In this post, growth is defined by reaching people and converting them and an increase in church attendance, not birthrate or immigration. Measured in that way, Christianity is the fastest growing religion in the world, without a close second. Periodically updated.
A Pew Research report says that Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world. However, in this post it is not about birthrate or immigration, but outreach and converts (including immigrants who convert to Christ). Pew does not predict how many people born in Muslims countries, often in squalor, will convert to Christ, which is happening now.
The growth of Christianity in Islamic countries is all the more remarkable considering that it is a crime, sometimes punishable by death, to leave Islam. Christians in Iran, for example, suffer terrible persecution. Yet Muslims are still converting to Christ rapidly.
See 2016 Open Doors Watch List of the fifty nations that persecute Christians the most severely. Most of them are Islamic.
https://www.opendoorsusa.org/christian-persecution/world-watch-list/
See a long study at this website Freedom of Religion in Early Islam (there is none).
Let’s take it continent by continent in alphabetical order:
Africa
Christianity Today reports the church has increased its numbers from 9 million in 1900 to 541 million today, with a 51% increase in the last few years:
The Church has seen dramatic and explosive growth in Asia, Africa and South America. The growth of the African Church in particular is jaw-dropping. In 1900 there were fewer than 9 million Christians in Africa. Now there are more than 541 million. In the last 15 years alone, the Church in Africa has seen a 51 per cent increase, which works out on average at around 33,000 people either becoming Christians or being born into Christian families each day in Africa alone.
Sudan: Despite the terrible persecution of Christians by Muslims, one church growth expert for Frontline Fellowship writes:
Resistance and Growth
Yet [despite persecution] the Church has increased tenfold over the last 40 years. Today the steadfast and resilient Christian Church in South Sudan is one of the fastest growing in the world.
This came in on Oct 27, 2017: Will end of sanctions against Sudan ease Bible shortage for 1 million Christians?
Measures by the Sudanese government to prevent Bibles from entering the country are leaving the churches there with a serious shortage of Scripture and teaching materials.
One senior church leader, who has overseen the import of hundreds of thousands of Bibles and other pieces of Christian literature to Sudan, told World Watch Monitor the Bible Society has not had Bibles to distribute in Sudan since around 2013.
One thought on Sudan: If Muslims would stop persecuting Christians to the point of bulldozing their churches, Christianity would grow even more rapidly.
In Ethiopia, the church is growing:
Evangelism and rapid church growth are taking place in all sectors of Ethiopian society. Most evangelical Ethiopian churches have given these high priority. In fact, thousands of people from many religious backgrounds are coming to identify themselves as followers of Jesus. Outsiders invest heavily in these activities.
There are many seminaries and Bible schools throughout Ethiopia. Therefore, training for Christian leadership is widely available.
While evangelism is going forward, there is also definite, although low-level, persecution from other religious groups [read: Islam].
It is ironic that during the lifetime of Muhammad the earliest Muslims fled to Ethiopia, in order to escape persecution from Meccan pagans.
Asia
Asia Evangelical Alliance reports on these countries:
Nepal: World’s only Hindu kingdom. First church in 1959 and had only 29 members. Today more than 500,000 Christians in Nepal.
However, this report came in on Oct 27, 2017:
Nepal Criminalizes Christian Conversion and Evangelism
President approves new sanctions targeting non-Hindus and foreign missionaries.
Mongolia: 1989 only 4 Christians; Today Over 20,000 Christians
Cambodia: 2 Million deaths during 1975 – 1977. Late 70’s only 2,000 Christians. Today Over 150,000 Christians.
China: 1949 1.2 Million Christians. Severe persecution under Communist rule. Today estimated 100 million Christians.
However, in China things are still not rosy: Chinese House Church Leaders and Toddler Arrested After Singing in Public Park: The Communist country proves that it is serious about its newest religious restrictions.
The Chinese government demolished a mega-church:
Observation on China: How fast would Christianity grow without the persecution!
But this new report says the Chinese church is growing fast:
China on course to become ‘world’s most Christian nation’ within 15 years
The number of Christians in Communist China is growing so steadily that it by 2030 it could have more churchgoers than America
Photo: ALAMY
It is said to be China’s biggest church and on Easter Sunday thousands of worshippers will flock to this Asian mega-temple to pledge their allegiance not to the Communist Party, but to the Cross.
The 5,000-capacity Liushi church, which boasts more than twice as many seats as Westminster Abbey and a 206ft crucifix that can be seen for miles around, opened last year with one theologian declaring it a “miracle that such a small town was able to build such a grand church”.
