The Top 13 Christian Creeds: Origins, Contents, & Importance
"A Christian creed is a series of defining statements that express the core beliefs of Christians. They are the objective truths that all Christians believe. Originally, new Christians would study to develop their own creed based on what they had learned about their new faith. However, over time, several specific creeds came to prominence and were used by many people as a confession of faith prior to being baptized. Today, these creeds remain as declarations of faith for Christians around the world."
I believe in God, the Father almighty,
creator of heaven and earth.
I believe in Jesus Christ, God’s only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died, and was buried;
[he descended to the dead.]
On the third day he rose again;
he ascended into heaven,
he is seated at the right hand of the Father,
and he will come to judge the living and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting. Amen.- The Apostles Creed
We believe in one God,
the Father almighty,
maker of heaven and earth,
of all things visible and invisible.
And in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the only Son of God,
begotten from the Father before all ages,
God from God,
Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made;
of the same essence as the Father.
Through him all things were made.
For us and for our salvation
he came down from heaven;
he became incarnate by the Holy Spirit and the virgin Mary,
and was made human.
He was crucified for us under Pontius Pilate;
he suffered and was buried.
The third day he rose again, according to the Scriptures.
He ascended to heaven
and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again with glory
to judge the living and the dead.
His kingdom will never end.
And we believe in the Holy Spirit,
the Lord, the giver of life.
He proceeds from the Father [and the Son],
and with the Father and the Son is worshiped and glorified.
He spoke through the prophets.
We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic church.
We affirm one baptism for the forgiveness of sins.
We look forward to the resurrection of the dead,
and to life in the world to come. Amen.- The Nicene Creed
By emphasizing the status of each member of the Trinity as part of the Godhead it set itself apart from the prominent heresies of the time.
Whoever desires to be saved should above all hold to the catholic faith.
Anyone who does not keep it whole and unbroken will doubtless perish eternally.
Now this is the catholic faith:
That we worship one God in trinity and the trinity in unity,
neither blending their persons
nor dividing their essence.
For the person of the Father is a distinct person,
the person of the Son is another,
and that of the Holy Spirit still another.
But the divinity of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is one,
their glory equal, their majesty coeternal.
What quality the Father has, the Son has, and the Holy Spirit has.
The Father is uncreated,
the Son is uncreated,
the Holy Spirit is uncreated.
The Father is immeasurable,
the Son is immeasurable,
the Holy Spirit is immeasurable.
The Father is eternal,
the Son is eternal,
the Holy Spirit is eternal.
And yet there are not three eternal beings;
there is but one eternal being.
So too there are not three uncreated or immeasurable beings;
there is but one uncreated and immeasurable being.
Similarly, the Father is almighty,
the Son is almighty,
the Holy Spirit is almighty.
Yet there are not three almighty beings;
there is but one almighty being.
Thus the Father is God,
the Son is God,
the Holy Spirit is God.
Yet there are not three gods;
there is but one God.
Thus the Father is Lord,
the Son is Lord,
the Holy Spirit is Lord.
Yet there are not three lords;
there is but one Lord.
Just as Christian truth compels us
to confess each person individually
as both God and Lord,
so catholic religion forbids us
to say that there are three gods or lords.
The Father was neither made nor created nor begotten from anyone.
The Son was neither made nor created;
he was begotten from the Father alone.
The Holy Spirit was neither made nor created nor begotten;
he proceeds from the Father and the Son.
Accordingly there is one Father, not three fathers;
there is one Son, not three sons;
there is one Holy Spirit, not three holy spirits.
Nothing in this trinity is before or after,
nothing is greater or smaller;
in their entirety the three persons
are coeternal and coequal with each other.
So in everything, as was said earlier,
we must worship their trinity in their unity
and their unity in their trinity.
Anyone then who desires to be saved
should think thus about the trinity.
But it is necessary for eternal salvation
that one also believe in the incarnation
of our Lord Jesus Christ faithfully.
Now this is the true faith:
That we believe and confess
that our Lord Jesus Christ, God’s Son,
is both God and human, equally.
He is God from the essence of the Father,
begotten before time;
and he is human from the essence of his mother,
born in time;
completely God, completely human,
with a rational soul and human flesh;
equal to the Father as regards divinity,
less than the Father as regards humanity.
Although he is God and human,
yet Christ is not two, but one.
He is one, however,
not by his divinity being turned into flesh,
but by God’s taking humanity to himself.
