“The story of Christianity as a worldwide faith is being written before our eyes”, declared Dr. Dana Robert of Boston University School of Theology, as she addressed a group of world church leaders on the fundamental realignment of Christian faith around the globe.
“Christianity has undergone one of the greatest demographic and cultural shifts in its 2000 year history,” Robert said.
She was speaking to the Global Christian Forum (GCF) at Manado, Indonesia, which in itself reflects changing patterns of Church engagement.
Uniquely, the gathering has brought together leaders from all major church traditions, all theological perspectives and major world communions including the Anglican Communion, the World Council of Churches, the World Evangelical Alliance, the Pentecostal World Fellowship and representatives of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for promotion of Christian Unity. In a statistical analysis of the changing demographics and practices of global Christianity, Mr. Peter Crossing of the Centre for the Study of Global Christianity, told the GCF that a century ago (1910), 66 percent of the world’s Christians lived in Europe, but today it accounts for only 26 percent of the world’s Christian population.
He said the “Global North (defined as Europe and North America) contained over 80 percent of all Christians in 1910 falling to under 40percent by 2010”. In 1910 less than 2 percent of all Christian lived in Africa but by 2010 this had skyrocketed to 20 percent or world Christianity by 2010. Crossing, who is a researcher for the Atlas of Global Christianity, said that whilst the overall number of Christian’s globally had remained fairly constant over the last one hundred years there had been “dramatic change in the centre of gravity of global Christianity”.