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Lutheran Church Membership Exceeds 65 Million Worldwide


From News News <NEWS@ELCA.ORG>
Date Fri, 9 Aug 2002 10:31:09 -0500

ELCA NEWS SERVICE

August 9, 2002

LUTHERAN CHURCH MEMBERSHIP EXCEEDS 65 MILLION WORLDWIDE
02-192-LWI*

     GENEVA (ELCA) -- According to the most recent statistics
published by the Lutheran World Federation (LWF), Lutheran church
membership worldwide has grown by more than 1.4 million since 2000,
to reach a total of 65,387,677 in 2001, representing an increase of
some 2.2 percent.  In 2000, global membership fell short of 64
million, and in 1999 there were 63.1 million members.
     Membership of the 133 member churches, 11 recognized
congregations and one recognized council of the LWF totaled
61,704,551 in 2001.  There were about 60.2 million members in 2000.
     Last year, the number of LWF member churches increased from 131
to 133, of which 130 are full members and three are associate
members.  The number of Lutherans belonging to non-LWF-member
churches decreased by about 92,000, down to 3,683,126.
     The largest 2000-2001 increase was in Africa.  The continent
has 1,368,489 more Lutherans than the previous year, reaching a total
of 11,953,068.
     The Lutheran Church of Christ in Nigeria showed the sharpest
increase globally, growing by some 62 percent to reach 1,167,023
members.  Two more churches saw 50 percent increases -- the Malagasy
Lutheran Church with 2,250,000 members and the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in the Republic of Namibia with 300,000.
     Double-digit percent increases were also reported by the Kenya
Evangelical Lutheran Church with 30,000 members, the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in Malawi with 25,000 and the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in Zimbabwe with 110,000.  The Evangelical Lutheran Church in
Namibia increased by 9 percent to a 580,000 total.
     The Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus is still the
biggest African Lutheran church, with an unchanged membership of
around 3.36 million.  The second largest is the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in Tanzania with about 2.5 million.
     In Europe, overall Lutheran membership decreased by 305,118,
down to 36,642,084.  LWF member churches lost 213,268, down to
36,602,324.
     Membership of the largest Lutheran church in the world -- the
Church of Sweden -- remained unchanged at 7,399,915, while that of
the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland, the third largest in the
world, increased slightly to 4,606,543. The Evangelical Lutheran
Church in Denmark has 4,532,635 members, having lost some 3,800.
Membership of the Church of Norway remained unchanged at 3.8 million.
     The Evangelical Church in Croatia had 4,500 members last year,
3,000 less than in 2000.  The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Hungary,
with 301,925 members, registered a 30 percent loss.  The Evangelical
Lutheran Church in the Kingdom of the Netherlands, after losing
almost 15 percent, now has 15,000 members.  The Evangelical Church of
the Augsburg Confession in the Slovak Republic has 372,858, an
increase of roughly 13 percent.
     Of any country, Germany has by far the most Lutherans. The
overall 2001 total was 13,649,314, a decrease of about 222,226.  The
North Elbian Evangelical Lutheran Church reported 2,233,740 members,
a loss of about 120,000.
     Membership of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saxony
decreased by 57,000 to a 937,000 total; of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in Thuringia by about 20,000 to 514,580; of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in Brunswick by 10,000 to 440,000; of the Evangelical
Church of Pomerania by nearly 9,000 to 129,283; and of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mecklenburg by 5,000 to 230,000.  The
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schaumburg-Lippe showed a slight loss
of 1,000, down to 66,000.
     In Asia, the number of Lutherans increased by more than 5
percent in 2001.  Of the 7,146,011 total of Lutheran church members
there, 7,025,779 belong to LWF member churches.
     Membership of the Gossner Evangelical Lutheran Church in
Chotanagpur and Assam, India, climbed by about 20,000 to 380,135.
The South Andhra Evangelical Lutheran Church, Telugu, India, grew by
almost 50 percent, and now has 45,500 members.  The Nias Protestant
Christian Church, which joined the LWF only last year, had 333,657
members, an increase of some 6,000. The Pakpak Dairi Christian
Protestant Church, in Indonesia, slightly increased its membership to
30,490.
     Decreases in membership were reported by the Lutheran Church in
Australia, with about 85,000, a loss of 9,000, and the Lutheran
Church in Malaysia and Singapore with 6,000 members, about a 25
percent loss.
     The North American Lutheran churches lost almost 24,000 members
in 2001.  Of a total of 8,519,967 Lutherans, 5,331,573 belonged to
LWF member churches.
     The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the second-largest
LWF member church, had 5,125,919 members, representing an almost
24,000-member loss.  The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (in the
United States and Canada), which is not an LWF member, registered an
unchanged membership figure of 2.6 million.
     The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, with 188,654
members, showed a loss of almost 3,000.  Membership figures for the
Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church Abroad (in Canada) and the
Lithuanian Evangelical Lutheran Church in Diaspora (in the United
States), remained unchanged at 12,000 and 5,000 respectively. The
Association of Free Lutheran Congregations (in the United States),
which keeps in loose contact with the LWF, increased by more than 10
percent to a 36,400 total.
     In Latin America, the Lutheran Churches showed a slight
increase of about 3,400 members, reaching a total of 1,126,547, of
which 848,058 belong to LWF member churches.  Membership of these
churches remained mostly stable, except for the Evangelical Lutheran
Church of Brazil, which keeps in loose contact with the LWF and grew
by around 2,000 members to reach 219,888.
     These statistics were reported via a survey the LWF Office for
Communication Services conducted of LWF member churches,
congregations and one council recognized by the LWF, and other
Lutheran churches or organizations in infrequent contact with the
Federation.  For churches that reported no statistical information by
December 2001, the preceding year's figures were recorded.
-- -- --
     A one-page summary of the LWF statistics for 2001 is at
http://www.lutheranworld.org/LWF_Documents/LWF-Statistics-01-2001.pdf
and the complete LWF statistics on Lutheran churches is at
http://www.lutheranworld.org/LWF_Documents/LWF-Statistics-2001.pdf on
the LWF Web site.

* Lutheran World Information is the information service of the
Lutheran World Federation, based in Geneva, Switzerland.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://listserv.elca.org/archives/elcanews.html


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