The £8 million building is also one of the most visible symbols of Communist China’s breakneck conversion as it evolves into one of the largest Christian congregations on earth.
“It is a wonderful thing to be a follower of Jesus Christ. It gives us great confidence,” beamed Jin Hongxin, a 40-year-old visitor who was admiring the golden cross above Liushi’s altar in the lead up to Holy Week.
“If everyone in China believed in Jesus then we would have no more need for police stations. There would be no more bad people and therefore no more crime,” she added.
South Korea: 1884: 1st protestant church planted; 1984: 30,000 Churches
Today: Over 60,000 Churches; – 10 of the world’s largest ‘Mega churches’; Largest sender of missionaries.
Asia Evangelical Alliance summarizes:
East Asia: 1990 – 22 million Christians; Today over 300 million Christian; Growth rate – 83%; Evangelical Christians: 140 million.
Vietnam:
The remarkable religious transformation of Vietnams Hmong:
Christianity started spreading among the Hmong in the highlands of northwest and central Vietnam in the late 1980s through a Hmong-language Christian radio program broadcast from Manila and has led to a remarkable religious transformation in the past three decades, according to academic Seb Rumsby, writing for The Diplomat.
Among the one million Hmong there are now an estimated 400,000 Christians, and the social, economic, and political impacts of religious change from persecution and migration to lifestyle changes and new gender relations are becoming increasingly difficult to ignore, says Rumsby.
Pakistan: This country, where Islam has dominated for centuries, hosts huge Christian gatherings.
CBS [ secular TV news] Praises “Mom of Pakistan”:
Marilyn Hickey preached to over 1 million people in Karachi, the largest city in Pakistan, earlier this month. The momentous meeting came during an eight-day mission trip to Pakistan. But that trip and the millions reached for Christ were the fruits of seeds planted years before.
India: Hinduism dominates, but the nation hosts huge Christian gatherings.
Calvary Temple of Heyderabad, India:
“The Church is founded on 5 June 2005 Hyderabad by Dr. P. Satish Kumar with 25 people. Hundreds of people are added and in 2006, the Church has 1,000. In 2007, the church has 3,000 people. Then the church has an attendance of 80,000 in 2013 and 130 000 in 2015, and 155,000 in 2016.”
Indonesia: Virtue Online reports that in a nation of 215 million, mostly Muslim, the church is growing rapidly:
The 2000 census counted just under 10% of Indonesians as Christians, a figure many Christian leaders believe is too low. Anecdotal evidence paints a compelling picture of the faith’s rapid rise. In the early 1960s, for instance, there were no Evangelical churches in Temanggung, where the soccer-field revival took place; now there are more than 40. In the capital Jakarta, newly built megachurches that might seem more at home in Texas send steeples into the sky. Other Christians worship at unofficial churches based in hotels and malls, where Sunday services rival shopping as a popular weekend activity. Asia’s tallest statue of Jesus Christ, built in 2007, presides over Manado city in eastern Indonesia, while Indonesian cable TV beams 24-hour Christian channels.:
Most of these next nations in Table 1 are in Asia and the Arab world:
Table 1. The Top 20 Countries Where Christianity Has the Highest Percentage Growth Rate
Rank | Country | Continent | Christian AAGR | Years to double | Majority Religion | Percent Christian 1970 | Percent Christian 2020 |
1 |
Nepal | Asia, South Central |
10.93% |
6.6 |
Hindu |
0.1% |
3.8% |
2 |
China | Asia, Eastern |
10.86% |
6.6 |
Non-religious |
0.1% |
10.6% |
3 |
United Arab Emirates | Arabian Peninsula |
9.34% |
7.7 |
Muslim |
5.9% |
12.9% |
4 |
Saudi Arabia | Arabian Peninsula |
9.27% |
7.8 |
Muslim |
0.3% |
4.6% |
5 |
Qatar | Arabian Peninsula |
7.81% |
9.2 |
Muslim |
4.5% |
9.5% |
6 |
Oman | Arabian Peninsula |
7.62% |
9.4 |
Muslim |
0.5% |
4.6% |
7 |
Yemen | Arabian Peninsula |
7.09% |
9.1 |
Muslim |
0.0% |
0.2% |
8 |
Mongolia | Asia, Eastern |
5.96% |
12.1 |
Buddhist |
0.3% |
2.0% |
9 |
Cambodia | Asia, South-eastern |
5.87% |
12.3 |
Buddhist |
0.5% |
3.6% |
10 |
Bahrain | Arabian Peninsula |
5.49% |
13.1 |
Muslim |
3.9% |
7.9% |
11 |
Benin | Africa, Western |
4.85% |
14.8 |
Christian |
18.1% |
47.8% |
12 |
Burkina Faso | Africa, Western |
4.81% |
15.0 |
Muslim |
9.0% |
24.8% |
13 |
South Sudan | Africa, Eastern |
4.67% |
15.4 |
Christian |
22.7% |
63.8% |
14 |
Bhutan | Asia, South Central |
4.60% |
15.7 |
Buddhist |
0.3% |
1.1% |
15 |
Mali | Africa, Western |
4.54% |
15.9 |
Muslim |
1.4% |
3.8% |
16 |
Brunei | Asia, South-eastern |
4.49% |
16.0 |
Muslim |
5.8% |
14.1% |
17 |
Guinea | Africa, Western |
4.44% |
16.2 |
Muslim |
1.3% |
3.8% |
18 |
Kuwait | Arabian Peninsula |
4.26% |
16.9 |
Muslim |
5.1% |
9.2% |
19 |
Singapore | Asia, South-eastern |
4.12% |
16.3 |
Buddhist |
7.8% |
21.7% |
20 |
Turks and Caicos Islands | Caribbean |
3.97% |
18.1 |
Christian |
99.5% |
91.6% |
Whats happening in these countries?