He is one,
certainly not by the blending of his essence,
but by the unity of his person.
For just as one human is both rational soul and flesh,
so too the one Christ is both God and human.
He suffered for our salvation;
he descended to hell;
he arose from the dead;
he ascended to heaven;
he is seated at the Father’s right hand;
from there he will come to judge the living and the dead.
At his coming all people will arise bodily
and give an accounting of their own deeds.
Those who have done good will enter eternal life,
and those who have done evil will enter eternal fire.
This is the catholic faith:
one cannot be saved without believing it firmly and faithfully.- The Athanasian Creed
We, then, following the holy Fathers, all with one consent, teach men to confess one and the same Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, the same perfect in Godhead and also perfect in manhood; truly God
and truly man, of a reasonable soul and body; consubstantial with the Father according to the Godhead, and consubstantial with us according to the Manhood; in all things like unto us, without sin;
begotten before all ages of the Father according to the Godhead, and in these latter days, for us and for our salvation, born of the Virgin Mary, the Mother of God, according to the Manhood; one and the same Christ, Son, Lord, only begotten, to be acknowledged in two natures, unconfusedly, unchangeably, indivisibly, inseparably; the distinction of natures being by no means taken away by the union,
but rather the property of each nature being preserved, and concurring in one Person and one Subsistence, not parted or divided into two persons, but one and the same Son, and only begotten,
God the Word, the Lord Jesus Christ; as the prophets from the beginning have declared concerning Him, and the Lord Jesus Christ Himself has taught us, and the Creed of the holy Fathers has handed down to us.- The Chalcedonian Creed
I believe in the Father, and in the Son, and in the Holy Ghost, and in one baptism of repentance.- The Baptismal Creed of Jerusalem
Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men.And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name,so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.- Philippians 2:5-11 ESV
Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
- John 14:6 ESV
So, I implore you, don’t live in ignorance or indecision. Read through the creeds and confessions above, or study the Word and write your own. The point isn’t that you wake up and recite the Apostles Creed every morning, the point is that you have a firm understanding of what you believe and live it out.Move on from indecision and ignorance and take responsibility for the truth of what you believe.
This is a list of Christian denominations by number of members. It is inevitably partial and generally based on claims by the denominations themselves. The numbers should therefore be considered approximate and the article an ongoing work-in-progress.
The list includes the following Christian denominations: the Catholic Church including the Eastern Catholic Churches; all the Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches with some recognition and their offshoots; Protestant denominations with at least 0.2 million members; all the other Christian branches with distinct theologies, such as Restorationist and Nontrinitarianian denominations; the independent Catholic denominations; and the Church of the East. With an estimated 2.42 or 2.3 billion adherents in 2015,[2][3][4] Christianity is the largest religious group in the world, and in 2020 there were about 2.6 billion adherents globally.[5]
Christianity – 2.6 billion
Catholicism – 1.345 billion
Catholicism is the largest branch of Christianity with 1.345 billion, and the Catholic Church is the largest among churches.[6] Figures below are in accordance with the Annuario Pontificio, at 2019.[6] The total figure does not include independent denominations that self-identify as Catholic, numbering some 18 million adherents.
