back to Haiti, Catholic - nuns
| Group | Where | Number of Adherents |
% of total pop. |
Number of congreg./ churches/ units |
Number of countries |
Year | Source | Quote/ Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catholic - priests | Haiti | 391 | - | - | - | 1972 | *LINK* web site: "Religion in Latin America " (Providence College); web page: "Statistics " (viewed 14 Aug. 1999). [Orig. source: Statistical Yearbook of the Church 1996; Catholic Almanac 1975. | Table 2: "Increase in Priests, 1972-1996 " |
| Catholic - priests | Haiti | 583 | - | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* web site: "Religion in Latin America " (Providence College); web page: "Statistics " (viewed 14 Aug. 1999). [Orig. source: Statistical Yearbook of the Church 1996; Catholic Almanac 1975. | Table 2: "Increase in Priests, 1972-1996 " |
| Catholic - seminarians | Haiti | 41 | - | - | - | 1972 | *LINK* web site: "Religion in Latin America " (Providence College); web page: "Statistics " (viewed 14 Aug. 1999). [Orig. source: Statistical Yearbook of the Church 1996; Catholic Almanac 1975. | Table 1.1: "Increase in Seminarians " |
| Catholic - seminarians | Haiti | 325 | - | - | - | 1996 | *LINK* web site: "Religion in Latin America " (Providence College); web page: "Statistics " (viewed 14 Aug. 1999). [Orig. source: Statistical Yearbook of the Church 1996; Catholic Almanac 1975. | Table 1.1: "Increase in Seminarians " |
| Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | Haiti | 5,100 | 0.07% | 18 units |
- | 1995 | Deseret News 1997-98 Church Almanac. Deseret News: Salt Lake City, UT (1996), pg. 188-408. | "Year-end 1995: Est. population [of country]; Members, [number shown in '# of adherents' column to left] " |
| Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | Haiti | 5,800 | 0.09% | 16 units |
- | 1997 | Deseret News 1999-2000 Church Almanac. Deseret News: Salt Lake City, UT (1998), pg. 267-410. | Information from a variety of sources. Figures for year-end 1997. |
| Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | Haiti | 5,300 | - | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* LDS-GEMS | In 1997 there were about 5,300 members in Haiti. |
| Church of the Nazarene | Haiti | 70,924 | 0.99% | 436 units |
- | 1998 | *LINK* official organization web site: Nazarene World Mission Society | Church Statistics: Churches; 6 Jan 1998; total population: 7,148,000 |
| Communion Mennonite d'Haiti | Haiti | 400 | - | - | - | 1990 | *LINK* Mennonite World Conference web site. Directory 1998. Web page: "Carribean, Central & South America: Mennonite & Brethren in Christ Churches " | HAITI... Communion Mennonite d'Haiti; Members (1990): 400 |
| Conservative Baptist Mission | Haiti | 17,646 | - | 325 units |
- | 1998 | *LINK* Baptist World Alliance web site; page: "BWA Statistics " (viewed 31 March 1999). | "Figures are for BWA affiliated conventions/unions only (no independents included). "; Table with 3 columns: Country, "Churches ", & "Members "; "1997/1998 Totals " |
| Evangelical | Haiti | - | 13.00% | - | - | 1979 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: Operation World 1979); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Protestants 18%. Community 880,000. Membership 290,000. Denominations -- over 20 (also many hundreds of indigenous groups. Evangelicals 13% of the population. |
| Evangelical Baptists of S. Haiti (WIM) | Haiti | 58,000 | - | - | - | 1979 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: Operation World 1979); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Largest [Protestant groups]: Baptists 80,000 members; Evang. Bapt. of S. Haiti (WIM) 58,000; Pentecostals 50,000; MEBSH (UFM) 15,000. |
| Islam | Haiti | 2,500 | 0.04% | - | - | 2000 | K. F. Bin Mohd Noor. "Muslims Statistics... for Year 2000 " [orig. src: Barrett. World Christian Encyclopedia, 1982] | Table |
| Jehovah's Witnesses | Haiti | 3,530 | 0.06% | 76 units |
- | 1983 | Botting, Heather & Gary Botting. The Orwellian World of Jehovah's Witnesses. Toronto: University of Toronto Press (1984), pg. 53-59. | Table: "1983 Service Year Report of JWs Worldwide "; Adherent count here is from "1983 Peak Publishers " column |
| Jehovah's Witnesses | Haiti | 10,621 | 0.15% | 207 units |
- | 1997 | *LINK* official organization web site | Adherent/member count is for "1997 Peak Witnesses "; Memorial attendance (annual sacrament meeting) for same year: 67,259. |
