World Christian Encyclopedia

World Christian Encyclopedia is a reference work, with its third edition published by Edinburgh University Press in November 2019. The WCE is known for providing membership statistics for major world religions and Christian denominations including historical data and projections of future populations.

The data incorporated into the World Christian Encyclopedia have been made available online at the World Christian Database (WCD).

Editions

1st - 1982

The first edition of the World Christian Encyclopedia (WCE), by David B. Barrett, was published in 1982 by Oxford University Press.[1] Barrett was a trained aeronautical engineer who became a missionary with the Church Missionary Society (Anglican). He arrived in Nyanza Province in Western Kenya in 1957. Over the course of 14 years he traveled to 212 of 223 countries and corresponded with Christians all over the world in search of the most up-to-date statistics on Christianity and world religions. His research resulted in the first edition of the World Christian Encyclopedia in 1982.[2]

2nd - 2001

Barrett moved to Richmond, Virginia in 1985 to work with the Southern Baptists on missionary strategy. He continued his research as an independent researcher, joined by Todd M. Johnson in 1988. With George Kurian, Barrett and Johnson produced the second edition of the World Christian Encyclopedia, in 2 volumes, in 2001 (Oxford University Press).[3]

3rd - 2019

The third edition, written and edited by Todd M. Johnson and Gina A. Zurlo (Barrett died in 2011), was released in November 2019.[4] Johnson and Zurlo are Co-directors of the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary (South Hamilton, MA, USA).[4][5]

Reception

One study found that the WCD's data was "highly correlated with other sources that offer cross-national religious composition estimates" but the database "consistently gives a higher estimate for percent Christian in comparison to other cross-national data sets".[6] And it's reported that there is concern about possible bias because the world christian encyclopedia was originally developed as a Christian missionary tool.[6]

Margit Warburg, a Danish researcher, has argued that the database contains numerical inaccuracies in its statistics on the Baháʼí Faith. She noted that figures given in WCE for some Western countries are highly exaggerated. For instance, the World Christian Encyclopedia reports an estimated 1,600 Baháʼís in Denmark in 1995 and 682,000 Baháʼís in the USA in 1995. According to her, the Baháʼís themselves do not acknowledge such numbers; the number of registered Baháʼís in Denmark, in 1995, was about 240 and in the number in the USA was about 130,000.[7]

References

  1. Barrett, David B. (1982). "A Comparative Study of Churches and Religions in the Modern World, AD 1900-2000". World Christian Encyclopedia (First ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-572435-6. Retrieved 2020-10-21 via Google Books.
  2. Gina A. Zurlo, "'A Miracle from Nairobi'": David B. Barrett and the Quantification of World Christianity, 1957–1982," Ph.D. diss., Boston University, 2017. Link: https://open.bu.edu/handle/2144/27183
  3. Barrett, David B.; Kurian, George T.; Johnson, Todd M. (2001). "A Comparative Study of Churches and Religions in the Modern World". World Christian Encyclopedia (Second ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-507963-9 via Internet Archive.
  4. Johnson, Todd M.; Zurlo, Gina A. (2019). "World Christianity, 1900–2050". World Christian Encyclopedia (Third ed.). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-14744-032-38. Retrieved 2019-10-01.
  5. "World Christian Encyclopedia". Center for the Study of Global Christianity. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  6. Hsu, Becky; Reynolds, Amy; Hackett, Conrad; Gibbon, James (2008). "Estimating the Religious Composition of All Nations: An Empirical Assessment of the World Christian Database" (PDF). Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 47 (4): 691–692. doi:10.1111/j.1468-5906.2008.00435.x. Retrieved 2012-01-27.
  7. Warburg, Margit. (2006). Citizens of the world : a history and sociology of the Bahaʹis from a globalisation perspective. Leiden: Brill. p. 218. ISBN 978-90-474-0746-1. OCLC 234309958.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.