| Group | Where | Number of Adherents |
% of total pop. |
Number of congreg./ churches/ units |
Number of countries |
Year | Source | Quote/ Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christianity | Togo | 1,400,000 | 35.00% | - | - | 1997 | Dostert, Pierre Etienne. Africa 1997 (The World Today Series). Harpers Ferry, West Virginia: Stryker-Post Publications (1997); pg. 64. | Estimates of % of population in principal religions, & est. 1997 total pop. |
| Christianity | Togo | - | 20.00% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* Moore, Carrie A. "11 Togo dancers join LDS Church in Utah " in Deseret News (Oct. 4, 1998). | "Though about 70 percent of Togo's population profess indigenous religious beliefs, about 20 % are Christian. " |
| Christianity | Tonga | - | 66.00% | - | - | 1833 | Douglas, Norman & Ngaire Douglas. Tonga: A Guide. Newstead, Brisbane, Australia: Albion Press (1989); pg. 37. | "By 1833, then, roughly two-thirds of Tonga was Christian and united, and the effort seems to have been minimal, at least on the part of Taufa'ahau. " |
| Christianity | Tonga | 107,335 | 100.00% | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* CIA World Factbook web site (viewed Aug. 1998) | Total population: 107,335. Christian (Free Wesleyan Church claims over 30,000 adherents) |
| Christianity | Tonga | - | 93.00% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site: "Ethnologue Database " (viewed circa Dec. 1998) | "Religion: Christian 84% [apparently meaning Protestant and Catholic], Mormon 9% [a subset of Christianity], Baha'i 3% " |
| Christianity | Trinidad and Tobago | - | - | - | - | 1993 | Saft, Elizabeth (ed). Trinidad & Tobago (series: Insight Guides). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Co. (1993); pg. 72. | "Trinidad and Tobago is officially a Christian country, with the Catholic Church being particularly powerful... Practically every known sect of Christianity claims a portion of the black population: Roman Catholic, Church of England, Church of Scotland, Methodist, Moravian, Seventh-Day Adventist, Pentecostal, and more. " |
| Christianity | Tunisia | - | - | 4 units |
- | 1982 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: 9/17/82 issue of GLOBAL PRAYER DIGEST); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Worshipping Christian groups can be found in only four cities. |
| Christianity | Tunisia | 92,453 | 1.00% | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* CIA World Factbook web site (viewed Aug. 1998) | Total population: 9,245,284. Muslim 98%, Christian 1%, Jewish 1% |
| Christianity | Turkey | - | 0.30% | - | - | 1988 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: Reach Out to the Muslim World, International Students, Inc. Spring/Summer 1988.); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Total population: 51,400,000. Muslim 99.5% (Sunni Muslim 85%, Alevi Shiite, 14%) Christian 0.3 % (Chiefly confined to national and foreign minorities) Other 0.2%. |
| Christianity | Turkey | 50,000 | 0.08% | - | - | 1998 | "In Search of the Lost Churches of Paul " in Christianity Today (Aug. 10, 1998); pg. 46. | "All of this has conspired to keep the Christian population negligible. The Greek, Armenian, Syrian and Arab Christian populations together make up less than 1 percent of the population (maybe 50,000 out of more than 65 million people.) " |
| Christianity | Turkey - Kurds | 30,000 | - | - | - | 1993 | Chaliand, Gerard (ed). A People Without a Country: The Kurds and Kurdistan. New York: Olive Branch Press (1993 - revised first American edition); pg. 41. | "Nearly all Kurds (99%) are Muslims. There are also about 30,000 Nestorian and Assyrian Christians, and 40 to 50,000 Yezidis, the misnamed 'Devil worshippers.' " |
| Christianity | Tuvalu | 9,782 | 95.00% | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* Web site: "Council for World Mission "; web page: "Tuvalu/Ekalesia Kelisiano Tuvalu (EKT) " (viewed 31 May 1999). | "Ekalesia Kelisiano Tuvalu (EKT)?Country information: Population: 10,297 (July 1997).. Main religions: Christianity (95%)... Church information... Members/Congregations: 9,715/13. " |