| Jehovah's Witnesses | Haiti | 11,503 | 0.16% | 211 units |
- | 1998 | *LINK* Jehovah's Witnesses official web site; section: "Statistics "; web page: "Worldwide Report " (viewed 16 April 1999). | Table: "1998 Report of Jehovah's Witnesses Worldwide "; This adherent/member count is for "1998 Peak Witnesses " |
| Jehovah's Witnesses - Memorial attendance | Haiti | 18,713 | - | 76 units |
- | 1983 | Botting, Heather & Gary Botting. The Orwellian World of Jehovah's Witnesses. Toronto: University of Toronto Press (1984), pg. 53-59. | Table: "1983 Service Year Report of JWs Worldwide "; Data from columns: "No. of congs. " and "Memorial attendance " |
| Jehovah's Witnesses - Memorial attendance | Haiti | 67,259 | 0.92% | 207 units |
- | 1997 | *LINK* official organization web site | From 1997 Statistics "Memorial attendance " column. Count of all who attend this once-a-year meeting, whether or not a "publisher " in full standing. Most would be considered adherents. |
| Jehovah's Witnesses - Memorial attendance | Haiti | 50,597 | 0.69% | - | - | 1998 | *LINK* Jehovah's Witnesses official web site; section: "Statistics "; web page: "Worldwide Report " (viewed 16 April 1999). | Table: "1998 Report of Jehovah's Witnesses Worldwide "; "Memorial attendance " column indicates attendance at yearly communion meeting. |
| L'Eglise de Dieu en Christ Mennonite | Haiti | 444 | - | 6 units |
- | 1998 | *LINK* Mennonite World Conference web site. Directory 1998. Web page: "Carribean, Central & South America: Mennonite & Brethren in Christ Churches " | HAITI... L'Eglise de Dieu en Christ Mennonite; Members: 444; Congregations: 6 |
| Macandal | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1976 | Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster (1985), pg. 211-212. | "Haitian anthropologist... Michel Laguerre... 1976 [met] peasants who had been invited to join secret societies, [but later] converted to Protestantism & hence were willing to talk. There were... secret societies in all parts of the country, & each one maintained control of a specified territory. Names varied from region to region but included Zobop, Bizango, Vlinblindingue, San Poel, Mandingue, &... Macandal... quasi-political arm of the vodoun society charged above all with the protection of the community... " |
| Mandingue | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1976 | Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster (1985), pg. 211-212. | "Haitian anthropologist... Michel Laguerre... 1976 [met] peasants who had been invited to join secret societies, [but later] converted to Protestantism & hence were willing to talk. There were... secret societies in all parts of the country, & each one maintained control of a specified territory. Names varied from region to region but included Zobop, Bizango, Vlinblindingue, San Poel, Mandingue, &... Macandal... quasi-political arm of the vodoun society charged above all with the protection of the community... " |
| MEBSH Church (UFM) | Haiti | 15,000 | - | - | - | 1979 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: Operation World 1979); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Largest [Protestant groups]: Baptists 80,000 members; Evang. Bapt. of S. Haiti (WIM) 58,000; Pentecostals 50,000; MEBSH (UFM) 15,000. |
| Mennonite Son Light Missions | Haiti | 80 | - | 2 units |
- | 1994 | *LINK* Mennonite World Conference web site. Directory 1998. Web page: "Carribean, Central & South America: Mennonite & Brethren in Christ Churches " | HAITI... Mennonite Son Light Missions; Members (1994): 80; Congregations: 2 |
| Mennonite World Conference | Haiti | 924 | - | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* Mennonite World Conference web site; page: "Mennonite and Brethren in Christ World Membership Totals " (viewed 8 Aug. 1999). | Table: "Mennonite and Brethren in Christ World Membership Totals "; "based on the most recent data available... from 1996 or 1997... statistics indicate baptized members "; Dif. religious bodies: 3. |
| Nonreligious | Haiti | - | 1.00% | - | - | 1992 | Goring, Rosemary (ed). Larousse Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions (Larousse: 1994) pg. 581-584. | Table: "Population Distribution of Major Beliefs "; "Figures have been compiled from the most accurate recent available information and are in most cases correct to the nearest 1% " |
