Christian Post
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
_Religion Census: Increase in Evangelicals, Mormons, Muslims;  Decrease in 
Catholics, Mainline Protestants_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/religion-census-increase-in-evangelicals-mormons-muslims-decrease-in-catholics-mainli
ne-protestants-74207/) 
Wed, May. 02, 2012 Posted: 06:08 AM EDT   
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A decennial census of U.S. religions in America was released Tuesday by the 
 Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB). The 
results  show a dramatic increase in the number of Latter-day Saints, or 
Mormons, and  Muslims, a modest increase in the number of evangelical 
Protestants, 
and a drop  in the number of Catholics and mainline Protestants. 
Muslims saw the greatest growth rate among the five main religious groups  
studied. Their numbers increased by 66.7 percent in the 2010 census from a  
decade earlier. Latter-day Saints saw the next highest growth at 45.5 
percent,  followed by evangelical Protestants at only 1.7 percent. The number 
of 
Catholics  decreased by five percent and the number of mainline Protestants 
decreased by  12.8 percent. 
Notably, when combined, nondenominational and independent churches are now  
the largest faith group, with over 12 million adherents, according to the  
report. 
Evangelical Protestants and Latter-day Saints saw their greatest growth in  
the nine most populated metropolitan areas. These areas each have over 5 
million  people. Evangelical Christians increased their numbers by 12.3 
percent and  Latter-day Saints increased their numbers by 66.9 percent in these 
areas.  Muslims, by contrast, grew at a faster rate outside of the major 
metropolitan  areas. 
The census also shows an increase in religious diversity in the United  
States. In the 2000 census, at least one non-Christian religious congregation  
was found in 21 percent of America's counties. In the 2010 census, that had  
risen to 31 percent, a nearly 50 percent increase. 
ASARB's U.S. Religion Census is the most thorough study of its kind.  
County-level data is collected for 236 different religious groups. The first  
census was taken in 1952, to be followed up in 1971, 1980, 1990, 2000 and, now, 
 2010. 
"With 236 participating bodies, the 2010 US Religion Census is the most  
comprehensive local-level analysis of U.S. religious adherents and attendance 
in  more than 60 years," said Clifford Grammich, the chairman of the ASARB  
operations committee for the study, in a statement. "We are especially 
pleased  to have increased participation for several independent and 
non-Christian  bodies." 
At the_ study's website_ (http://www.thearda.com/rcms2010/)  you can view 
graphical  representations of the wealth of data the census provides. One can 
select their  own denomination or religious group, for instance, and view a 
map of how its  numbers have changed, by county, over the previous decade.
Napp Nazworth
 
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