into
contemporary North Korea, as well as the glimpse into Evangelical apologetic
thought.).
Certainly there are more "followers" of Juche, by nature of their
nationality, than there are Jews or Jains. (Belke's book reports 23 million
Juche adherents, essentially the entire population of North Korea, but the
author and international news services agree that the population of the country
has decreased to about 19 million during the current famine.) Belke reports a
few centers in India, and Juche web sites indicate some centers in Australia,
Europe and Japan. But despite the presence of these outreach centers set up the
North Korean government, there do not appear to be any established communities
of adherents outside of North Korea.
Some other religions which exist substantially only within a single country have
been excluded from this list of "Major Religions of the World." It is
true that Juche has only a nominal presence outside of North Korea. But it has so
many adherents, is so influential in their lives, and is so different from
any other religious system, that including it on this list may be necessary in
order to accurately reflect the total world religious economy. As with the other
religions listed here, inclusion on this list does not constitute endorsement,
merely recognition of Juche as a statistically significant distinct religion.
Other than geographic isolation, the other argument for excluding Juche from
this list of major religions would be that it is not a completely independent
system, but rather than a subset of Communism. (For numerical purposes,
Communists who are not adherents of an established religion are included in the
"Secular" category above.) The North Korean system is historically
derived, in large part, from Soviet and Chinese Communism; during the 1960s
there would have been no reason to draw any distinctions. But today's Juche has
developed into a distinct, unique system, and has officially repudiated its
Marxist-Leninist roots. While we recognize there may be validity in continued
classification of Juche as a highly "heretical" subset of Communism or
general secularism, it seems that, on balance, to do so today is no more
accurate than continuing to classify Buddhism as a Hindu sect. Revision to the
status of Juche on this list may be forthcoming pending further research and
developments.
Judaism: Estimates of the world's Jewish
population range from about 12 million to over 17 million. On the high end of
realistic estimates of how many people would consider themselves Jews seems to
be about 15 million, but a figure this high would include a large number of
non-practicing, purely ethnic Jews. Judaism is far more important in areas such
as history, literature, science, politics, and religion, than its relatively
small numbers might suggest. The American Jewish Year Book published in
2000 by the American Jewish Committee, reports there are currently 5.7 million
Jews in the United States, 362,000 in Canada, and 13,191,500 worldwide. More.
Babi & Baha'i faiths: At least 98% of
the adherents of the Babi & Baha'i faiths belong to the same
church/denomination/religious body, the Baha'i World Faith (or simply "Baha'i
Faith") with headquarters in Haifa, Israel. One might think that this
should make Baha'i records fairly straightforward and easily obtainable. But
statistical practices differ in each country and figures are not always released
to the public. Most recent published estimates of the world Baha'i population
are about 6.5 million. This is the figure provided in current Baha'i
publications. A recent, updated estimate in the 1998 Encyclopedia Britannica is
reportedly 7.67 million, higher than any Baha'i-provided figure we have seen.
The accuracy of all of these figures is difficult to determine, and the
organization does not provide a breakdown of membership data for each country.
As with most religious groups, organizationally reported adherent counts include
significant numbers of nominal members, or people who no longer actively
participate, yet still identify themselves as adherents. There are valid
arguments that some of the "mass conversions" have resulted in
adherents with little or no acculturation into the new religious system. As is
typical with a religious group made up primarily of converts, Baha'is who drift
from active participation in the movement are less likely to retain nominal
identification with the religion -- because it was not the religion of their
parents or the majority religion of the surrounding culture. On the other hand,
there are no countries in which people are automatically assigned to the Baha'i
Faith at birth (as is the case with Islam, Christianity, Shinto, Buddhism, and
other faiths), so their numbers aren't inflated with people who have never
willingly participated in or been influenced by the religion while adults.
On balance, while official Baha'i figures are not a measure of active
participants, the proportion of participating adherents among claimed adherents
is thought to be higher than average among the "major religions" on
this list. The Baha'i community is remarkably active and influential in
religious matters on both global and local levels, especially given their
relatively small numbers compared to some other religions. More.
Jainism: The highest published figure
we've seen for Jainism is 10 million, but this is clearly incorrect. Almost all
estimates for the world population are under 5 million. This religion is almost
entirely confined to India and to ethnic Jains. It's importance historically and
philosophically far outstrips its relatively small number of adherents. More.