| Nonreligious | Haiti | 66,114 | 1.00% | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* CIA World Factbook web site (viewed Aug. 1998) | Roman Catholic 80% (of which an overwhelming majority also practice Voodoo), Protestant 16% (Baptist 10%, Pentecostal 4%, Adventist 1%, other 1%), none 1%, other 3% (1982); Total Population: 6,611,407 (1997 est.). |
| Order of the Elus-Cohen | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1772 | Cavendish, Richard (ed.). Man, Myth & Magic: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Supernatural (vol. 13). New York: Marshall Cavendish Corp. (1970), pg. 1746-47. | "...Order's chief centres were its 'chapters' at Foix... and other French cities, and those on Santo Domingo, including Port-au-Prince (1772)... " |
| other | Haiti | 430,000 | - | - | - | 1996 | 1997 Britannica Book of the Year. Pg. 781-783. | Table; "other " = NOT Roman Catholic, Baptist, Pentecostal |
| Pentecostal | Haiti | 50,000 | - | - | - | 1979 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: Operation World 1979); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Largest [Protestant groups]: Baptists 80,000 members; Evang. Bapt. of S. Haiti (WIM) 58,000; Pentecostals 50,000; MEBSH (UFM) 15,000. |
| Pentecostal | Haiti | 240,000 | - | - | - | 1996 | 1997 Britannica Book of the Year. Pg. 781-783. | Table: "Religion ": Divided by nations, with 2 columns: "Religious affiliation " & "1996 pop. " [of that religion]. Based on best avail. figures, whether census data, membership figures or estimates by analysts, as % of est. 1996 midyear pop. |
| Pentecostal | Haiti | 264,456 | 4.00% | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* CIA World Factbook web site (viewed Aug. 1998) | Roman Catholic 80% (of which an overwhelming majority also practice Voodoo), Protestant 16% (Baptist 10%, Pentecostal 4%, Adventist 1%, other 1%), none 1%, other 3% (1982); Total Population: 6,611,407 (1997 est.). |
| Protestant | Haiti | - | 18.00% | - | - | 1979 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: Operation World 1979); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Protestants 18%. Community 880,000. Membership 290,000. Denominations -- over 20 (also many hundreds of indigenous groups. Evangelicals 13% of the population. |
| Protestant | Haiti | - | 16.00% | - | - | 1992 | Goring, Rosemary (ed). Larousse Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions (Larousse: 1994) pg. 581-584. | Table: "Population Distribution of Major Beliefs "; "Figures have been compiled from the most accurate recent available information and are in most cases correct to the nearest 1% "; Protestant "includes all non-Roman Catholic denominations " |
| Protestant | Haiti | 1,057,825 | 16.00% | - | - | 1997 | *LINK* CIA World Factbook web site (viewed Aug. 1998) | Roman Catholic 80% (of which an overwhelming majority also practice Voodoo), Protestant 16% (Baptist 10%, Pentecostal 4%, Adventist 1%, other 1%), none 1%, other 3% (1982); Total Population: 6,611,407 (1997 est.). |
| Protestant | Haiti | 1,317,800 | 20.00% | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 2 - Americas. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998), pg. 215, 219. | "Location: Haiti; Population: 6,589,000 "; "Religion is an integral part of Haitian life and culture. Vodou (a mixture of African animism and Christianity, also known as Voodoo) and Roman Catholicism are the two main religions. Over 90% of Haitians participate in Vodou religion. Because Vodou is nonexclusive, 80% of Haitians are also Roman Catholic, and Protestants of various denominations account for the other 20%, many of whom do not generally participate in Vodou. All three religious sectors are organized at the national level and are officially organized. " |
| Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia | Haiti | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 1998 | *LINK* official organization web site (1998) | Counted listings in directory of parishes. |
| San Poel | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1976 | Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster (1985), pg. 211-212. | "Haitian anthropologist... Michel Laguerre... 1976 [met] peasants who had been invited to join secret societies, [but later] converted to Protestantism & hence were willing to talk. There were... secret societies in all parts of the country, & each one maintained control of a specified territory. Names varied from region to region but included Zobop, Bizango, Vlinblindingue, San Poel, Mandingue, &... Macandal... quasi-political arm of the vodoun society charged above all with the protection of the community... " |
