back to Christian Identity Movement, Indiana
| Group | Where | Number of Adherents |
% of total pop. |
Number of congreg./ churches/ units |
Number of countries |
Year | Source | Quote/ Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christian Identity Movement | Kentucky | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Michigan | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Missouri | - | - | 2 units |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Montana | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Nebraska | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | New Mexico | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | North Carolina | - | - | 3 units |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Ohio | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Oklahoma | - | - | 2 units |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Pennsylvania | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Tennessee | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Texas | - | - | 2 units |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | USA | 20,000 | - | - | - | 1990 | Lang, Susan S. Extremist Groups in America. New York: Franklin Watts (1990); pg. 57-58, 62. | "...some of these 'reverends' and 'pastors' preach a downright racist and radical view that brings out paranoia and prejudice, repeatedly triggering violence in the recent past. They call themselves the Identity Church or Christian Identity, and local parishes have names such as the Church of Jesus Christ Christian, the Mountain Church, the Cosmoetheist Church, the Church of the Creator, the Church of Israel, the New Christian Crusade Church, and the Sword of Christ and Good News, among others. "; Pg. 62: "[Christian] Identity is not a mainstream philosophy; experts estimate that there are about fifty major leaders and anywhere from seven thousand to twenty-thousand followers... Although there is no one Identity church, Identity 'provides religious unity for differing racist political groups, and it brings religious people into contact with the racist movement,' says Zeskind... providing a philosophical umbrella... " |
| Christian Identity Movement | USA | - | - | - | - | 1993 | Landau, Elaine. The White Power Movement: America's Racist Hate Groups. Brookfield, CT: Milbrook Press (1993); pg. 55. | "The Klan's recent setbacks... have not, however, collapsed America's growing white-power movement. Many other active groups have embraced the racist principles associated with the Identity Church. This quasi-religious organization holds that white Anglo-Saxons are descended from the Ten Lost Tribes of biblical times... Although the Identity Church rationale was initially seized on by U.S. white supremacists during the late 1970s and early 1980s, its roots in the U.S. extend back to the 1940s and to nineteenth-century Britain. " |
| Christian Identity Movement | USA | 50,000 | - | - | - | 1994 | Long, Robert Emmet (ed.). Religious Cults in America (The Reference Shelf: Volume 66 Number 4), New York: The H. W. Wilson Co. (1994); pg. 57. | "...Christian Identity movement... Not surprisingly, Identity has become highly influential in the white supremacist right. While its numbers are small (probably between 20,000 and 50,000)... " |
| Christian Identity Movement | USA | - | - | - | - | 1994 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994); pg. 29. | "The skinheads are probably the most open about their Nazi views, but other groups share these views. Some of these groups were formed by people who took part in the American Nazi movement of the 1930s and 1940s. Many of these people still hold Nazi beliefs. However, the groups they lead today are joined together by a religion called Christian Identity. " |
| Christian Identity Movement | USA | - | - | 50 units |
- | 1995 | Able, Deborah. Hate Groups (series: "Issues in Focus "). Springfield, N.J.: Enslow Publishers, Inc. (1995); pg. 47-49. | "Identity Christians... There are perhaps fifty different Identity congregations scattered throughout the United States. Among them are the Mountain Church of Jesus Christ the Savior in Cohactah, Michigan. Another Identity church is the New Christian Crusade Church... Other churches include the Ministry of Christ Church in Mariposa, California, and the Lord's Covenant Church in Phoenix, Arizona. The most famous... is Richard Butler's Church of Jesus Christ Christian in Hayden Lake, Idaho. " |
| Christian Identity Movement | USA | 50,000 | - | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site (1998): "Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry "; web page: "Christian Identity Movement " | "The Christian Identity Movement; Also known as Anglo-Isrealism, Israel Identity... Membership: less than 50,000. In America only... Adherents - generally are Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nation, Nazi Party, White Separatists groups " |
| Christian Identity Movement | USA | - | - | 32 units |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 77. | Pg. 77: "Figure 3.2 shows a map of the 2000 geographical distribution of 602 racial hate groups "; Pg. 79: [Key to map] Ku Klux Klan: 110; Neo-Nazi: 180; Racist Skinhead: 39; Christian Identity: 32; Black Separatist: 48; Neo-Confederate; Other: 105 [Source: Southern Poverty Law Center.] |