| Christianity | Tuvalu | - | 95.00% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site: "Ethnologue Database " (viewed circa Dec. 1998) | "Religion: Christian 95%, Baha'i 5% " |
| Christianity | Uganda | 11,154,000 | 66.00% | - | - | 1990 | *LINK* Library of Congress Country Studies | Est. 16.9 million [total pop.] (1990). 66% Christian, equally divided between Roman Catholics & Protestants; largest Protestant denomination Anglican (Episcopal). About 15% Muslim. Remainder traditional or no religion. |
| Christianity | Uganda | - | 66.00% | - | - | 1994 | *LINK* "After 22 years of Exile, Asians Return to a Different Uganda " in Hinduism Today International (Dec. 1994) | Uganda is 66% Christian (half Catholic, half Protestant), 15% Muslim and 19% of tribal religion. |
| Christianity | Uganda | 11,160,000 | 60.00% | - | - | 1997 | Dostert, Pierre Etienne. Africa 1997 (The World Today Series). Harpers Ferry, West Virginia: Stryker-Post Publications (1997); pg. 186. | Estimates of % of population in principal religions, & est. 1997 total pop. |
| Christianity | Uganda | 13,320,000 | 66.60% | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 1 - Africa. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998); pg. 448-449. | "Location:Uganda; Population: 20 million "; Pg. 449: "About two-thirds of Ugandans are Christians, evenly divided between Protestants and Roman Catholics. " |
| Christianity | Uganda | - | 66.00% | - | - | 1999 | Creed, Alexander. Uganda ( "Major World Nations " book series). Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers (1999); pg. 57-58. | "Most Ugandans practice a Christian religion. About 33% are Roman Catholic... About 33% of Ugandans are Protestant. " |
| Christianity | Uganda - Baganda | 2,550,000 | 85.00% | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 1 - Africa. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998); pg. 35, 37. | "Baganda: Alternate Names: The King's Men; Location: Uganda; Population: About 3 million; Religion: Christianity (Protestantism and Roman Catholicism); Islam "; Pg. 37: "The majority of present-day Baganda are Christian, about evenly divided between Catholic and Protestant. Approximately 15% are Muslim... Contemporary Baganda are considered to be extremely religious, whatever their faith, although the Balubaale cult no longer exists. Belief in ancestors and the power of witches are still, however, quite common. " |
| Christianity | United Kingdom | - | - | - | - | 575 C.E. | Stack, Peggy Fletcher. A World of Faith. USA: Signature Books (1998); pg. 17. | "Episcopalians... In the sixth century, a Catholic monk left Rome and traveled to England. On the dusty road to London, the monk met the British king, Aethelbert, and promptly converted him to Christianity. In return, the king helped the monk win other converts and then built a monastery for them in Canterbury. The Archbishop of Canterbury became an important leader of the church in England. " |
| Christianity | United Kingdom | 51,230,000 | - | - | - | 1996 | 1997 Britannica Book of the Year; pg. 781-783. | Table; This figure for Christian "includes affiliated and nominal Christians " [but then, I assume that's what the figure for total Christians always includes on this table. But there's an explicit footnote to this effect for this stat.] |
| Christianity | United Kingdom | 51,060,000 | - | - | - | 1997 | Ash, Russell. The Top 10 of Everything, DK Publishing, Inc.: New York (1997); pg. 160-161. | List: "Top 10 Largest Christian Populations in the World "; (Rank: 6) |
| Christianity | United Kingdom | - | 90.00% | - | - | 1998 | Christian Century (Apr. 22-29, 1998); pg. 428. | "Other faiths comprise less than 10 percent of the population, so 90 percent still are rooted in a Christian position [in United Kingdom]. " |
| Christianity | United Kingdom | 37,394,000 | - | - | - | 1998 | Ash, Russell. The Top 10 of Everything 1999. New York: DK Publishing (1998); pg. 76. | "...it is difficult to put a precise figure on nominal membership (a declared religious persuasion) rather than active participation (regular attendance at a place of worship). For example, the total Christian population of the U.K. was estimated to be 37,394,000 in 1995, but it is estimated that the population who regularly attend church services (who would be classified as practicing Christians) is just over 6,000,000. Even taking into account other denominations in the UK, there is clearly a wide gulf between thought and deed. " |
