How many Pentecostals and Charismatics are there in the U.S. today?

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Todd Johnson, who is the director of the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary, reported on the global demographics of the Pentecostal and Charismatic renewal.

He does this by first breaking down our demographic of interest into a single group called “renewalists” which are comprised of three “waves”: Pentecostals, Charismatics, and neocharismatics. Despite the three waves, Johnson argues that they all point to an interconnected movement:

“The case for the Pentecostal and Charismatic Renewal as a single interconnected movement can best be made by considering how the movement starts and spreads in any area, from the days of the earliest Pentecostals to those of current Charismatics and neocharismatics. The start of the movement anywhere has always been an unexpected or unpredictable happening rather than the result of any human planning or organization. First individuals (at random across the existing churches), then groups, then large numbers in semi-organized movements become filled with the Spirit and embark on the common Charismatic experience. All of them, originally, can collectively be termed Renewalists.”

Number of Renewalists in the United States

For these “renewalists,” as Johnson calls them, we find that they have quite a substantial representation in American Christianity. According to a reference Johnson makes to the World Christian Database, as of 2010, there are roughly 76,000,000 renewalists in the U.S.1

That is to say approximately 1/3rd of all Christians in the U.S identify with renewalist ideology. This renewalist group makes up in fact the largest demographic of Christian in the U.S. today, with Catholics trailing in second at about 70,000,000 followers, or about 30% of the Christian population.

  1. Johnson, T.M. Soc (2009) 46: 479. The Global Demographics of the Pentecostal and Charismatic Renewal

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