- Are you surprised to see that 19 of the countries in the top 20 are in Asia and Africa?
- Did you notice 11 countries on the top 20 list are Muslim majority countries?
- Did you catch that not a single country from Europe, Northern America or Latin America makes the top 20 list?
- Did you notice the worlds newest country, South Sudan? South Sudan became an independent country in July 2011, separating from the Muslim majority of Northern Sudan.
- Did you see that highest Christian growth rates are found among all major non-Christian religious groups: Hindus, Non-Religious, Buddhists, Muslims and Ethno-religionists (Benin and South Sudan)
- Did you observe that the majority of the top 20 countries are clustered in three areas: Eastern Asia, Western Africa and the Arabian Peninsula.
Joyful Christians in Iraq:
Kasr El Dobara in Cairo is the largest evangelical church in the Middle East. Started in 1948, it has grown to a membership of 8,000 members. (Source)
Australia
Traditional Christianity is declining, but Pentecostalism and the Charismatic Renewal are reversing that trend: Leftwing newspaper the Guardian reports:
Members of the Pentecostal church increased from nearly 220,000 in 2006 and 238,000 in 2011 to 260,500 last year, according to the 2016 census results released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Tuesday.
It has grown particularly among young people, with increases in the 0-14 (the largest share of affiliates), 15-24 and 25-34 age profiles recorded in each census from 2006.
Due to immigration of people belonging to other religions, it can at first glance appear that these new religions are the fastest growing. But immigration does not mean a total number of converts.
Planetshakers is another mega-church in Australia with churches all over the world.
C3 church in Sydney has planted about 450 churches around the world.
C3 Church Global, formerly known as Christian City Church International (C3i), is a Charismatic movement founded by Phil Pringle and Christine Pringle. The first church was started at Dee Why on the Northern Beaches of Sydney, Australia, and is now located in Oxford Falls. The movement changed its name to “C3 Church” in September 2008. As of February 2017, there are over 450 churches in 64 countries in the group. (Source)
Europe
Let’s start with the big picture.
Christianity Today reports:
Molly Wall, the programme director of Operation World, adds that amid concern for the overall decline in Christians [in Europe], evangelicals in Europe can feel encouraged as “evangelical Christianity grew in strength and confidence in most European countries from the 1990s to the present, even while the overall population grew slowly or even declined”.
In other words, traditional Christianity is declining, while Evangelical Christianity is increasing.
Moscow Church Spearheads Russia Revival: “Despite social and political upheaval, Russia is witnessing a Christian revival. At the heart of this powerful move of God is the Moscow Good News Church.”
The Protestant movement is growing very strongly. Americans Rick and Denise Renner are at the forefront of the movement. In 1991, the couple moved their family to what is now the former Soviet Union with the goal of reaching Russians with the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Nine years later, in September 2000, they started Moscow Good News Church in the Russian capital city. Moscow Church is approximately 3,500 people in regular attendance.
An Evangelical Preachers Message Catches Fire in Ukraine:
Muslim Refugees Converting to Christianity in Berlin Church:
According to the Christian Broadcasting Network, many Muslims who have fled their homes in Iran and Afghanistan are converting to the Christian faith, with the Evangelical Trinity Church reporting that the community has grown from a mere 150 to 600 members in just two years.