| Christian Identity Movement | Virginia | - | - | 2 units |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | Washington | - | - | 3 units |
- | 2000 | Swain, Carol M. The New White Nationalism in America; Its Challenge to Integration. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press (2002); pg. 78-79. | Pg. 78-79: "Active Hate Groups in the United States in 2000 [map]... Source: Southern Poverty Law Center " |
| Christian Identity Movement | world | - | - | - | - | 1994 | Thompson, S. E. Hate Groups. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books (1994); pg. 29-30. | "Wesley Swift, a former Klan organizer from Alabama, founded Christian Identity and his Church of Jesus Christ Christian in the 1960s. The religion is based on Swift's interpretation of the Bible. Swift and his followers believe... The Christian Identity movement has grown in a climate of wide-scale social change taking place in North America and Europe over the last three decades. "; Pg. 30: "Christian Identity is the most influential force in the hate movement today. Dozens of churches teach Swift's... view of humanity. " |
| Christian Knights | North Carolina | - | - | - | - | 1992 | Landau, Elaine. The White Power Movement: America's Racist Hate Groups. Brookfield, CT: Milbrook Press (1993); pg. 36. | "...in April 1992 leaders fromone of the Klan's largest orders--The Christian Knights--traveled from their North Carolina headquarters to Long Island, New York, to swear in new members and lay the groundwork for a new group charter. " |
| Christian Life Churches International | Australia | 1,050 | 0.01% | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* Parliament of Australia web site; page: "Census 96: Religion " (viewed 18 Dec. 1999) | Self-identification, from 1996 govt. census. |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | USA | 392,167 | - | - | - | 1951 | Rosten, Leo (ed.). Religions in America; New York: Simon & Schuster (1963), 8th ed. [1st pub. in 1952. 8th ed. completely revised]; pg. 130. | "There are three main Negro Methodist bodies: the African Methodist Episcopal Church (1,166,301 members in 1951); the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (770,000 in 1959); and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church (392,167 in 1951). " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | USA | 444,493 | - | 2,523 units |
- | 1961 | Zehavi, A.M. (editor) Handbook of the World's Religions. New York: Franklin Watts (1973); pg. 9. | "The Christian Methodist Episcopal church in 1961 had 2,523 churches, 444,493 members, 2,025 Sunday schools with an enrollment of 115,424. " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | USA | 718,922 | - | 2,340 units |
- | 1983 | Bedell, Kenneth (ed.). Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches 1993. Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn (1993); pg. 248-255. | Table 2: US Current Stats. (# of adherents from table's "inclusive membership " column, not sometimes smaller "full communicant " col.) Listed in table as "Christian Methodist Episcopal Church. " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | USA | 718,922 | - | 2,340 units |
- | 1983 | Chalfant, H. Paul, et al. Religion in Contemporary Society (3rd Ed.); Itasca, Illinois: F.E. Peacock Publishers (1994). [Source: Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches, 1992]; pg. 381. | Table 12.1: "Membership in Major African-American Denominations "; Number of adherents from column: "Number of Members " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | USA | 718,922 | - | 2,340 units |
- | 1983 | *LINK* web site for Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches (accessed 1998); [Orig. source: Source: Kenneth B. Bedell, editor, Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches, annual.] | Table: 1997 Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches: U.S. Religious Bodies with more than 60,000 Members "; "...prepared for the U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census... for the 1997 edition of the Statistical Abstract of the U.S. " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | world | 120,000 | - | - | - | 1880 | Marty, Martin E. Pilgrims in Their Own Land: 500 Years of Religion in America. Boston: Little, Brown and Co. (1984); pg. 255. | "...some of them founded in 1870 a southern Christian Methodist Episcopal Church... While the CME, starting from scratch, did grow to 120,000 members by 1880... " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | world | 466,718 | - | - | - | 1965 | Crim, Keith (ed.). The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions. San Francisco: Harper Collins (1989). Reprint; originally pub. as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions, 1981; pg. 107. | "The Methodist Episcopal (M.E.) Church split over the slave issue in 1844. The southern branch continued its affiliation with blacks until 1870, when the black members withdrew and organized the Christian (originally 'Colored') Methodist Episcopal Church (1965 membership 466,718). " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | world | 718,922 | - | 2,340 units |