| Scientology | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1999 | *LINK* web page (OPPOSING VIEW): "Scientology Worldwide " (viewed 13 Feb. 1999); "Last Update on 10th Feb. 1999 " | Number here ( "# congregations ") represent total of all orgs: Dianetic Centers, Celebrity Centers, missions, etc.; "CoS web sites have lists of Missions (1998) & Orgs (1996) from which the Table below is derived. Original concept and research by 'Inducto'. " |
| Vlinblindingue | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1936 | Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster (1985), pg. 210. | "A member of the mulatto elite... told Hurston: 'We have a society that is detestable to all the people of Haiti. It is known as the Sect Rouge, Vinbrindingue and Cochons gris and all these names mean one and the same thing... " |
| Vlinblindingue | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1976 | Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster (1985), pg. 211-212. | "Haitian anthropologist... Michel Laguerre... 1976 [met] peasants who had been invited to join secret societies, [but later] converted to Protestantism & hence were willing to talk. There were... secret societies in all parts of the country, & each one maintained control of a specified territory. Names varied from region to region but included Zobop, Bizango, Vlinblindingue, San Poel, Mandingue, &... Macandal... quasi-political arm of the vodoun society charged above all with the protection of the community... " |
| Vlinblindingue | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1985 | Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster (1985), pg. 273. | "Vlinblindingue: A name of a secret society (also vinbringingue). " |
| Vodoun | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1979 | *LINK* Nance Profiles web site (orig. source: Operation World 1979); (viewed Aug. 1998; now restricted.) | Roman Catholicism 70%, the state religion, but considerable compromised by close contacts with Voodooism. Voodooism is really the national religion -- an outgrowth of African spiritism and witchcraft. |
| Vodoun | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1988 | Dostert, Pierre Etienne. Latin America 1988 (The World Today Series). Harpers Ferry, West Virginia: Stryker-Post Publications (1997), pg. 105. | "Religion: Officially, Roman Catholic Christianity, but a majority of Haitians practice Voodoo, a variety of animism similar to African native religions, but with a greater emphasis on mysticism. " |
| Vodoun | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1989 | *LINK* Library of Congress Country Studies | Est. 6.1 million [total pop.] (1989). Roman Catholicism official religion according to 1860 Concordat with Vatican. Voodoo more widely practiced than Catholicism and could be considered national religion. |
| Vodoun | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1993 | Brandon, George. Santeria from Africa to the New World: Dead Sell Memories. Bloomington and Indiana: Indiana University Press (1993), pg. 2. | "Yoruba religion also entered Haiti to compose there, along with Kongo-Angolan and Dahomeyan practices, the kaleidoscope that is the religion of Vodun. " |
| Vodoun | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1996 | Occhiogrosso, Peter. The Joy of Sects: A Spirited Guide to the World's Religious Traditions. New York: Doubleday (1996), pg. 358. | "But in the Caribbean and South America, where slave owners were mainly Catholic, the religion of the slaves retained much more of their African ancestral beliefs, concealed by or integrated with those of the slavemasters. The most widespread and influential of these religions--sometimes called diasporan in reference to the forced Diaspora of the Jews from their homeland--are Vodou in Haiti, Candomble in Brazil, and Santeria in Cuba. " |