- Latin Church – 1.327 billion
- Eastern Catholic Churches – 18 million[7]
- Byzantine Rite – 8.2 million
- Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church – 5.5 million[8]
- Melkite Greek Catholic Church – 1.6 million[9]
- Romanian Greek Catholic Church – 0.5 million[9]
- Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church – 0.4 million[9]
- Hungarian Greek Catholic Church – 0.3 million[9]
- Slovak Greek Catholic Church – 0.3 million[9]
- Belarusian Greek Catholic Church – 0.1 million[10]
- Italo-Albanian Catholic Church – 0.01 million[9]
- Greek Catholic Church of Croatia and Serbia – 0.01 million[9]
- Georgian Byzantine Catholic Church (not sui iuris) – 0.01 million;[11]
- Albanian Greek Catholic Church – 0.01 million[12]
- Russian Greek Catholic Church – 0.01 million[10]
- Greek Byzantine Catholic Church – 0.006 million[13]
- Macedonian Greek Catholic Church – 0.001 million[14]
- Bulgarian Greek Catholic Church – 0.001 million[9]
- East Syriac Rite – 4.9 million
- Syro-Malabar Church – 4.3 million[9]
- Chaldean Catholic Church – 0.6 million[9]
- West Syriac Rite – 4.1 million
- Maronite Church – 3.5 million[9]
- Syro-Malankara Catholic Church – 0.5 million[9]
- Syriac Catholic Church – 0.2 million[9]
- Armenian Rite – 0.8 million
- Armenian Catholic Church – 0.8 million[9]
- Alexandrian Rite – 0.5 million
- Coptic Catholic Church – 0.2 million[9]
- Eritrean Catholic Church – 0.2 million[9]
- Ethiopian Catholic Church – 0.07 million [9]
- Canonically irregular groups
- Society of Saint Pius X – 1 million[15]
Independent Catholicism – 18 million
Various denominations that self-identify as Catholic, despite not being affiliated with the Catholic Church.[16]
- Philippine Independent Church – 6 million[17] (in communion with the Anglican Communion)[18]
- Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association – 5 million[19]
- Traditionalist Mexican-American Catholic Church – 2 million
- Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church – 0.56 million[20]
- Old Catholic Church – 0.1 million (in communion with the Anglican Communion)[21]
- Polish National Catholic Church – 0.03 million
- Apostolic Catholic Church – 0.005 million
- Palmarian Catholic Church – 0.002 million[22]
Protestantism – 900 million
Protestantism is the second largest major group of Christians by number of followers. Estimates vary from 800 million to 1 billion, or between 31% and 38% of all Christians.[23][24][25][26][27][28][29] The main reason for this wide range is the lack of a common agreement among scholars as to which denominations constitute Protestantism. For instance, most sources but not all include Anabaptism, Anglicanism, Baptists and Independent Nondenominational Christianity as part of Protestantism.[30] Moreover, Protestant denominations altogether do not form a single structure comparable to the Catholic Church, or to a lesser extent the Eastern Orthodox communion. However, several different comparable communions exist within Protestantism, such as the Anglican Communion, World Communion of Reformed Churches, World Baptist Alliance, World Methodist Council and the World Lutheran Federation. Regardless, 900 million is the most accepted figure among various authors and scholars, and thus is used in this article. Note that this 900 million figure also includes Anglicanism, as well as Anabaptists, Baptists and multiple other groups that might sometimes disavow a common "Protestant" designation, and would rather prefer to be called, simply, "Christian".[23]
Historical Protestantism – 300–400 million
The number of individuals who are members of historical Protestant Churches totals to 300-400 million.[25]
Anglicanism – 110 million
There are about 110 million Christians in Anglican tradition,[31][32] mostly part of the Anglican Communion, the third-largest Christian communion in the world.
- Anglican Communion – 85 million[33][34][35][36][37]
- Church of England – 25.0 million[38]
- Church of Nigeria – 20.1 million[39]
- Church of Uganda – 8.1 million[40]
- Anglican Church of Kenya – 5.0 million[41]
- Episcopal Church of South Sudan and Sudan – 4.5 million[42]
- Church of South India – 3.8 million[43]
- Anglican Church of Australia – 3.1 million[44]
- Anglican Church of Southern Africa – 2.3 million[45]
- Anglican Church of Tanzania – 2.0 million[46]
- Episcopal Church in the United States – 1.8 million[47]
- Church of North India – 1.5 million[48]