Shinto: Shinto is one of the
"classic" eleven or twelve "major world religions." But
adherent counts for this religion are problematic and often misunderstood. In a
nutshell, Shinto is simply the indigenous ethnic practice of Japan and its
importance is almost entirely historical and cultural, not contemporary. The
number of adherents of Shinto are often reported as being around 100 million, or
around 75 to 90% of the Japanese population. These figures come from the Shukyo
Nenkan (Religions Yearbook), put out by the Ministry of Education &
Bureau of Statistics, and they obtain their figures by asking religious bodies
for statistics. The Shinto religious bodies have on record most Japanese
citizens because of laws established in the 17th Century which required
registration with the Shinto shrines. Essentially everybody within local
"shrine districts" were counted as adherents. This is comparable to
certain Catholic and Protestant nations in Europe where the majority of people
have been Christianed or otherwise counted as a member of the state church, but
where large proportions of the population are non-practicing.
The difference is that in those European countries, those people are at least
nominally adherents of the religion that claims them. "Nominally" here
means if asked their religion, they can recall the name of the church they were
baptized into as an infant, and don't mind citing that as their religious
preference. In Japan, the majority of adherents of Shinto, as claimed by the
Shinto organizations, don't even consider themselves adherents, even nominally.
In polls, only about 3.3% of the Japanese people give Shinto as their religion.
A high world-wide figure for people who consider themselves primarily
practitioners of Shinto would be about 4 million. Certainly most Japanese people
participate in holidays which have Shinto roots, but in this list we are trying
to track self-identification, not general vestigial influence. Also, the
strongest active religions which have Shinto roots (such as Tenrikyo) no
longer claim to be "branches" of Shinto, and can be listed separately.
Cao Dai: Most of the figures for this
group are around 2 million, but we've seen some that say around 8 million. It's
almost entirely a Vietnamese movement, and not even as important there as it
used to be.
Tenrikyo: Recent figures are about 2.3
million to 3 million. Tenrikyo is one of the largest and most active religious
bodies in contemporary Japan. It has missions all over the world and a strong
evangelical ethic. Outside of Japan the countries with the most adherents seem
to be the U.S. (especially Hawaii), South Korea, Brazil, and Taiwan, although
only in Japan do Tenris make up an appreciable proportion of a country's total
population. In January 1999 Tenrikyo published country-by-country statistics
showing nearly 1,000 churches or mission stations outside of Japan (in
over 30 different countries), and over 37,000 in Japan. These figures dwarf
those of some "classical world religions," such as Zoroastrianism and
Jainism.
Tenrikyo is probably one of the largest, most fully-developed independent modern
religious systems which most Westerners know nothing about. Tenrikyo offers
impressive opportunities for sociological, historical and comparative religion
research which are relatively unexplored by the academic community. One of the
most famous modern adherents of Tenrikyo was the author Avram Davidson. More
Scientology: One often sees
Scientology listed in books and newspapers as having over 8 million adherents.
Where does this figure come from? It comes from them, as do most adherent
figures. Our data indicate that they cite this figure because it is the total
number of people who have participated in Church of Scientology activities since
the inception of the church. But their figure does not include people who have
only received services from their drug rehab groups and other non-Church
facilities. Narconon's clientele are not counted as Church members unless and
until they become Scientologists. As Narconon's mission is drug rehabilitation
and not Church recruitment, the percentage of Narconon clients who become Church
members is small.
The latest edition of the organization's publication What Is Scientology?
lists 373 churches and missions (plus hundreds of "related
organizations" which are not directly comparable to congregations)
in 129 countries. (Four new countries, for a total of 133, have been opened
since the publication of the book, according to a church spokesperson.)
According to church officials, this publication states that in 1997 the number
of people who participated in Scientology services for the first time was
642,596 internationally and that the circulation of internal Church magazines
which are sent to their members was 6,630,000. Hartley Patterson, a critic of
Scientology, has speculated that the circulation figure may be based on the
total press run for three publications.
Adherents.com has no argument with Scientology statistics, but for the purposes
of this list of "Major Religions of the World Ranked by Size," we
use a different standard of counting adherents than they have used to arrive
at their 8 million figure. (Figures presented here are generally estimates of
primary, self-identified religious affiliation.) There are not 8 million people
who, if taking a survey, would name Scientology as their religious preference.
One might generously estimate up to one million worldwide, but the actual number
who would fit this criterion is probably under a half million. Adding up
organizationally-reported membership on a state-by-state, country-by-country
basis would yield a current membership figure of about 750,000, according to a
church critic. As with all religions, the complete body of adherents represent a
spectrum of participation, including fully active members as well as
non-attending or disengaged sympathizers.