- | 1983 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.) The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); Section: Pietist-Methodist Family: Black Methodism; pg. 195-196. | "Christian Methodist Episcopal Church... Memphis, TN [H.Q.]... Membership: In 1983, the church reported 718,922 members, 2,340 churches... " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | world | 800,000 | - | 3,000 units |
- | 1990 | Mead, Frank S. (revised by Samuel S. Hill), Handbook of Denominations in the United States (9th Ed.), Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn. (1990); pg. 160. | "There are 800,000 members and 3,000 churches. " |
| Christian Methodist Episcopal Church | world | 800,000 | - | 3,000 units |
- | 1993 | Mead, Frank S. (revised by Samuel S. Hill), Handbook of Denominations in the United States (10th Ed.), Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn. (1995). | - |
| Christian Mission to Many Lands | Tanzania | - | - | - | - | 1999 | *LINK* "Southern Africa " in SIM NOW, Feb. 1999 (vol. #85); (viewed online 6 July 1999); SIM International web site. | "Tanzania: Our [SIM International] missionaries work in partnership with the Christian Mission to Many Lands (CMML) in the south of the country where the Makua, Makonde, and Yao live-the same people groups are found in Mozambique. At present, one couple is developing a youth and conference center, and another couple is preparing for involvement in Muslim evangelism. " |
| Christian Mission to Many Lands | Zambia | 50,000 | - | - | - | 1979 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: OPERATION WORLD 1979); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | "Anglicans 90,000; Reformed Church (S. African DRC) 90,000+; Baptists (3 groups) 16,000; Brethren (CMML) 50,000; Evangelical (AEF) 20,000; Brethren in Christ 6,000 "; [From Yale Divinity Library List of Abbreviations, I believe CMML stands for "Christian Missions in Many Lands " or (other source) "Christian Mission to Many Lands "] |
| Christian Motorcyclists Association | world | 60,000 | - | - | - | 1999 | *LINK* Wolfson, Hannah (AP). "Mormons Ride Hogs, Hand Out Their Scripture " in Salt Lake Tribune, 3 July 1999 (viewed online 4 July 1999). | "Missionaries on motorcycles are nothing new. The Christian Motorcyclists Association was formed in 1975, and now has some 60,000 members preaching the word around the world. |
| Christian Nation Church | Ohio | 100 | - | 5 units |
- | 1945 | Ferm, Vergilius (ed). An Encyclopedia of Religion; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press (1976; 1st ed. pub. 1945 by Philosophical Library); pg. 160. | "Christian Nation Church: A conservative religious sect in Ohio, having five churches and slightly more than 100 members. The movement originated in 1892 and took the form of an organized sect in 1895. " |
| Christian Nation Church | USA | 100 | - | 5 units |
- | 1945 | Ferm, Vergilius (ed). An Encyclopedia of Religion; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press (1976; 1st ed. pub. 1945 by Philosophical Library); pg. 160. | "Christian Nation Church: A conservative religious sect in Ohio, having five churches and slightly more than 100 members. The movement originated in 1892 and took the form of an organized sect in 1895. " |
| Christian Nation Church | USA | 100 | - | 5 units |
- | 1945 | Ferm, Vergilius (ed). An Encyclopedia of Religion; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press (1976; 1st ed. pub. 1945 by Philosophical Library); pg. 341. | Table: "...the leading holiness groups in the United States at the present time are as follows: " [Table lists figures for "Churches " and "Members " for 28 groups.] |
| Christian Nation Church | USA | 200 | - | 5 units |
- | 1989 | Bedell, Kenneth (ed.). Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches 1993. Abingdon Press: Nashville, Tenn (1993); pg. 248-255. | Table 2: US Current Stats. (# of adherents from table's "inclusive membership " column, not sometimes smaller "full communicant " col.) Listed in table as "Christian Nation Church U.S.A.. " |
| Christian Nation Church | world | 100 | - | 5 units |
1 country |
1945 | Ferm, Vergilius (ed). An Encyclopedia of Religion; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press (1976; 1st ed. pub. 1945 by Philosophical Library); pg. 160. | "Christian Nation Church: A conservative religious sect in Ohio, having five churches and slightly more than 100 members. The movement originated in 1892 and took the form of an organized sect in 1895. " |
| Christian Nation Church | world | 226 | - | 5 units |
- | 1982 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.) The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); Chapter: Holiness Family; section: 19th Century Holiness; pg. 205. | "Christian Nation Church, U.S.A... South Lebanon, OH [H.Q.]... Membership: In 1982 the Church reported 226 members, 5 churches and 18 ministers. " |
| Christian Outreach | Australia | 11,024 | 0.06% | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* Parliament of Australia web site; page: "Census 96: Religion " (viewed 18 Dec. 1999) | Self-identification, from 1996 govt. census. [Listed in table as "Christian Outreach Centres "] |
