December 24, 2002

AWAKEN:

The Christian Future (The Wall Street Journal, December 24, 2002)
As Penn State University Professor Philip Jenkins explains in his new book, "The Next Christendom," the largest populations of Christians on the planet are in Africa and Latin America -- and they continue to grow at phenomenal rates. As a result, "in its variety and vitality, in its global reach, in its association with the world's fastest-growing societies . . . it is Christianity that will leave the deepest mark on the twenty-first century," Mr. Jenkins writes in the Atlantic Monthly.

In 1900, Africa had 10 million Christians, or about 9% of its population. Today that continent is home to 360 million Christians out of 784 million people, or 46%. Latin America has 480 million Christians, and Asia another 313 million. By 2025 Christians will be by far the world's largest faith at 2.6 billion, with half of that in Latin America and Africa, and another 17% in Asia. [...]

Given Christianity's influence in countries that are moving toward democracy, religion itself is likely to play a key role in the ultimate shape of these nations. The record has been encouraging to date, with African and Asian church leaders using their popularity to insert Christian principles of justice and morality into the political realm, such as the role played by South African churches in ending apartheid. At some point, however, these nations will face questions about church-state divides or tolerance for religious minorities. Given the growth of Islam in the same areas, it also raises the potential for more conflicts like those in Sudan, Nigeria or Indonesia.

What does this mean for the traditional Christian centers of Europe and North America? The center of Christianity is definitely moving to Africa, Latin America and Asia, though interestingly those adherents are bringing their religions back to Europe and the U.S. Declining birthrates in Europe will likely bring greater immigration, much of it fueled by active Christians from poorer regions like Africa. This is already happening; Professor Jenkins cites London's Kingsway International Christian Centre, founded in 1992 by a Nigerian pastor, which is now said to be the largest church created in Britain since 1861.

America, with its faster birthrates and immigration, will continue to see Christian growth for years to come. Even with all of its diversity today, the number of Jews, Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus in the U.S. is exceedingly small, making up only 4% to 5% of the population, and that percentage isn't likely to change much in the foreseeable future. America may not see Africa's Christian boom, but the vitality and change that has marked Christianity for so long will continue to mark the American experiment too.


The most interesting question in all of this is whether Europe will be content to slide off into oblivion, or whether there will eventually be a great re-awakening there, like the ones America experiences cyclically (many consider us to be in the midst of the Third). Posted by Orrin Judd at December 24, 2002 11:19 AM
Comments

Interesting that our great advances in liberty have been made in between the Great Awakenings.

Posted by: Harry at December 24, 2002 1:47 PM

Like the New Deal and Great Society?

Posted by: oj at December 24, 2002 4:34 PM

I was thinking of the Constitutional Convention

and, yes, the New Deal.

Posted by: Harry at December 25, 2002 2:37 PM

At a presentation by the christian writer Os Guiness, I asked for his reaction to the demographic dynamic that Jenkins describes. As a believer, Guiness felt this spread of the Christian faith to be quite encouraging. He also cautioned the audience from finding too much comfort in the growth of Christianity in the developing world. He reminded us that the Christian faith is taking hold in pre-modern societies that have not encountered the "corrosive" effects of modernity on traditional cultures. In his opinion, the evangelist's work is not complete until the Christian faith is reconciled with modern life. Unless we can accomplish that spiritual life in Ghana may eventually become as dessicated as spiritual life in France.



--John Sterling

Posted by: John Sterling at December 25, 2002 7:11 PM

Are there really any premodern societies that have not yet encountered the corrosive aspecs of modernism?



I mean, aside from out of the way places like Malawi.



Ghana, to take one example, has been closely engaged with Europe for more than 500 years.

Posted by: Harry at December 26, 2002 12:48 PM
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