Mohammed Ali Zonoobi, an Iranian who sought asylum in Germany was recently baptized and shared his story. “I feel like I am born again,” he said in tears.
Zonoobi’s name has now been changed to Martin as he is no longer a Muslim, but a full-blown Christian who made an oath with God that he will “break away from Islam.”
Hundreds of Muslims converting to Christianity in Finland, churches say
Large church in Berlin: Berlin International Community Church:
Next, Hillsong Germany is another mega-church with several offshoots or campuses in other German cities (and one in Switzerland).
Hillsong German Mission Statement
To reach and influence the world by building a large Christ-centered, Bible-based church, changing mindsets and empowering people to lead and impact in every sphere of life.
France
This nation has immigration, both from Muslim nations and sub-Saharan Christian nations, so let’s track the growth of churches, regardless of the origins of who attends.
Hillsong Church in France: Large church in Paris:
Three new evangelical churches open in France every month:
The number of worship places has increased tenfold in 60 years. There are 650,000 evangelical Christians in France, a new study shows.
This newest study was made public on January 3 by Daniel Liechti, the President of the New Church Plants Committee of the CNEF. He told French newspaper La Croix, that the growth of evangelical Christians in France has been steady in the last 20 years. Within two years, we may be able to say that this pace is even accelerating slightly more, he added. The study deducts the number churches that have been closed. It therefore shows the actual growth of churches, Liechti said. It needs to be said that this data only include the churches who are members of the CNEF, an evangelical representative umbrella which unites about 70% of all evangelical churches in France. …
In the last 60 years, the number of active members of evangelical churches has increased tenfold.
Spain: 12 evangelical churches open every month:
Evangelical Christians are the biggest faith minority in the country. The steep fall of Roman Catholic believers contrasts with the growth of Atheism.
In Spain, there are almost 4,000 evangelical places of worship. This is one of the the data included in the latest annual Religious Plurality report of the Spanish government. According to the figures made available in December 2016, the traditionally Catholic country is becoming more and more diverse.
EVANGELICALS ARE FASTEST GROWING FAITH GROUP Evangelical Christianity is the confession which experiences the greatest growth in the country. There are 3,910 registered churches of this confession. This last year, 141 evangelical churches have opened, nearly 12 every month. Evangelical churches represent 57% of all the worship places of faith minorities. Muslims have 1,508 registered worship places, followed by Jehovahs Witnesses (650), Orthodox Christians (197), Buddhists (155), Mormons (119), Bahais and Jews (36).
Mega-Church in Stockholm, Sweden:
Hillsong in Copenhagen, Denmark:
North America
Newsmax’s Top 50 Megachurches in America
Megachurches are the spiritual phenomenon of the 21st century; there are more churches with 5,000 people attending weekly services than at any other time in history. So much for those who claim ad nauseam that faith is declining in our country.
In compiling this list, Newsmax has elected to organize these churches based upon their overall influence rather than by their size (others do that regularly). While influence is notoriously subjective and therefore difficult to quantify, we based our list on the notoriety of the megachurches leaders, the reach of their books, the ratings of their television and radio programs, and the way the public views them.
For every mega-church in America, there are hundreds of mid-sized or small churches.
Here is a summary of a Harvard study:
Harvard Research Says US Christianity Is Not Shrinking, But Growing Stronger
As for Mexico, Public Radio International reports:
In 1970, according to census figures, 96 percent of Mexicans claimed to be Catholics, but that figure had dropped to about 80 percent by 2010. Evangelicals are filling part of that spiritual gap.
According to Open Doors Watch List of Persecution, Mexico ranks 40 out of 50, in “High Persecution,” coming from organized corruption.
Muslim migration causes an artificial surge in Islam’s growth rate in North America and Europe, but the goal in this post is to track conversions and church growth.
South America
Washington Post reports:
The growth of Pentecostalism in Latin America is estimated to be at three times the rate of Catholic growth. Non-Catholic believers now account for 2 percent of Latin Americas 550 million Christians.
Today, Brazil not only has more Catholics than any other country, but also more Pentecostals, reflecting Pentecostalisms astonishing global growth. Tracing its roots to the Azusa Street revival in 1910, and comprising 5 percent of Christians in 1970, today one of four Christians is Pentecostal or Charismatic. Or think of it this way: one out of 12 people alive today has a Pentecostal form of Christian faith.