- Anglican Church of Rwanda – 1.0 million[49]
- Church of the Province of Central Africa – 0.9 million[50]
- Anglican Church of Burundi – 0.8 million[51]
- Church in the Province of the West Indies – 0.8 million[52]
- Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia – 0.5 million[53]
- Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean – 0.5 million[54]
- Church of Christ in Congo–Anglican Community of Congo – 0.5 million[55]
- Church of Pakistan – 0.5 million[56]
- Church of Ireland – 0.4 million[57]
- Anglican Church of Canada – 0.4 million[58]
- Church of the Province of West Africa – 0.3 million[59]
- Anglican Church of Melanesia – 0.2 million[60]
- Episcopal Church in the Philippines – 0.1 million[61]
- Continuing Anglican movement and independent churches – 0.4 million
- Traditional Anglican Communion – 0.4 million[62]
- Anglican Church in North America – 0.13 million[63]
- Reformed Evangelical Anglican Church of South Africa – 0.09 million[64]
Baptist churches – 100 million
The worldwide Baptist community numbers about 100 million.[65][66][67][68][69] However, the Baptist World Alliance, the world communion of Baptist churches, self-reports only 47 million baptized believers, as Baptists do not count children as members.[68][66][67] Therefore, the BWA is the 8th largest Christian communion.[70]
- Southern Baptist Convention – 14.5 million[71]
- National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. – 7.5 million[72]
- Nigerian Baptist Convention – 6.5 million[73]
- National Missionary Baptist Convention of America – 3.1 million[74]
- National Baptist Convention of America, Inc. – 3.1 million[74]
- Baptist Union of Uganda – 2.5 million[74]
- Baptist Community of Congo – 2.1 million[74]
- Baptist Convention of Tanzania – 2.0 million[74]
- Baptist General Convention of Texas – 1.7 million[75]
- Brazilian Baptist Convention – 1.6 million[74]
- Progressive National Baptist Convention – 1.5 million[74]
- Council of Baptist Churches in Northeast India – 1.3 million[74]
- American Baptist Churches USA – 1.2 million[74]
- Baptist Bible Fellowship International – 1.2 million[76]
- Lott Carey Foreign Mission Convention – 1.1 million[74]
- Baptist Community of the Congo River – 1.1 million[74]
- National Primitive Baptist Convention of the U.S.A. – 1.0 million[76]
- Myanmar Baptist Convention – 1.0 million[74]
- Cooperative Baptist Fellowship – 0.8 million[74]
- Baptist General Association of Virginia – 0.6 million[74]
- Baptist Convention of Kenya – 0.6 million[74]
- Nagaland Baptist Church Council – 0.6 million[74]
- Korea Baptist Convention – 0.5 million[74]
- Samavesam of Telugu Baptist Churches – 0.5 million[74]
- Orissa Evangelical Baptist Crusade – 0.5 million[74]
- National Baptist Convention (Brazil) – 0.4 million[74]
- Baptist Convention of Malawi – 0.3 million[74]
- Garo Baptist Convention – 0.3 million[74]
- Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches – 0.3[74]
- Ghana Baptist Convention – 0.3[74]
- Union of Baptist Churches in Rwanda – 0.3 million[74]
- Conservative Baptist Association of America – 0.2 million[77]
- National Association of Free Will Baptists – 0.2 million[78]
- Convention of Visayas and Mindanao of Southern Baptist Churches – 0.2 million[74]
- Manipur Baptist Convention – 0.2 million[74]
- Evangelical Baptist Church of the Central African Republic – 0.2 million[74]
- Converge – 0.2 million[79]
- Seventh Day Baptists – 0.05 million[80]
Lutheranism – 70–90 million
The number of adherents in the Lutheran denomination totals to 70-90 million persons (the Lutheran World Federation reports 77 million, and is the sixth largest communion),[81] being represented in the following churches:[25][82]
- Evangelical Church in Germany - 20.7 million (10.3 million United Protestants, i.e. Lutheran & Reformed; 10.1 million Lutherans; 0.3 million Reformed)[83]
- Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus – 10.4 million[84]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania – 7.9 million[85]
- Church of Sweden – 5.8 million[86][87]
- United Evangelical Lutheran Churches in India – 4.5 million[88]
- Church of Denmark – 4.3 million[89][90]
- Batak Christian Protestant Church – 4.0 million[91]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland – 3.7 million[92][93]
- Church of Norway – 3.7 million[94][95]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in America – 3.3 million[96][97]
- Malagasy Lutheran Church – 3.0 million[98]