Realistically, a figure lower than 750,000 seems be more reasonable for this
page's listing. Some documents suggest that even the tabulation of 750,000 based
on country-by-country/state-by-state organizationally-provided data is quite out
of date. Internal documents suggest 100,000 active members -- which would easily
yield an estimate of a total of 600,000 or more, including one-time members,
lapsed members, and strong supporters.
This might cause some people to think the church's figures are inaccurate, or it
might seem like we are being harsh to ignore their figure and estimate such a
low one. To put these figures into perspective, compare them to those of other
major religions. There is no reason to believe that less than 8 million people
have willingly participated in Scientology activities and actively studied at
least some of its teachings. Large numbers of people have derived benefit from
participation in church activities and church-sponsored programs. But people
rarely call themselves Scientologists mainly because their parents don't call
themselves Scientologists. Membership in the Church of Scientology does not
necessarily preclude membership in another religious organization. A percentage
of the claimed members will indeed affirm membership in the organization, while
at the same time citing another religion as their primary religious preference.
If one eliminated from the total number of Christians in the world all those
who are counted as Christians only because they identify themselves as such in a
survey or census, even though they never actually attend Christian services,
study Christian literature, or make behavioral changes based on Christian
teachings beyond general societal norms, one might obtain a similar downgrade in
actual number of effective adherents.
Despite such a "downgrade" from official Church of Scientology
estimates, it may be noted that in the last large-scale survey of religious
identification (Kosmin, 1990), enough people in the United States named
Scientology as their primary religion that it was among the top 10 largest
religions in the country, with more members than the Baha'i Faith, Sikhism or
Neo-Pagan/Wiccan groups. Independent sources indicate that the strongest
communities of Scientologists are in California and the United Kingdom, as well
as in Clearwater, Florida (where the main training center is located).
Some people have commented on the fact that this page lists an estimate of
750,000 Scientologists worldwide, while the Religion
in the U.S. web page refers to 45,000 Scientologists in the U.S. Some people
have mistakenly concluded that this means the overwhelming majority of
Scientologists live outside the U.S., or that one of the figures is simply
"wrong." The two figures are not directly comparable. Simply put, these
two figures are from different sources and are based on different methodologies
and critera. The U.S. figure of 45,000 comes directly from the Kosmin NSRI
survey of 1990. The worldwide figure is as a conglomerate figure, using
different criteria (as explained elsewhere on this page), based on official
organizational as well as critical sources. The larger figure would include
lapsed members, as well as people who are are adherents of Scientology, but also
identify with another religious group, and name that group in a survey r census.
Unitarian-Universalism: Being
completely opposed to fixed doctrine (which they refer to as "dogma"),
but affirming certain principles, the Unitarian Universalists (or simply
"Unitarians" as they prefer to be called in some countries) are quite
different from other major religions. Since 1995 the primary UU organization has
affirmed officially that it is not a subset of Christianity (although its roots
are Christian), but encompasses spirituality from all the major world religions
as well as primal-indigenous/tribal faiths. But it should be kept in mind that
there are self-avowed Christian Unitarians, Buddhist Unitarians, Pagan
Unitarians, etc. In 1990, 500,000 Americans claimed to be Unitarian-Universalists,
three times the official organizational count of enrolled members, loosely
indicating that Unitarian-Universalism is the general preferred philosophy of
far more people than actually participate in or contribute to the congregations
and organizations. More.
Rastafarian: Because of the
loosely-organized structure of Rastafarianism, and because many Rastafarians are
nominal but non-participating members of larger religious groups, precise size
estimates are difficult. We've seen total world estimates of about 200,000.
We've seen an estimate of 700,000 in a couple of places. Leonard E. Barrett,
author of The Rastafarians, estimates there are 800,000 Rastas worldwide,
more than 2 million if one counts followers of the lifestyle but not the faith.
Based on other data we believe a figure as high as this would have to include
many Jamaicans who are strong Rastafarian supporters or enthusiasts, but who are
also at least partially or nominally adherents of mainstream Protestant and
Catholic denominations as well.
There are multiple reasons why Rastafarians are typically not counted as one of
the major world religions: They are relatively new, having originated
only in this century. They aren't particularly widespread worldwide.
(They are mostly in Caribbean nations, esp. Jamaica, as well as the United
Kingdom and the U.S.) They are sometimes classified as a Christian sect because
they use the Bible as their primary religious text (but they generally use the
Hebrew Bible). They are smaller than religious groups usually listed as
"major world religions."
