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Charismatic Polling Pew conducts a 10-country survey of Pentecostals.
The Weekly Standard ^ | 10/16/06 | Mark Tooley

Posted on 10/16/2006 9:05:21 AM PDT by Valin

NOW NUMBERING OVER 500 million, and probably the fastest growing religious movement in the world, Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians are transforming the global religious demographic, especially in Latin America and Africa. They comprise nearly half of Brazil's population, and 25 percent of the United States is Pentecostal or Charismatic.

Are these religious, social conservatives replicating in the Global South political trends that are present among Republican-oriented evangelicals in the United States? A new study from the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life tries to answer just this question.

Pew estimated that Pentecostals and Charismatics account for about one fourth of the world's 2 billion Christians. According to the World Christian Encyclopedia, published in 2001, there are about 66 million Pentecostals and 470 million Charismatics.

Both Pentecostals and Charismatics have effusive worship styles, emphasize divine healings and other gifts of the Holy Spirit, and believe that evangelism is imperative. Pentecostals belong to specifically Pentecostal denominations, such as the Assemblies of God, which date to the early 20th century. Charismatics are found across evangelical and Protestant churches, but also within Roman Catholicism. According to the World Christian Encyclopedia, there are about 120 million Catholic Charismatics, or over one fifth of the Pentecostal/Charismatic total.

Pew measured opinion among Pentecostals/Charismatics where they are thought to be strongest: the United States, Brazil, Chile, Guatemala, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, the Philippines, South Korea, and India. Though there are also millions in China, government restrictions on religion there likely would have made polling problematic.

Not surprisingly, Pew found that Pentecostals/Charismatics in every country are more socially conservative than the general population, disapproving of homosexuality, abortion, euthanasia, suicide, and divorce. In Africa and Asia, they were more strongly opposed to the practice of homosexuality than they were in Latin America and the United States. Africans and Asians, both the general population and Pentecostals/Charismatics, are also the most hostile to divorce and pre-marital sex. Brazilians and Chileans were the least disapproving.

About 60 percent of Pentecostals/Charismatics in the United States think abortion is always wrong, compared to 45 percent of the general population. But Latins, Africans, and Asians were all much more opposed to abortion. Americans were the most accepting of euthanasia. Only 50 percent of Pentecostals here insist it is never justified, though that is still higher than 37 percent of the general population.

Pentecostals/Charismatics everywhere attend worship services more frequently than other Christians, are more adamant about their doctrines, and have more literal understandings of the Bible. Politically, outside the United States, they are a little harder to measure beyond key social issues.

In most countries, Pentecostals/Charismatics are more pro-Israel than the general population. They also tend to support the free market, but not much more than the general population. This is a little surprising, as Pentecostals, especially in Latin America, are heavily influenced by U.S. parachurch groups and are commonly portrayed, especially by their critics, as extensions of American-style capitalism.

Pentecostals/Charismatics in the United States strongly support the war on terror, but in most of the other polled countries, they are ambivalent or negative. The exceptions are Nigeria, Kenya, India, and the Philippines, all of which have struggled against Islamic terrorism and, in the case of Nigeria, Islamist repression of Christian populations. Americans, religious and not, are the most likely to trust their own nation's military. Religious Filipinos and Kenyans also trust their national militaries. The other national populations do not trust theirs.

In all of the measured countries except for the United States, South Korea, and South Africa, Pentecostals/Charismatics comprise the majority of Protestant Christians, and in Latin America overwhelmingly so. But in Brazil and Guatemala, Charismatics also comprise a majority of Roman Catholics. Pentecostals/Charismatics are a majority of the total populations of Guatemala and Kenya. And they are nearly half of Brazil and the Philippines. One quarter of Americans are Pentecostal/Charismatic.

Although the West, excluding the United States, is getting more secular, the Global South is getting more religious, or at least switching from traditional religion to more charismatic Christianity. Nigeria is a prime example. Pew reports that over the last 50 years Nigeria has gone from 45 percent Muslim to 50 percent, and from 21 percent Christian to 48 percent, a majority of which is Pentecostal/Charismatic. Traditional religion has declined from one third of the population to just less than 2 percent.

Similarly, South Korea is becoming more Christian and more Buddhist, with a quarter of the population now belonging to each, up from 20 percent each 20 years ago, with no religious affiliation slipping from 58 percent to less than half of the population over the same period. South Africa has gone from 68 percent to 80 percent Christian over the last 50 years. The Latin American countries and the Philippines have growing evangelical Protestant minorities, with Guatemala now 30 percent evangelical. But this evangelical resurgence has been accompanied by a growing Charismatic Catholicism in all these countries. Evangelical resurgence seems to stimulate a corresponding resurgence of Catholic faith.