- The Lutheran Church of Christ in Nigeria – 2.2 million[99]
- Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod – 2.0 million[100]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea – 1.2 million[101]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in Namibia – 0.7 million[102]
- Evangelical Church of the Lutheran Confession in Brazil – 0.6 million[103]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in Southern Africa – 0.6 million[104]
- The Protestant Christian Church – 0.5 million[91]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Republic of Namibia – 0.4 million[102]
- Evangelical Free Church of America – 0.4 million[105]
- The Indonesian Christian Church – 0.3 million[91]
- Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ – 0.3 million[106]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church of Cameroon – 0.3 million[107]
- Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Austria – 0.3 million[108]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in Zimbabwe – 0.3 million[109]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia – 0.3 million[110]
- Christian Protestant Church in Indonesia – 0.3 million[91]
- Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod – 0.3 million[111]
- Church of Iceland – 0.2 million[112]
- Simalungun Protestant Christian Church – 0.2 million[91]
- Evangelical Lutheran Church of Brazil – 0.2 million[113]
- Protestant Church of Augsburg Confession of Alsace and Lorraine – 0.2 million[114]
- Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Slovakia – 0.2 million[115]
- Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Hungary – 0.2 million[116]
- Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church – 0.2 million[117]
Reformed churches (Calvinism) – 60–80 million
The Reformed tradition is represented by 60-80 million people who hold membership in the following churches;[118][119][120][121][122] the World Communion of Reformed Churches is the fourth-largest communion.[123]
- Presbyterianism – 40 million
- Presbyterian Church of East Africa – 4.0 million[124]
- Presbyterian Church of Nigeria – 3.8 million[125]
- Presbyterian Church of Africa – 3.4 million[126]
- National Presbyterian Church in Mexico – 2.8 million[127]
- Church of Christ in Congo–Presbyterian Community of Congo – 2.5 million[128]
- Presbyterian Church in Korea (HapDong) – 2.5 million[129]
- Presbyterian Church of Korea (TongHap) – 2.5 million[130]
- Presbyterian Church in Cameroon – 2.0 million[131]
- Presbyterian Church of Cameroon – 1.8 million[132]
- Church of Central Africa Presbyterian – 1.8 million[133]
- Presbyterian Church in Korea (BaekSeok) – 1.5 million[134]
- Presbyterian Church of India – 1.3 million[135]
- Presbyterian Church (USA) – 1.3 million[136]
- Presbyterian Church in Sudan – 1.0 million[137]
- Presbyterian Church of Brazil – 0.7 million[138]
- Presbyterian Church of Ghana - 1.0 million[139]
- Evangelical Presbyterian Church, Ghana – 0.6 million[140]
- United Church of Christ in the Philippines – 0.5 million[141]
- Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa – 0.5 million[142]
- United Church of Canada – 0.4 million[143]
- Presbyterian Church in America – 0.4 million[144]
- Presbyterian Church of Pakistan – 0.4 million[145]
- Presbyterian Church in Korea (Koshin) – 0.4 million
- Church of Scotland – 0.3 million[146]
- Korean Presbyterian Church – 0.3 million[147]
- Presbyterian Church in Rwanda – 0.3 million[148]
- Uniting Church in Australia – 0.2 million[149]
- Presbyterian Church in Taiwan – 0.2 million[150]
- Presbyterian Church in Ireland – 0.2 million[151]
- Continental Reformed churches – 30 million
- Church of Jesus Christ in Madagascar – 3.5 million[152]
- Protestant Church in Indonesia – 3.1 million[153]
- United Church in Zambia – 3.0 million[154]
- Evangelical Church of Cameroon – 2.5 million[155]
- Swiss Reformed Church – 2.4 million[156]
- Christian Evangelical Church in Timor – 2.0 million[157]
- Protestant Church in the Netherlands – 1.6 million[158]
- Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) – 1.1 million
- Christian Evangelical Church in Minahasa – 0.7 million[159]
- United Church in Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands – 0.6 million[160]
- Protestant Church in Western Indonesia – 0.6 million[161]
- Evangelical Christian Church in Tanah Papua – 0.6 million[162]
- Protestant Church of Maluku – 0.6 million[163]
- Reformed Church in Hungary – 0.6 million[164]