| Christianity | United Kingdom: England | - | - | - | - | 597 C.E. | Blashfield, Jean F. England ( "Enchantment of the World Second Series "). New York: Children's Press (1997); pg. 97. | "Christianity took hold in Ireland, Wales, and part of Scotland, but it was late coming to England. About A.D. 570, a Kentish king named Ethelbert married a Christian woman. Pope Gregory of Rome, hearing of the event, sent a mission to Englandin 597. The leader, Augustine, baptized the king and established Canterbury as the headquarters of the Christian church in England. " |
| Christianity | United Kingdom: Isle of Man | - | - | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* CIA World Factbook web site (viewed Aug. 1998) | Anglican, Roman Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian, Society of Friends; Total pop.: 74,504. |
| Christianity | Uruguay | - | 62.00% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site: "Ethnologue Database " (viewed circa Dec. 1998) | "Religion: Christian 62%, secular 36%, Jewish 2% " |
| Christianity | USA | - | - | 3,219 units |
- | 1776 | Finke, Roger & Rodney Stark. The Churching of America, 1776-1990. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press (1992; 3rd printing 1997); [Orig. source: Paullin (1932)]; pg. 25. | Table 2.1: "Numbers of Congregations per Denomination, 1776 " |
| Christianity | USA | - | - | - | - | 1890 | Reeves, Thomas C. Twentieth Century America: A Brief History. New York: Oxford University Press (2000); pg. 1. | "Americans... in 1900... The great majority of Americans assumed they lived in a Christian, Protestant country; the faith was an integral part of everyday life. For example, not only was Bible reading in the public schools routine, bu tin 1890, twenty-two of twenty-four state universities surveyed conduced chapel services, twelve required attendance, and four mandated church attendance as well. In 1892 U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Brewer declared, 'This is a religious people. This is historically true. From the discovery of this continent to the present hour there is a single voice making this affirmation . . . this is a Christian nation.' Economic abundance, religion, patriotism, and optimism were intertwined and everywhere in evidence in the U.S. at the dawn of the twentieth century. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | - | - | - | 1912 | Reeves, Thomas C. Twentieth Century America: A Brief History. New York: Oxford University Press (2000); pg. 55. | "Missionary diplomacy... [President Woodrow Wilson] and Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan denounced self-interest in the service of morality. Neither man had more than a rudimentary knowledge of foreign policy, or, indeed foreign countries... Both men, however, were deeply religious and firmly believed that they could be instruments of God's will across the globe, bringing Christianity, peace, stability, and democracy to millions. More often than not during the next eight years, they failed. And in the course of attempting to be missionaries for a 'superior' way of life, they antagonized peoples in many nations, who were unable to tell the difference between Wilsonian diplomacy and old-fashioned Yankee imperialism. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | - | - | - | 1965 | Reeves, Thomas C. Twentieth Century America: A Brief History. New York: Oxford University Press (2000); pg. 194. | "By mid-1963, at least thirty states required or authorized Bible reading in public schools. About half of the nation's schoolchildren began their day with religious exercises that included Bible verses or the Lord's Prayer or both. These practices, according to pollsters, had the overwhelming support of the American people. But the U.S. Supreme Court thought otherwise. In 1963, continuing a trend that began in 1947, it struck down state-sponsored Bible reading and recitation of the Lord's Prayer in public schools. Billy Graham said he was 'shocked and disappointed.' Liberal church leaders, however, praised the decision of the Court. Moreover, the media treated religion with increasing indifference. Many Christian colleges and universities dropped religious requirements & practices. The mood of educated people (especially in the humanities & social sciences) was moving sharply to the left in the 1960s, and this was reflected in a growing hostility to traditional Christianity. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | 90.00% | - | - | 1981 | Robertson, Ian. Sociology (2nd ed.); New York, NY: Worth Publishers (1981) [2nd edition is updated since 1977 1st edition]; pg. 419. | "The United States, in constrast, is also about 90% Christian, the largest denomination, the Catholic Church has only about 27% of total church allegiance. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | - | - | - | 1990 | *LINK* Religious Requirements & Practices of Certain Selected Groups: A Handbook for Chaplains (1993) - (online ed. - 1998); contract #: MDA903-90-C-0062 w/ Dept. of Defense; J. Gordon Melton, Project Director & James Lewis.; Section: "Christian Heritage Groups: Introduction "; [Orig. source: Ahlstrom, S., A Religious History of the American People (Garden City, NY: Image Books, 1975); Vol. 2.] | "As of 1990, there are over 800 different, distinct groups or bodies ('denominations') identified as part of American Christianity. " |
| Christianity | USA | 151,224,992 | 86.20% | - | - | 1990 | Kosmin, B. & S. Lachman. One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society; Harmony Books: New York (1993); pg. 15-17. | Table 1-2: Self-Described Adherence of U.S. Adult Population 1990. Phone survey w/ 113,000 people; by Graduate School of City U. of New York. |
| Christianity | USA | - | 88.10% | - | - | 1990 | Kosmin, B. & S. Lachman. One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society; Harmony Books: New York (1993); pg. 88-93. | Table 3-1: Religious Composition of State Populations, 1990... Self-identification of religious loyalty, using representative sample of 113,000 people in phone interviews. Sum of % by state of 21 main groups Kosmin classified as Christian: Assemblies of God, Baptist, Christianity - no denomination supplied, Church of God - all denominations, Church of the Nazarene, Churches of Christ, Congregationalist, Episcopalian, Evangelical/Born Again, Jehovah's Witnesses, Latter Day Saints, Holiness/Holy, Lutheran, Mennonite, Methodist, Orthodox, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Catholic, Seventh-day Adventists |
| Christianity | USA | - | - | 405,000 units |
- | 1993 | O'Brien, J. & M. Palmer. The State of Religion Atlas. Simon & Schuster: New York (1993); pg. 36-37. | "There are 405,000 Christian places of worship in the USA, including 100,000 with no affiliation to any other group. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | 82.00% | - | - | 1993 | Occhiogrosso, Peter. The Joy of Sects: A Spirited Guide to the World's Religious Traditions. New York: Doubleday (1996); pg. 372. | "According to a 1993 Gallup poll, only 4% of Americans describe themselves as atheists or agnostics. Of the remaining 96%, an overwhelming 82% said they are Christians: Protestant, Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, or unaffiliated. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | - | - | - | 1993 | Reeves, Thomas C. Twentieth Century America: A Brief History. New York: Oxford University Press (2000); pg. 284. | "[During the 1990s] The courts, in the name of the separation of church and state, were a major force in restricting the impact of the Christian faith. Among other things, they outlawed prayer in the public schools and drove Christian symbols out of public places. The highly influential New York Times and the American Civil Liberties Union, among others, applauded these things. Conservative Catholic and evangelical intellectuals were scandalized, often appealing to American history to show the novelty of this approach. Right and left found little or no common ground on the issue by the end of the 1990s. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | 87.00% | - | - | 1994 | Baines, John. The United States (series: Country Fact Files). Austin, Texas: Raintree Steck-Vaughn Publishers (1994); pg. 23. | "Religion: 87% of people say they are Christian, and 40% go to church regularly. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | 80.00% | - | - | 1994 | Reeves, Thomas C. Twentieth Century America: A Brief History. New York: Oxford University Press (2000); pg. 284. | "A Harris poll taken in July 1994 revealed that 95 percent of those surveyed believed in God. Of the four in five Americans who described themselves as Christians... " |