| Christian Outreach | New Zealand | 297 | 0.01% | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* web site: "VisionNet Census " (created by a Protestant group); web page: Pentecostal groups (viewed 9 Jan. 1999); original source: Statistics New Zealand | Data taken from New Zealand national censuses, based on self-identification, down to denominational level. |
| Christian Outreach Center | Texas: Dallas | 2,000 | - | 1 unit |
- | 1992 | *LINK* Thumma, Scott. web site: "Megachurches in the U.S. " (viewed Aug. 20, 1999; data collected 1992; last updated Aug. 19, 1999). Center for Social & Religious Research, Hartford Seminary. | Table; "size " is avg. weekly attendance. Study finding all U.S megachurches.; Indep. cong. in Dallas, TX; pastor Johnny King. |
| Christian Patriots Defense League | USA | 500 | - | - | - | 1990 | Lang, Susan S. Extremist Groups in America. New York: Franklin Watts (1990); pg. 78-81. | "The Christian Patriots Defense League (CPDL), is headed by retired millionaire John Harrell. CPDL is yet another extreme far-right survivalist and paramilitary group dedicated to helping 'patriots' survive the almost certain collapse of the U.S. government and the racial war that will follow. Harrell hosts biannual 'freedom festivals' either on his 55-acre Illinois estate, or his 232-acre base in the Missouri Ozarks, or on a paramilitary compound in West Virginia known as the group's survival base... His 'survival conferences' used to attract about one thousand participants who had a choice of more than fifty classes related to weapons training and guerrilla warfare before state laws outlawed them. Now attracting some five hundred survivalists, participants are taught tax evasion, first aid, and self-defense to protect the 'white Christian civilization.' " |
| Christian Pilgrim Church | USA | 250 | - | 15 units |
- | 1975 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.) The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991); Chapter: Holiness Family; section: 20th Century Holiness; pg. 217-218. | "The Christian Pilgrim Church was formed in 1937 by a group of holiness people, including Revs. Fannie Alldaffer, C. W. Cripps & Tracy Aldaffer. They gathered at Coldwater, Michigan, to build a holiness church... Congregations are found in the South and Midwest. Membership: Not reported. In the mid-1970s, the Church had 15 congregations and approximately 250 members. " |
| Christian Protestant Angkola Church | Indonesia | - | - | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site: National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.; web page: news release represents a modest edit of the wrap-up prepared by the World Council of Churches (1998). Viewed 7 Oct. 1999. | "Membership of the WCC rose to a record 339 churches as the Assembly welcomed eight more... two... are Indonesian: the Christian Protestant Angkola Church and the Christian Church of Sumba. " |
| Christian Reformed Church | Alaska | 239 | 0.04% | 1 unit |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center (Mars Hill, NC). Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. Courtesy of American Religion Data Archive. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members' column: 138. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Arizona | 1,673 | 0.05% | 11 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 1,075. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | California | 22,172 | 0.07% | 84 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 14,363. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Colorado | 4,516 | 0.14% | 18 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 2,952. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Connecticut | 263 | 0.01% | 1 unit |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 167. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Florida | 2,713 | 0.02% | 16 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 1,885. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Georgia, USA | 207 | 0.00% | 3 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 120. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Hawaii | 72 | 0.01% | 1 unit |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 53. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Idaho | 302 | 0.03% | 2 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 178. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Illinois | 17,390 | 0.15% | 51 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 11,208. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Indiana | 5,343 | 0.10% | 14 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 3,070. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Iowa | 21,129 | 0.76% | 62 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 13,543. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Kansas | 431 | 0.02% | 2 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 312. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Maryland | 178 | 0.00% | 1 unit |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 128. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Massachusetts | 1,372 | 0.02% | 4 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 946. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
| Christian Reformed Church | Michigan | 100,680 | 1.08% | 235 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 65,792. [Listed as 'Christian Reformed Church.'] |
Christian Reformed Church, continued ![]()