- Reformed Church in Romania – 0.6 million[165]
- Uniting Reformed Church in Southern Africa – 0.5 million[166]
- Toraja Church – 0.4 million[167]
- Reformed Church of France – 0.4 million[168]
- Lesotho Evangelical Church – 0.3 million[169]
- Evangelical Christian Church in Halmahera – 0.3 million[170]
- Christian Church of Sumba – 0.3 million[171]
- Karo Batak Protestant Church – 0.3 million[172]
- Christian Reformed Church of Nigeria – 0.3 million[173]
- Reformed Church in Zambia – 0.3 million[174]
- Evangelical Reformed Church in Angola – 0.2 million[175]
- Reformed Church in America – 0.2 million[176]
- Christian Reformed Church in North America – 0.2 million[177]
- Kalimantan Evangelical Church – 0.2 million[178]
- Javanese Christian Church – 0.2 million[179]
- Indonesia Christian Church – 0.2 million[180]
- Church of Christ in the Sudan Among the Tiv – 0.2 million[181]
- Church of Lippe – 0.2 million[182]
- Evangelical Church of Congo – 0.2 million[183]
- Christian Evangelical Church of Sangihe Talaud – 0.2 million[184]
- Central Sulawesi Christian Church – 0.2 million[185]
- Evangelical Reformed Church in Bavaria and Northwestern Germany – 0.2 million[186]
- Congregationalism – 5 million
- Evangelical Congregational Church in Angola – 0.9 million[187]
- United Church of Christ – 0.8 million[188]
- United Congregational Church of Southern Africa – 0.5 million[189]
Methodism – 60–80 million
The Methodist movement is represented by 60–80 million people (a figure including adherents but non-members), found in denominations including the following;[25][190] the World Methodist Council is the fifth largest communion.[191]
- United Methodist Church – 12 million[192]
- African Methodist Episcopal Church – 2.5 million[193]
- Church of the Nazarene – 2 million[194]
- Methodist Church Nigeria – 2 million[195]
- The Salvation Army – 1.8 million[196]
- Methodist Church of Southern Africa – 1.7 million[197]
- African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church – 1.4 million[198]
- Korean Methodist Church – 1.3 million[199]
- United Methodist Church of Ivory Coast – 1 million[200]
- Free Methodist Church – 0.9 million[201]
- Christian Methodist Episcopal Church – 0.9 million[202]
- Methodist Church Ghana – 0.8 million[203]
- Methodist Church in India – 0.6 million[204]
- Methodist Church in Kenya – 0.5 million[205]
- Wesleyan Church – 0.4 million[206]
- Methodist Church of Great Britain – 0.2 million[207]
- Methodist Church in Brazil – 0.2 million[208]
- Methodist Church of Fiji and Rotuma – 0.2 million[209]
Seventh-day Adventist Church – 21.4 million
The Seventh-day Adventist Church has a membership of 21.4 million people.[210][211]
Restoration Movement – 7 million
- Churches of Christ – 5 million
- Churches of Christ in Australia - 0.05 million
- Christian churches and churches of Christ – 1.1 million[76]
- Community of Disciples of Christ in Congo – 0.7 million[212]
- Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) – 0.4 million[213]
Anabaptism – 4 million
- Mennonites – 2.1 million[214]
- Schwarzenau Brethren (German Baptists) – 1.5 million[215]
- Amish – 0.3 million
- Hutterites – 0.05 million
Plymouth Brethren – 1 million
The Plymouth Brethren number around 1 million members.[216]
Hussites – 1 million
- Czechoslovak Hussite Church – 0.14 million
- Unity of the Brethren – 0.035 million
Quakers – 0.4 million[edit]
Modern Protestantism – 400–500 million
The denominations listed below did not emerge from the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century or its commonly acknowledged offshoots. Instead, they are broadly linked to Pentecostalism or similar other independent evangelical and revivalistic movements that originated in the beginning of the 20th century.[217] For this reason, several sources tend to differentiate them from Protestants and classify them together as Independents, Non-core Protestants etc. Also included in this category are the numerous, yet very similar Nondenominational churches. Nonetheless, sources eventually combine their numbers to the Protestant tally.[23][24] Despite the absence of centralized control or leadership, if considered as a single cohort, this will easily be the second largest Christian tradition after Roman Catholicism.[218][219][220] According to the Center for the Study of Global Christianity (CSGC), there are an estimated 450 million Independents world-wide, as of mid-2019.[221]