Neo-Paganism: Neo-Paganism is an
umbrella term for modern revivals of ancient ethnic and magickal traditions.
These are usually polytheistic, but many Neo-Pagans consider their faith
pantheistic, and many other concepts of deity can be found among Neo-Pagans as
well. Subdivisions within Neo-Paganism include Wicca, Magick, Druidism, Asatru,
neo-Native American religion and others.
Only recently has Neo-Paganism become a movement of any significant size and
visibility. Solid statistics on Neo-Paganism on a worldwide scale are
essentially non-existent, but it is a rapidly growing religion/religious
category. Estimates regarding its worldwide size range widely--from under one
hundred thousand to over four million. Independent surveys and government-based
figures are not indicative of the higher estimates provided by Neo-Pagan and
Wiccan organizations, but there may be a variety of reasons for this.
There are two reasons why some might argue that Neo-Paganism should not be
listed as a major religion on this page: 1) It might be said that Neo-Paganism
is not a single religion, but an umbrella term for many disparate religions.
But upon closer examination of the movement, one finds that despite drawing upon
such disparate sources as European witchcraft, Norse mythology, Druidism, and
Egyptian, Greek, and Native American ancient religions, Neo-Pagans as a whole
have a remarkably cohesive, identifiable culture and generally shared value set,
even more so than religions such as Christianity, Islam or Judaism when taken as
a whole. 2) It could also be said that Neo-Paganism could be classified as a
subset of primal-indigenous religion. Though it has roots in primal
ethnic religions, Neo-Paganism is something distinct, clearly drawing much of
its identity from Gardnerian principles introduced in the 1930s. Neo-Paganism is
distinct from the primal ethnic religions of ancient pre-industrial societies
just as Buddhism has roots in, but is distinct from, Hinduism. So we are
including Neo-Paganism on this list because the most recent sociological work in
the field indicates it is a distinct religion, and because it is increasingly
significant.
There were 768,400 Neo-pagans (largest subset were Wiccans) in the U.S. in
the year 2000, according to the Wiccan/Pagan Poll, conducted by the Covenant of
the Goddess (CoG) beginning in late July, 1999. [Online source: http://www.cog.org/cogpoll_final.html]
Researchers may also be interested in Isaac Bonewits' succinct web page, How
Many "Pagans" Are There? Bonewits identifies reasons for
enumeration, difficulties in doing so, and concludes by estimating the Neopagan
population at "from half a million to several million people in the USA and
Canada."
Zoroastrianism: This religion is
in every major comparative religion text book, yet it is actually listed in the
latest Guiness Book of World Records as the "major religion nearest
extinction." The Zoroastrians (or "Parsis") are sometimes
credited with being the first monotheists and having had significant influence
in the formation of current, larger world religions. To whatever degree that is
true, some observers believe Zoroastrianism is in a precarious state and its
position as a major contemporary world religion is tenuous. Most of the
Zoroastrians do not believe in allowing conversion. They have even stricter
rules than Jews about whether or not children of mixed marriages are
Zoroastrians. 200 thousand would be a generous estimate. Most estimates for the
world total of Zoroastrians are 100 to 125 thousand.
Groups Not Included in This List of World Religions
The following groups are religions, but have not been included in this
list of major religions primarily for one or more of the following reasons:
- They are not a distinct, independent religion, but a branch of a broader
religion/category.
- They lack appreciable communities of adherents outside their home country.
- They are too small (even smaller than Zoroastrianism).
Mandeans: The Encyclopedia Britannica lists Mandeans separately,
but they only have about 45,000 adherents in two countries, meaning
they're far smaller than many new religious movements the Encyclopedia lumps
together under "New Religionists." As small as the Mandeans are, we
are not listing them as one of the largest "Major Religions."
Britannica's decision to list Mandeans separately, while not listing larger but
newer religions is due the their list's criteria, which emphasizes
long-established yet post-literate religions. This Adherents.com listing, on the
other hand, is based on contemporary size, without regard to age.
PL Kyodan: They currently claim about 1 million adherents and 500
churches in 10 countries. But they're almost entirely in Japan. The group has a
few branches in North America and Europe, and perhaps twenty in South America.
So there is some spread beyond its home country, but with only about 500
branches worldwide, and with some question as to whether it has really emerged
from it's original Shinto matrix, it may be inappropriate to call it a distinct
major religion.