Central America
This post (here) has a list of mega-churches in Central America. Listing them by attendance numbers, here are the churches with 25,000+:
25,000+
“Friends of Israel” Bible Baptist Tabernacle –
Tabernaculo Bíblico Bautista “Amigos de Israel” –
Pastor Brother Toby – Dr. Edgar López Bertrand
(International Baptist Mission – Fundamentalist)
Colonia San Benito, San Salvador, El Salvador
Auditorium seats 10,000 people; has six Sunday worship services
Total estimated Sunday attendance = 48,000
International Harvest Ministry of Honduras –
Ministerio Internacional La Cosecha Honduras
(International Church of the Foursquare Gospel)
Pastor General Misael Argenal Rodríguez
Located in San Pedro Sula, Honduras
Auditorium seats 30,000 people; total attendance unknown.
Iglesia Elim Central de San Salvador –
Misión Cristiana Elim Internacional
(independent Pentecostal)
Pastor General Mario Vega
Calle al Matazano, Final Colonia Santa Lucía
San Salvador, El Salvador
Auditorium seats 5,000 people; has five Sunday worship services
Total estimated Sunday attendance = 22,000
Chile and elsewhere in South America:
The Jotabeche Church [in Chile] has 350,000 memberswhich makes it the second largest in the world. The size and growth of this church are a prime example of an explosion of church growth in Latin America. The numerical growth alone of these churches is cause for wonder: in 1900, there were only 50,000 Protestants in Latin America. In the 1980s, they had grown to 50,000,000, and by the year 2000, they reached 137,000,000.
Bolivia:
Persecution from socialists in Bolivia:
Article 88 of the mountainous South American nations new penal code, authorized December 15, states that whoever recruits, transports, deprives of freedom, or hosts people with the aim of recruiting them to take part in armed conflicts or religious or worship organizations will be penalized 5 to 12 years of imprisonment, according to a translation by Evangelical Focus, a media initiative of the Spanish Evangelical Alliance. (source)
However, this link says evangelism can happen in Bolivia–for now:
https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org/2018/01/28022/
Growth Table of Charismatic and Pentecostal Christians
Regions | No. of Charismatic / Pentecostals in Millions in 1900 | No. of Charismatic / Pentecostals in Millions in 2000 |
Africa | .9 | 126 |
Asia | 0 | 135 |
Europe | 0 | 37.6 |
Latin America | 0 | 141.4 |
North America | 0 | 79.6 |
Oceania | 0 | 4.3 |
Source: Bruce Shelley and R. L. Hatchett, Church History in Plain Language, 4th ed. (Thomas Nelson, 2013) p. 498. By now, after two decades, those numbers look small. |
Conclusion
This post is not about birthrates or immigration. It is about conversions.
Countless numbers of people in the Islamic world are converting to Christ, even when shariah law forbids it.
If Muslims countries ever allowed freedom of religion, then it is not hard to predict that hugh numbers of Muslims would leave harsh sharia and embrace the gospel of grace of Jesus Christ.
See Thirty Shariah Laws for evidence of how harsh it is.
See also Ten Sharia Laws that Oppress Women.
In terms of growth by conversion and preaching (not terrorism or forceful shariah), the religion of Islam is in retreat around the globe, except perhaps in the West, but even there Evangelical Christianity is growing rapidly. In Spain, for example, Evangelical worship places outnumber Muslim ones.
Countless numbers of people in religions other than Islam are also converting to Christ.
In Europe, the old Cathedrals are empty, but the living church is growing.
For the record, I place Roman Catholicism under the heading “Christianity,” and we have not discussed this church’s growth or decline, except only in passing.
Non-Western churches are growing the fastest.
Across the globe, Christianity is the fastest growing religion by conversion, without a close second.
RELATED (onsite)
Twenty-five reasons to leave Islam;
Jesus and Muhammad: Fifteen Major Differences
Ten Big Differences between Christianity and Other Religions
Articles in World Religions Outline series (in alphabetical order):
Each of those posts has a Christian Reaction and Reply at the end.
RELATED (Offsite)
Harvard Research Says US Christianity Is Not Shrinking, But Growing Stronger
Christianity in its global context
Islam is not the fastest growing religion in the world
This latter article concludes in 2004 (slightly edited):
- There are more new Christians added to the world population than any other religion on earth every day. These data makes the entire discussion about “rates of growth” irrelevant. The fact is that today Christianity is the fastest growing religion on this most critical basis. This may change, but today, in 2004 AD, Christians take the prize for being the fastest growing religion.
- On none of the 6 continents are Muslims the fastest growing religion.
- That Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world is pure myth at best and at worst a deliberate deception of solid statistical facts.