Pentecostalism – 280 million
Those who are members of the Pentecostal denomination number around 280 million people.[25]
- Assemblies of God – 67 million[222]
- Apostolic Church – 15 million
- International Circle of Faith – 11 million[223]
- Fangcheng Fellowship – 10 million[224]
- China Gospel Fellowship - 10 million
- International Church of the Foursquare Gospel - 9 million
- Ethiopian Kale Heywet Church - 9 million
- Church of God in Christ - 6.5 million[225]
- Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) - 6 million
- Jesus Is Lord Church Worldwide – 5 million
- Ethiopian Full Gospel Believers' Church - 4.5 million [226]
- International Pentecostal Holiness Church – 4 million
- The Pentecostal Mission – 2.5 million
- Christian Congregation of Brazil – 2.5 million
- True Jesus Church – 2.5 million
- The Church of Pentecost – 2.1 million
- Universal Church of the Kingdom of God – 2 million
- Apostolic Faith Mission of South Africa – 1.2 million
- Church of God of Prophecy – 1.5 million
- Association of Pentecostal Churches of Rwanda – 1 million
- God is Love Pentecostal Church – 0.8 million
- Association of Vineyard Churches – 0.3 million[227]
Nondenominational Christianity – 80–100 million
- Calvary Chapel – 25 million
- Christian and Missionary Alliance – 6 million[228]
- Born Again Movement – 3 million[229]
- Church of God (Anderson, Indiana) – 1.2 million
African initiated churches – 60 million
60 million people are members of African initiated churches.[230]
- Zion Christian Church – 15 million
- Eternal Sacred Order of Cherubim and Seraphim – 10 million
- Kimbanguist Church – 5.5 million
- Redeemed Christian Church of God – 5 million[231]
- Church of the Lord (Aladura) – 3.6 million[232]
- Council of African Instituted Churches – 3 million[233]
- Church of Christ Light of the Holy Spirit – 1.4 million[234]
- African Church of the Holy Spirit – 0.7 million[235]
- African Israel Church Nineveh – 0.5 million[236]
Chinese Patriotic Christian Churches - 25 million
New Apostolic Church – 10 million
The New Apostolic Church has around 10 million members.[237]
Local churches – 1 to 10 million
Messianic Judaism – 0.3 million
Messianic Judaism has a membership of 0.3 million people.[238]
Eastern Protestant Christianity – 22 million
Eastern Protestant Christianity (or Eastern Reformed Christianity) encompasses a range of heterogeneous Protestant Christian denominations that developed outside of the Occident, from the latter half of the nineteenth century and yet keeps elements of Eastern Christianity, to varying degrees. Most of these denominations came into being when existing Protestant Churches adopted reformational variants of Orthodox Christian liturgy and worship; while others are the result of reformations of Orthodox Christian beliefs and practices, inspired by the teachings of Western Protestant missionaries.[239][240][241] Some Protestant Eastern Churches are in communion with similar Western Protestant Churches.[239][242] However, Protestant Eastern Christianity within itself, does not constitute a single communion. This is due to the diverse polities, practices, liturgies and orientations of the denominations which fall under this category.
- Ethiopian-Eritrean Evangelical Church – 16.5 million, Alexandrian Rite
- Believers Eastern Church – 3.5 million, West Syrian Rite
- Mar Thoma Syrian Church – 1 million, Syro-Antiochene Rite [243][244] (in communion with the Anglican Communion)[18]
- Armenian Evangelical Church – 0.25 million, Armenian Rite
- St. Thomas Evangelical Church of India - 0.1 million, Syro-Antiochene Rite
- Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Slovenia - 0.02 million, Byzantine Rite [245]
- Evangelical Church of Romania – 0.16 million, Byzantine Rite
- Laestadianism – 0.15 million, Mostly Byzantine Rite
- Kosovo Protestant Evangelical Church – 0.15 million, Byzantine Rite [246]
Eastern Orthodoxy – 220 million
The best estimate of the number of Eastern Orthodox Christians is 220 million[247] or 80% of all Orthodox Christians worldwide.[248] Its main body consists of the various autocephalous churches along with the autonomous and other churches canonically linked to them, for the most part form a single communion, making the Eastern Orthodox Church the second largest single denomination behind the Catholic Church.[249][250][251] In addition, there are several Eastern Orthodox splinter groups and non-universally recognized churches.