Somewhat disturbingly, the Gospel of Health and Wealth has thoroughly penetrated much of the Pentecostal/Charismatic movement, especially in the Global South. Over 40 percent of Pentecostals/Charismatics in the United States believe that God grants good health to the faithful, compared to a quarter of the general population. But strong majorities of Pentecostals/Charismatics in Latin America and Africa believe in the promise of good health. Interestingly, the figures in Africa are not that different from the general population, among whom there seems to be a consensus that God will reward good living with good health.

Contrary to some stereotypes about the hyper nationalism of American evangelicals, an overwhelming majority of Pentecostals/Charismatics in this country said that their religion is more important than their nationality. This was true in every other country in Pew's study. Pentecostals/Charismatics did not differ very much from the general population on gender roles in most countries, although they were more inclined to support female clergy than were the general populations in Asian countries. There is a strong tradition of female lay preaching among Pentecostals, and some Pentecostal churches ordain women.

Americans, religious and not, were the most adamant about religious freedom among all the nations surveyed. But overwhelming majorities in each, religious and not, affirm the importance of multi-party democracy, free elections, freedom of speech, and independent courts. Pentecostals/Charismatics were only slightly more likely than others to affirm their importance.

Pentecostals cannot always be neatly lumped together with Charismatics. For example, 60 percent of American Pentecostals sympathize with Israel, compared to 7 percent with Palestinians. But only 37 percent of American Charismatics favor Israel, compared to 10 percent for the Palestinians. Pentecostals tend to have strong views about God's ongoing covenant with the Jewish people. Charismatics among mainline Protestants and Roman Catholics are less inclined to this view. This same difference was found elsewhere except in South Korea and Kenya.

In Latin America, Pentecostals/Charismatics were less inclined than the general population to support the American war on terrorism, but they were more supportive in Africa and Asia. When asked to place themselves on the ideological spectrum, Pentecostals/Charismatics everywhere overwhelmingly picked the middle, though they were slightly more tilted right everywhere except in Kenya and South Africa.

The World Christian Encyclopedia estimates that Pentecostals/Charismatics will number over 800 million in 20 years, comprising 10 percent of the world's population and nearly one third of all Christians. In 1970, they numbered fewer than 80 million, or two percent of the global population. They are now the majority in several nations, and likely will become the majority in many more within the next decade. Their growth has helped make evangelicals the largest religious group in the United States, with enormous political repercussions. Those repercussions have now become global.

Mark D. Tooley directs the United Methodist committee at the Institute on Religion and Democracy.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: christianity; pentecostals; pewpolls
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1 posted on 10/16/2006 9:05:22 AM PDT by Valin
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To: Valin

http://pewforum.org/surveys/pentecostal/

Executive Summary
October 5, 2006

By all accounts, pentecostalism and related charismatic movements represent one of the fastest-growing segments of global Christianity. According to the World Christian Database, at least a quarter of the world's 2 billion Christians are thought to be members of these lively, highly personal faiths, which emphasize such spiritually renewing "gifts of the Holy Spirit" as speaking in tongues, divine healing and prophesying. Even more than other Christians, pentecostals and other renewalists believe that God, acting through the Holy Spirit, continues to play a direct, active role in everyday life.
(snip)


2 posted on 10/16/2006 9:06:06 AM PDT by Valin (http://www.irey.com/)
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To: Valin

Which might be misleading. Just cause people put on a Christian Bumper sticker, put a fish sign on their car, or carry a crucifix, may NOT necessarily mean that their values have changed. Latin America still has corruption issues, kidnapping that the Pentecostals have not done much to confront, as many of them are more HEAVENLY minded, trying to get the WORLD into their church, instead of the Jesus Doctrine into the world. They CAME OUT from 'among them', and have no power as Salt, Light or the effect of YEAST. There is another Silent Revolution emerging that the MSM hasn't uncovered yet.


3 posted on 10/16/2006 9:08:55 AM PDT by rovenstinez
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To: rovenstinez

Please tell me what is the silent revolution?


4 posted on 10/16/2006 9:11:51 AM PDT by carton253 (He who would kill you, get up early and kill him first.)
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To: Valin

Cool.


5 posted on 10/16/2006 9:12:44 AM PDT by Skooz (Chastity prays for me, piety sings...Modesty hides my thighs in her wings...)
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To: carton253

http://www.amazon.com/Revolution-George-Barna/dp/1414307586/sr=8-1/qid=1161015178/ref=pd_bbs_1/102-8633800-1236913?ie=UTF8
The pollster George Barna says that church attendance will be down 50% as people find more significance and spirtuality in home circles, smaller groups that will have more of a relational impact on society


6 posted on 10/16/2006 9:14:47 AM PDT by rovenstinez
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To: rovenstinez

For someone who does not seem all that thrilled with the Pentecostals, you certainly speak in strange tongues.