| Christianity | USA | 227,020,000 | - | - | - | 1996 | 1997 Britannica Book of the Year; pg. 781-783. | Table; "professing " [i.e. self-identified] Christians = 227,020,000, which includes 29,540,000 unaffiliated Christians |
| Christianity | USA | 140,000,000 | - | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* Web site: "Arabic Paper "; web page: "Statistics of Muslims in the USA and around the World " (viewed 15 June 1999). [Written 1998] | "WORLD '96: 1,800 million Christans 1,780 million Muslims 0,018 million; Jews; The Muslim population is growing at rate 3% a year, while Christianity is dropping to 2.6% a year; USA '96: 140.0 million; Christians; 010.0 milliom Muslims; 004.3 million Jews " [The many spelling errors were on the original web page, and not a mistake by Adherents.com. This web site is obviously presenting erroneous, highly inflated figures for Muslims.] |
| Christianity | USA | - | 84.00% | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* Web site: Pew Research Center (1998): "The Diminishing Divide: American Churches, American Politics " | "More specifically, religion has a strong impact on the political views of Christian Americans who represent 84% of the voting age population. " |
| Christianity | USA | 224,456,992 | - | - | - | 1997 | Ash, Russell. The Top 10 of Everything, DK Publishing, Inc.: New York (1997); pg. 160-161. | List: "Top 10 Largest Christian Populations in the World "; (Rank: 1) |
| Christianity | USA | 182,674,000 | - | - | - | 1998 | Ash, Russell. The Top 10 of Everything 1999. New York: DK Publishing (1998); pg. 76. | Table: "Top 10 Largest Christian Populations in the World "; Rank: #1 |
| Christianity | USA | - | 85.00% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site: "Monday Morning Reality Check " (Protestant); web page: "Harvest 2000, Take II " by Justin D. Long, 1998 (viewed 5 March 1999) | "Here in America, 85% of the country professes to be Christian and 15% don't. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | 90.00% | - | - | 1999 | Gallagher, Winifred. Working on God. New York: Random House (1999); pg. 31. | "At the millennium, one of three people on the planet and nine out of ten Americans identify themselves as Christians. " |
| Christianity | USA | - | 90.00% | - | - | 1999 | Gallagher, Winifred. Working on God. New York: Random House (1999); pg. xxiii. | "The same process of homogenization and secularization that affects Jews affects Americans from other traditions, often without their awareness. Nine out of ten citizens now identify in some way with Christianity, but how many of their children and grandchildren will? " |
| Christianity | USA - Koreans | 750,000 | 75.00% | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 2 - Americas. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998); pg. 279. | "The 1990 US Census estimated the Korean Amerian population at 750,000, but many think it may actually be as high as one million or more. Korean Americans live in communities across the US, with the majority in California. The states of New York, Illinois, New Jersey, Texas, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington also have significant Korean American communities. "; "About 75% of Korean American families are affiliated with a Christian church, and some 65% attend services regularly. Churches serve many purposes, both sacred and secular, in Korean American communities. " |
