County Membership Report

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Anson County, North Carolina

Denominational Groups, 2000

9,053 3,135   117 26 12,944
Evangelical Protestant Mainline Protestant Orthodox Catholic Other Unclaimed

Congregational "adherents" include all full members, their children, and others who regularly attend services. The historically African American denominations are not included in the 2000 congregation and membership totals. Many are also missing in 1990 and most historically African American denominations are missing in the 1980 reports.
[More information on the data sources]

Reports


Religious Bodies Theology Congregations Adherents Adherence Rate
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church Evangelical Protestant 16 8,168 348.0
Black Baptists Estimate Evangelical Protestant n.a. 4,685 199.6
Catholic Church Catholic 1 47 2.0
Church of God (Anderson, Indiana) Evangelical Protestant 2 60 2.6
Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) Evangelical Protestant 2 170 7.2
Church of God of Prophecy Evangelical Protestant 3 134 5.7
Churches of Christ Evangelical Protestant 1 32 1.4
Episcopal Church Mainline Protestant 2 164 7.0
International Pentecostal Holiness Church Evangelical Protestant 1 43 1.8
National Association of Free Will Baptists Evangelical Protestant 1 83 3.5
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Mainline Protestant 5 457 19.5
Primitive Baptists Associations Evangelical Protestant 4 93 4.0
Southern Baptist Convention Evangelical Protestant 30 8,257 351.8
United Methodist Church, The Mainline Protestant 25 3,096 131.9
Totals (Unadjusted)*: 93 25,489  

The population of this county (or equivalent) in 1990 was 23,474. The adherent totals of the religious groups listed above (25,489) include 108.6% of the total population in 1990.

Source

The 1990 data were collected by the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB) and include statistics for 132 religious groups, including number of churches and adherents. Martin B. Bradley, Norman M. Green, Jr., Dale E. Jones, Mac Lynn, and Lou McNeil supervised the collection. These data originally appeared in Churches and Church Membership in the United States, 1990, published by the Glenmary Research Center.

[More information on the data collection]

The adherence rate provides the number of adherents of a particular group per 1,000 population. For example, in 2000 the Episcopal Church had an adherence rate of approximately 8 (8.1) in Autauga County, Alabama. This means that 8 out of every 1,000 people in Autauga county are Episcopalian.