7 posted on 10/16/2006 9:16:27 AM PDT by Always Right
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To: rovenstinez

So have you read Gene Edwards and Frank Viola at all?


8 posted on 10/16/2006 9:27:45 AM PDT by carton253 (He who would kill you, get up early and kill him first.)
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To: carton253

Gene Edwards and Frank Viola

?


9 posted on 10/16/2006 9:32:15 AM PDT by Valin (http://www.irey.com/)
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To: Valin
My wife an I currently attend a nominally Pentecostal church, but do not consider ourselves "Pentecostal." We believe that all the gifts of the Spirit are active today, but neither of us speak in tongues. We both came out of a conservative Baptist church. But the reason we attend an independent Pentecostal congregation is that they preach about Christ, and have an expectation that the presence of God will actually show up...things that were missing in the Baptist church, where the focus wasn't on Christ, but was on how to do our best FOR Christ (i.e., a low-grade of legalism).

What people across the globe are starving for is a real encounter with God, and the Pentecostals and Charismatics are the only ones who seem to believe that such an encounter is possible. The Pew research seems to focus on the social and political views of Pentecostals and Charismatics, but the real impact of these movements is the spiritual tenor these movements bring to Christianity.

10 posted on 10/16/2006 9:41:06 AM PDT by My2Cents (A pirate's life for me.)
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To: rovenstinez
"There is another Silent Revolution emerging that the MSM hasn't uncovered yet.

Amen!!! They sure know about us and are scared witless, because their vivacious onslaught upon Joel Osteen and Rick Warren only drove droves to Amazon to buy their books and from there it was "Katy bar the door" into the so-called mega-churches!!

11 posted on 10/16/2006 9:42:34 AM PDT by 100-Fold_Return (They Took My Saddle in Houston, Broke My Leg in Santa Fe, Lost Wife + Girlfriend)
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To: Valin
Here is the web address to Gene Edwards autobiograpy.

http://www.geneedwards.com/autobiography.htm#author

I'm sorry I don't need to do links.

Here is the web address to Gene's publishing house.

http://www.seedsowers.com/catalog/index.php

Frank Viola's books can be found at Seedsowers.

Here is the web address to Frank's ministry:

http://www.ptmin.org/

12 posted on 10/16/2006 9:47:42 AM PDT by carton253 (He who would kill you, get up early and kill him first.)
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To: Valin

Not need to do links...should be do not know how to do links. That typo makes me appear down right rude. Sorry about that.


13 posted on 10/16/2006 9:48:25 AM PDT by carton253 (He who would kill you, get up early and kill him first.)
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To: My2Cents

But the reason we attend an independent Pentecostal congregation is that they preach about Christ, and have an expectation that the presence of God will actually show up

Wow! What a radical idea. :-)


14 posted on 10/16/2006 10:07:12 AM PDT by Valin (http://www.irey.com/)
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To: carton253

Thank you.


15 posted on 10/16/2006 10:08:01 AM PDT by Valin (http://www.irey.com/)
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To: Valin
I think you will like the books find there.

Check out T. Austin Sparks as well.

web address: http://www.austin-sparks.net/

For one the of the best reads in Christendom, download Spark's THE SCHOOL OF CHRIST. This is one revolutionary book. Mr. Sparks says more about Jesus in one sentence than most preachers do in a 50 minute sermon.

I'm sorry I don't know how to do links to make it easier for you.

16 posted on 10/16/2006 10:15:10 AM PDT by carton253 (He who would kill you, get up early and kill him first.)
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To: Valin
yeah, it is a radical idea! :) But, sadly, many mainline evangelical churches have gotten their eye off of what really makes a person a Christian, that is, the actual presence of Christ in the heart of the believer, and the ability to know and experience his presence in their daily life.

Take a look at this essay on Christless preaching that affects much of American Christianity today.

17 posted on 10/16/2006 10:25:56 AM PDT by My2Cents (A pirate's life for me.)
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To: My2Cents

Check out the T. Austin Sparks website that I mentioned to Valin. I think you will enjoy Mr. Sparks very much. I would direct you also to THE SCHOOL OF CHRIST.


18 posted on 10/16/2006 10:29:13 AM PDT by carton253 (He who would kill you, get up early and kill him first.)
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To: carton253

I've read a couple of books by Sparks, and he's great. Wasn't aware of the website. Thanks.


19 posted on 10/16/2006 10:31:17 AM PDT by My2Cents (A pirate's life for me.)
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To: My2Cents

Isn't he though. It's like eating a huge banquet. The Seedsower website (also in my post to Valin) has many Sparks books at a reasonable price.


20 posted on 10/16/2006 10:33:55 AM PDT by carton253 (He who would kill you, get up early and kill him first.)
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