| Christianity | USA - military | - | 71.00% | - | - | 2000 | *LINK* Estrin, Robin (AP). "Religion in the News " on Excite.News.Com (17 Feb 2000) | "Besides the Koran, the containerized chapels offer three versions of the Bible, the Book of Mormon and the Jewish Holy Scriptures. The mats and shawls are in camouflage green... Although the military is dominated by Protestants and Catholics (71 percent of Army personnel identify themselves as Christian, compared with 0.4 percent Muslims and 0.3 percent Jews)... " |
| Christianity | Utah | - | 87.60% | - | - | 1990 | Kosmin, B. & S. Lachman. One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society; Harmony Books: New York (1993); pg. 88-93. | Table 3-1: Religious Composition of State Populations, 1990... Self-identification of religious loyalty, using representative sample of 113,000 people in phone interviews. Sum of % by state of 21 main groups Kosmin classified as Christian: Assemblies of God, Baptist, Christianity - no denomination supplied, Church of God - all denominations, Church of the Nazarene, Churches of Christ, Congregationalist, Episcopalian, Evangelical/Born Again, Jehovah's Witnesses, Latter Day Saints, Holiness/Holy, Lutheran, Mennonite, Methodist, Orthodox, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Catholic, Seventh-day Adventists |
| Christianity | Utah | - | - | - | - | 1999 | *LINK* Mims, Bob. "Utah Christians Unite Today in March for Jesus " in Salt Lake Tribune, May 22, 1999 (viewed online 22 May 1999). | "'Over a dozen churches of various denominations are directly involved with the march, but many more churches have shown an interest in coming... Lutherans, Catholics, Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists, Episcopalians, Assembly of God, non-denominational, charismatics (and) LDS [Mormons], " Fletcher said... Fletcher sees that message as especially welcome in Utah, where Mormons comprise an estimated 70% of the population -- and where other Christians have been fragmented by denominational divisions. " |
| Christianity | Utah | - | 75.00% | - | - | 2001 | *LINK* Kosmin, Barry A.; Egon Mayer; & Ariela Keysar. "American Religious Identity Survey. " 2001. City University of New York. | ARIS: Nationwide phone survey of 50,000 American adults; open-ended question: 'What is your religion, if any?'; Sum of all major groups classified by study as Christian: Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Pentecostal, Episcopalian/Anglican, Mormon/LDS, Church of Christ, Non-denominational, Congregationalist/UCC, Jehovah's Witnesses, Assemblies of God, Evangelical, Church of God, Seventh-Day Adventist.] |
| Christianity | Vanuatu | 120,120 | 84.00% | - | - | 1991 | *LINK* web site: "Ethnologue Database " (viewed circa Dec. 1998) | "Population: 143,000 (1991 Honolulu Star-Bulletin)... Religion: Christian 84%, cargo cult 11%, traditional religion 5% " |
| Christianity | Vanuatu | - | - | - | - | 1997 | Leibo, Steven A. East, Southeast Asia, and the Western Pacific 1997 (The World Today Series). Harpers Ferry, West Virginia: Stryker-Post Publications (1997); pg. 196. | "Principal Religion: Christianity (Presbyterian, Anglican, Catholic) with local influences. " |
| Christianity | Venezuela | - | 96.00% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site: "Ethnologue Database " (viewed circa Dec. 1998) | "Religion: Christian 96%, secular 2% " |
| Christianity | Vermont | - | 83.60% | - | - | 1990 | Kosmin, B. & S. Lachman. One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society; Harmony Books: New York (1993); pg. 88-93. | Table 3-1: Religious Composition of State Populations, 1990... Self-identification of religious loyalty, using representative sample of 113,000 people in phone interviews. Sum of % by state of 21 main groups Kosmin classified as Christian: Assemblies of God, Baptist, Christianity - no denomination supplied, Church of God - all denominations, Church of the Nazarene, Churches of Christ, Congregationalist, Episcopalian, Evangelical/Born Again, Jehovah's Witnesses, Latter Day Saints, Holiness/Holy, Lutheran, Mennonite, Methodist, Orthodox, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Catholic, Seventh-day Adventists |