| Vodoun | Haiti | 5,930,100 | 90.00% | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 2 - Americas. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998), pg. 215, 219. | "Location: Haiti; Population: 6,589,000 "; "Religion is an integral part of Haitian life and culture. Vodou (a mixture of African animism and Christianity, also known as Voodoo) and Roman Catholicism are the two main religions. Over 90% of Haitians participate in Vodou religion. Because Vodou is nonexclusive, 80% of Haitians are also Roman Catholic, and Protestants of various denominations account for the other 20%, many of whom do not generally participate in Vodou. All three religious sectors are organized at the national level and are officially organized. " |
| Yoruba religion | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1993 | Brandon, George. Santeria from Africa to the New World: Dead Sell Memories. Bloomington and Indiana: Indiana University Press (1993), pg. 2. | "Yoruba religion also entered Haiti to compose there, along with Kongo-Angolan and Dahomeyan practices, the kaleidoscope that is the religion of Vodun. " |
| Zobop | Haiti | - | - | - | - | 1976 | Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster (1985), pg. 211-212. | "Haitian anthropologist... Michel Laguerre... 1976 [met] peasants who had been invited to join secret societies, [but later] converted to Protestantism & hence were willing to talk. There were... secret societies in all parts of the country, & each one maintained control of a specified territory. Names varied from region to region but included Zobop, Bizango, Vlinblindingue, San Poel, Mandingue, &... Macandal... quasi-political arm of the vodoun society charged above all with the protection of the community... " |
| American Baptist Churches in the U.S.A. | Hawaii | 866 | 0.08% | 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': 697. |
| Apostolic Faith (Hawaii) | Hawaii | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 1924 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.). The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991), pg. 261. Chapter: Pentecostal Family; section: Apostolic Pentecostals. | "Apostolic Faith (Hawaii)... Honolulu, HI... The Apostolic Faith Church, a local congregation in Honolulu, was founded by the Rev. Charles Lochbaum and his wife, Ada Lochbaum, who came to Honolulu in 1923. They began to hold services emphasizing... A tent was set up, services were held throughout the islands, and a building was erected in 1924. An aggressive evangelism program, which included street preaching and evangelizing the plantations was begun. The first branch of the Apostolic Faith was set up in Kaimuki. " |
| Apostolic Faith (Hawaii) | Hawaii | - | - | 5 units |
- | 1991 | Melton, J. Gordon (ed.). The Encyclopedia of American Religions: Vol. 1. Tarrytown, NY: Triumph Books (1991), pg. 261. | "Branch churches in Hawaii were established in Kaimuki, Lahainia Kahului, Kanunakakai, and Hilo. " |
| Assemblies of God | Hawaii | 13,005 | 1.17% | 69 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': 8,475. [Listed as 'Assemblies of God.'] |
| Assyrian Church of the East | Hawaii | 11 | 0.00% | - | - | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 03. [Listed as 'Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of The East.'] |
| Baptist - black denominations | Hawaii | 7,000 | 0.63% | - | - | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. More exclusive 'members': 5,626. [Listed as 'Black Baptists Estimate.'] |
| Baptist General Conference | Hawaii | 190 | 0.02% | 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': 152. |
| Buddhism | Hawaii | - | 33.00% | - | - | 1957 | Chegaray, Jacques. Hawaii: Isle of Dreams; New York: Sterling Publishing Co. (1957), pg. 181. | "To-day Hawaii reckons a third of its population Catholic, one-third Protestant (including Mormons, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Latter-Day Saints, Seventh Day Adventists, Baptists, etc.), and one-third Buddhist (Japanese and Chinese). " |
| Buddhism | Hawaii | - | - | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 2 - Americas. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998), pg. 225. | "Most Hawaiians are Christian, with a majority of those being Roman Catholic. Buddhists and followers of Shinto religion are the largest minorities in the state. " |
