Islam’s growth outpaces Christianity
During this decade, the global Muslim population increased by nearly 21%, while the number of Christians grew by just about 6%. This growth rate for Muslims was double that of the world’s overall population, which grew by 10% over the same period. Additionally, Islam attracted more new followers than all non-Muslim religions combined throughout these years.
The study pointed to factors such as a younger demographic and higher fertility among Muslims as major contributors. Data from 2015 to 2020 indicated that, on average, Muslim women have 2.9 children, compared to 2.2 among non-Muslim women.
Conversions and people leaving the religion had minimal effect on growth, with both hovering around 1% in the 2010s.
Although Christianity grew more slowly, it remained the world’s largest religion with 2.3 billion adherents in 2020, followed by Islam with 2 billion. However, Christianity’s share of the global population declined by nearly 2% during the decade.
The slowdown in Christian growth is attributed mainly to significant numbers leaving the faith to become religiously unaffiliated. Despite relatively high fertility rates, Christianity experienced a net loss of 11.6 adults for every 100 raised in the religion.
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