- Autocephalous churches – 166 million
- Russian Orthodox Church – 100 million[248][252][253][254][247]
- Romanian Orthodox Church – 17–18.8 million[255][256][257]
- Church of Greece – 10 million[255]
- Serbian Orthodox Church – 8-12 million[255][258]
- Bulgarian Orthodox Church – 8-10 million
- Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople – 5.25 million[255]
- Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch – 4.3 million[255]
- Georgian Orthodox Church – 3.5 million
- Church of Cyprus – 0.7 million
- Polish Orthodox Church – 0.6 million[255]
- Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria – 0.5 million[259]
- Albanian Orthodox Church – 0.4 million[255]
- Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem – 0.4 million[255]
- Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church – 0.075 million[255]
- Autonomous churches – 13 million
- Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) – 7.2 million[260]
- Metropolitan Church of Chișinău and All Moldova (Moscow Patriarchate) – 3.2 million
- Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia – 0.4 million[261][262]
- Metropolitan Church of Bessarabia (Moldova) (Romanian Patriarchate) – 0.72 million[263]
- Orthodox Ohrid Archbishopric (North Macedonia) – 0.34 million[citation needed]
- Estonian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) – 0.3 million
- Finnish Orthodox Church (Ecumenical Patriarchate) – 0.06 million[255]
- Chinese Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) – 0.03 million
- Japanese Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) – 0.03 million[255]
- Latvian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) – 0.02 million
- Estonian Orthodox Church (Ecumenical Patriarchate) – 0.02 million
- Churches in communion with the above Orthodox Churches but with disputed autocephaly – 19 million
- Orthodox Church of Ukraine – 12–18 million
- Orthodox Church in America – 1 million[255]
- Non-universally recognized churches – 6.27 million
- Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church – 2.4 million
- Macedonian Orthodox Church – 2 million
- Orthodox Church of Greece (Holy Synod in Resistance) – 0.75 million
- Old Calendarist Romanian Orthodox Church – 0.50 million
- Old Calendar Bulgarian Orthodox Church – 0.45 million
- Orthodox Church in Italy – 0.12 million
- Montenegrin Orthodox Church – 0.05 million
- Other separated Orthodox groups – 6 million
- Old Believers – 5.5 million
- Greek Old Calendarists – 0.86 million
- True Orthodox Church – 0.85 million
- Evangelical Orthodox Church – 0.07 million
Oriental Orthodoxy – 62 million
The Oriental Orthodox Churches are those descended from those that rejected the Council of Chalcedon in 451. Despite the similar name, they are therefore a different branch of Christianity from the Eastern Orthodox (see above). There are an estimated 62 million Oriental Orthodox Christians, worldwide.[264][265][266]
- Autocephalous churches – 61.7 million
- Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church – 37 million[267][268][269][270][271]
- Coptic Orthodox Church – 10 million[272][273][274][275][276]
- Armenian Apostolic Church – 9 million[277][278]
- Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin – 6 million
- Holy See of Cilicia – 1.5 million
- Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople – 0.5–0.7 million[279]
- Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem – 0.34 million
- Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church - 2 million[280]
- Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church - 2 million[281]
- Syriac Orthodox Church – 1.4 million[282][283]
- Jacobite Syrian Christian Church – 1.2 million[284]
- Autonomous churches – 0.01 million
- French Coptic Orthodox Church – 0.01 million
- Churches not in communion – 0.07 million
- Malabar Independent Syrian Church – 0.06 million
- British Orthodox Church – 0.01 million
Non-trinitarian Restorationism – 35 million
A sixth group is composed by Nontrinitarian Restorationists. These groups are quite distinct from orthodox Trinitarian restorationist groups such as the Disciples of Christ, despite some shared history.
- Latter Day Saint movement (Mormonism) – 16.7 million
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – 16.5 million[285]
- Community of Christ – 0.25 million[286]
- Jehovah's Witnesses – 8.5 million[287]
- Oneness Pentecostalism – 6 million
- United Pentecostal Church International – 4 million
- Pentecostal Assemblies of the World – 1.5 million
- Minor denominations – 4.4 million
- Iglesia ni Cristo – 2.3 million[288]
- The Unification Church (aka Moonies) – 1–2 million[289]
- La Luz del Mundo – around million (See La Luz del Mundo#Membership statistics)
- Unitarian Universalism – 0.6 million[290]
- Unitarian Universalist Association – 0.2 million[291]
(Unitarian Universalism developed out of Christian traditions but no longer identifies as a Christian denomination.)
- Unitarian Universalist Association – 0.2 million[291]
- Church of Christ, Scientist – 0.4 million
- Friends of Man – 0.07 million
- Christadelphians – 0.06 million
- Family International – 0.01 million
Church of the East – 0.6 million
Divisions occurred within the church itself, but by 1830 two unified patriarchates and distinct churches remained: the Assyrian Church of the East and the Chaldean Catholic Church (an Eastern Catholic Church in communion with the Holy See). The Ancient Church of the East split from the Assyrian Church of the East in 1968. In 2017, the Chaldean Catholic Church had approximately 628,405 members,[292] the Assyrian Church of the East 323,300,[293] while the Ancient Church of the East had 100,000.
- Assyrian Church of the East – 0.5 million
- Ancient Church of the East – 0.1 million
See also
- Christian state
- List of Christian denominations
- List of current Christian leaders
- List of largest church buildings
- List of schisms in Christianity
- List of the largest Protestant denominations
- Major religious groups
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