| Buddhist Churches of America | Hawaii | 100,000 | - | - | - | 1990 | Palmer, Spencer J. & Roger R. Keller. Religions of the World: A Latter-day Saint View, Brigham Young University: Provo, Utah (1990), pg. 99. | The BCA [Jodo Shinshu] consists of 61 churches & 40 branches located throughout U.S. w/ 80 ministers... There are currently over 100,000 Buddhists of Shinshu faith in continental U.S. and a like number in Hawaii. |
| Calvary Chapel | Hawaii | - | - | 15 units |
- | 2000 | *LINK* official Calvary Chapel website (Jan. 2000) | directory |
| Catholic | Hawaii | - | 33.00% | - | - | 1957 | Chegaray, Jacques. Hawaii: Isle of Dreams; New York: Sterling Publishing Co. (1957), pg. 181. | "To-day Hawaii reckons a third of its population Catholic, one-third Protestant (including Mormons, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Latter-Day Saints, Seventh Day Adventists, Baptists, etc.), and one-third Buddhist (Japanese and Chinese). " |
| Catholic | Hawaii | 231,000 | 22.00% | - | - | 1989 | Greeley, Andrew M. The Catholic Myth: The Behavior and Beliefs of American Catholics. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (1990), pg. 112-114. [Original sources: Official Catholic Directory, based on parish-level reporting, & U.S. 1989 Statistical Abstract] | Table: "Catholic Population by State "; [Greeley (author) has conduced a somewhat detailed analysis, adding some adjustments to account for statistically observed undercount, plus some other factors.] |
| Catholic | Hawaii | 232,780 | 21.00% | 102 units |
- | 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. [Listed as 'Catholic Church.'] |
| Catholic | Hawaii | 232,780 | 19.70% | 69 units |
- | 1996 | 1998 Catholic Almanac: Our Sunday Visitor: USA (1997), pg. 432-437. | Tables: "Catholic Population of the United States " and "Percentage of Catholics in Total Population in U.S. ". Figures are as of Jan. 1, 1997. |
| Catholic | Hawaii | - | - | - | - | 1998 | Gall, Timothy L. (ed). Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture & Daily Life: Vol. 2 - Americas. Cleveland, OH: Eastword Publications Development (1998), pg. 225. | "Most Hawaiians are Christian, with a majority of those being Roman Catholic. Buddhists and followers of Shinto religion are the largest minorities in the state. " |
| Christian and Missionary Alliance | Hawaii | 1,485 | 0.13% | 9 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': 848. |
| Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) | Hawaii | 305 | 0.03% | 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': 230. [Listed as 'Christian Church (Disciples of Christ).'] |
| Christian Churches and Churches of Christ | Hawaii | 1,413 | 0.13% | 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': 1,136. [Listed as 'Christian Churches and Churches of Christ.'] |
| 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 Science | Hawaii | - | - | 6 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. [Listed as 'Church of Christ Scientist.'] |
| Christianity - affiliated | Hawaii | 391,000 | 35.30% | - | - | 1990 | Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1997, 117th Edition. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of Commerce (Oct. 1997), pg. 70. [Orig. source: M. Bradley, et al. Churches & Church Membership in the U.S., 1990. Atlanta, GA: Glenmary Research Center (1992)] | Table: "No. 87: Christian Church Adherents, 1990 "; "Christian church adherents were defined as 'all members, including full members, their children and the est. number of other regular participants who are not considered as communicant, confirmed or full members.' " |
| Christianity - independent churches - charismatic | Hawaii | 3,600 | 0.32% | 5 units |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. [Listed as 'Independent Charismatic Churches.'] |
| Christianity - independent churches - non-charismatic | Hawaii | 500 | 0.05% | 1 unit |
- | 1990 | Glenmary Research Center. Churches & Church Membership in U.S., 1990. | By-county org. reports, figures from 'Churches' & inclusive 'Adherents' columns. [Listed as 'Independent Non-Charismatic Churches.'] |
| Church of Armageddon | Hawaii | - | - | 1 unit |
- | 1980 | Rudin, James A. & Marcia R. Rudin. Prison or Paradise: The New Religious Cults; Fortress Press: Philadelphia (1980), pg. 69. | [also known as "Love Family, " after founder Love Israel, formerly Paul Erdman] "[Love Israel's] 'Love Family' now has about two hundred fifty to three hundred members. Although centered in Seattle, Wa., it has branch colonies in Alaska and Hawaii. " |