| Christianity | Vermont | - | 67.00% | - | - | 2001 | *LINK* Kosmin, Barry A.; Egon Mayer; & Ariela Keysar. "American Religious Identity Survey. " 2001. City University of New York. | ARIS: Nationwide phone survey of 50,000 American adults; open-ended question: 'What is your religion, if any?'; Sum of all major groups classified by study as Christian: Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Pentecostal, Episcopalian/Anglican, Mormon/LDS, Church of Christ, Non-denominational, Congregationalist/UCC, Jehovah's Witnesses, Assemblies of God, Evangelical, Church of God, Seventh-Day Adventist.] |
| Christianity | Vietnam | - | - | - | - | 1981 | 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. 181. | "Never large, and in Vietnam principally Roman Catholic except among some mountain tribes, the Christian churches of this area have seen most of their villages wiped out and from some to most to all fo their people killed of forced to flee. " |
| Christianity | Vietnam | - | - | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* web site: "Monday Morning Reality Check " (Protestant); web page (1996 list): "Eastward shift of Christianity to post-Communist world " by Justin D. Long, 1996 (viewed 12 March 1999) | "There are large underground churches in many east Asian nations which are growing rapidly, particularly in Vietnam and North Korea. " |
| Christianity | Virginia | - | 87.40% | - | - | 1990 | Kosmin, B. & S. Lachman. One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society; Harmony Books: New York (1993); pg. 88-93. | Table 3-1: Religious Composition of State Populations, 1990... Self-identification of religious loyalty, using representative sample of 113,000 people in phone interviews. Sum of % by state of 21 main groups Kosmin classified as Christian: Assemblies of God, Baptist, Christianity - no denomination supplied, Church of God - all denominations, Church of the Nazarene, Churches of Christ, Congregationalist, Episcopalian, Evangelical/Born Again, Jehovah's Witnesses, Latter Day Saints, Holiness/Holy, Lutheran, Mennonite, Methodist, Orthodox, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Catholic, Seventh-day Adventists |
| Christianity | Virginia | - | 76.00% | - | - | 2001 | *LINK* Kosmin, Barry A.; Egon Mayer; & Ariela Keysar. "American Religious Identity Survey. " 2001. City University of New York. | ARIS: Nationwide phone survey of 50,000 American adults; open-ended question: 'What is your religion, if any?'; Sum of all major groups classified by study as Christian: Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Pentecostal, Episcopalian/Anglican, Mormon/LDS, Church of Christ, Non-denominational, Congregationalist/UCC, Jehovah's Witnesses, Assemblies of God, Evangelical, Church of God, Seventh-Day Adventist.] |
| Christianity | Wallis and Futuna Islands | - | 99.00% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* web site: "Ethnologue Database " (viewed circa Dec. 1998) | "Religion: 99% " |
| Christianity | Washington | - | 77.10% | - | - | 1990 | Kosmin, B. & S. Lachman. One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society; Harmony Books: New York (1993); pg. 88-93. | Table 3-1: Religious Composition of State Populations, 1990... Self-identification of religious loyalty, using representative sample of 113,000 people in phone interviews. Sum of % by state of 21 main groups Kosmin classified as Christian: Assemblies of God, Baptist, Christianity - no denomination supplied, Church of God - all denominations, Church of the Nazarene, Churches of Christ, Congregationalist, Episcopalian, Evangelical/Born Again, Jehovah's Witnesses, Latter Day Saints, Holiness/Holy, Lutheran, Mennonite, Methodist, Orthodox, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Catholic, Seventh-day Adventists |
| Christianity | Washington | - | 63.00% | - | - | 2001 | *LINK* Kosmin, Barry A.; Egon Mayer; & Ariela Keysar. "American Religious Identity Survey. " 2001. City University of New York. | ARIS: Nationwide phone survey of 50,000 American adults; open-ended question: 'What is your religion, if any?'; Sum of all major groups classified by study as Christian: Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Protestant - no denomination supplied, Pentecostal, Episcopalian/Anglican, Mormon/LDS, Church of Christ, Non-denominational, Congregationalist/UCC, Jehovah's Witnesses, Assemblies of God, Evangelical, Church of God, Seventh-Day Adventist.] |