Ch'ondogyo: About 3 million adherents total. Their numbers are
almost entirely confined to Korea, however. Apparently a fusion of Christianity
and traditional Korean religion. In North Korea, once Ch'ondogyo's center, where
it was, for a time, the country's second or third largest religion, it has
essentially been co-opted by the government and turned into a hollow appendage
of Juche.
Wonbulgyo: Another new Korean religion. The claim about 400 branches in
Korea, and 30 in North America and Europe. They make some claims to be an
emerging world religion, but as they call themselves "Won Buddhism,"
we include them within the greater body of Buddhism. Lively, but probably
less than 150,000 adherents, making it even smaller than Zoroastrianism.
Vodoun: Vodoun is classified here as a subset of African
diasporic religion.
New Age: New Age is an incredibly eclectic category, not a single
religion. Although a large number of people hold beliefs which have been
categorized as New Age, or participate in New Age practices, only a tiny
percentage of people actually identify "New Age" as their religion. At
this point "New Age" is more the umbrella term for a broad movement,
rather than a religion. Some previous enthusiasts of New Age movements now
prefer to be called pagans or Neo-Pagans.
Seicho-No-Ie: This organization is large (perhaps 2 to 3 million
members) and appears somewhat like a typical New Asian syncretistic religion,
but its literature states that it is an interdenominational organization
and not a religion. Furthermore, it does not seem to have spawned a distinctive
religious culture anywhere outside of Japan, and perhaps not even in Japan --
certainly not to the degree that groups such as PL Kyodan and Tenrikyo have.
Falun Dafa/Falun Gong: This is a relatively new movement (started in the
mid-1980s) from China which purports to have 100 million adherents worldwide, 70
million in China. These numbers are obviously inflated; it is not true that 1 in
every 58 people on the planet are adherents of Falun Dafa. A reasonable
worldwide number that some newspapers have used is 10 million, but this
is only a guess. The current crackdown on the movement by the Communist
government is likely to increase the movement's growth both within and outside
of China. Its status as a full-fledged "religion" is questionable, and
it does not claim to be one in the traditional sense. For most practitioners it
is more of a technique than a religion. However, the movement's literature
states that deriving full benefit from the techniques precludes membership in
other religions, and there are people who consider Falun Dafa their primary or
only religion. But exclusive followers of this sort are in the minority.
Furthermore, Falun Dafa is properly classified as a subset of Chinese
traditional religion and not as a distinct religion, so it would not be
classified as a "major world religion" even if it did have 100 million
followers. Although the movement is verifiably large and widespread, its
adherents appear to be almost uniformly ethnic Chinese. Their involvement with
the movement is not really conversion to a different or foreign religion, but
rather involvement in an evangelical/reform movement within their existing
religious system. Sociologically, the Falun Dafa movement has many parallels to
the Pentecostal movement and Billy Graham revivals within Christianity.
Taoism: Included as a subset of Chinese traditional religion
because of the impossibility of separating a large number of Taoists from
traditional Chinese religionists in general. See note under Chinese
traditional religion.
Confucianism: See Chinese traditional religion.
Roma: There are an estimated 9 to 12 million Roma (Gypsies; also
"Rroma") in the world, concentrated in Europe, but also in North
America, Australia and elsewhere. There is clearly a distinct set of Roma
religious beliefs and practices, which scholars frequently describe as
Aryan/Indian/Hindu in origin with an overlay of local (esp. European) religious
culture (often Catholic). But the Roma are primarily classified as an ethnic or
cultural group. Many clearly have a strong ethnic identity as Roma and a
self-identified religious identity as Catholic or Protestant. The Roma
illustrate how arbitrary the dividing lines between ethnicity, culture, and
religion can be.
Animal Rights: Although the Animal Rights movement (along with ethical
vegetarianism, Veganism, PETA, etc.) is a large and rapidly growing
socio-cultural-religious group, its proponents do not generally call it their
"religion." Reliable statistics for the number of adherents for whom
Animal Rights constitutes primary cultural/religious/philosophical identity,
versus those who simply support certain positions of the movement, are
unavailable. AR is a religion, but for the majority of Animal Rights
supporters, AR functions as a movement and/or lifestyle choice, not their
primary religion. (This is similar to the current broad support for the
"Free Tibet" movement, most of which comes from non-Buddhists.)
Other movements and groups which are not listed on this page but which function
as the sociological equivalent of traditionally recognized religions are listed here.
Please feel free to send comments, questions, adherent statistics, spelling
corrections, etc. to webmaster@adherents.com.
This document is copyright © 2002 by Adherents.com.