The Current Situation of Religion
in Los Angeles, 2000-2008
Compiled by Clifton L. Holland
The Roman Catholic Church and
associated Eastern Catholic Parishes
Today, Los Angeles is home to adherents of many religions, with Roman Catholicism being the largest due to the high numbers of Hispanic, Filipino, and Irish Americans. The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles comprises the City of Los Angeles as well as the counties of Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and Ventura. The archdiocese is considered the largest Roman Catholic diocese in the USA in terms of congregant population. It covers 8,762 square miles (22,430 square kilometers) of territory. The total Roman Catholic population, as of 2005, stands at 4,349,267 people living among a total population of 11,258,600.
There are 288 RCC parishes located in 120 cities throughout the Archdiocese in the three counties. There are seven missions and chapels and nine Eastern Catholic parishes: Armenian, Assyrian Chaldean, Byzantine-Ruthenian, Coptic, Maronite, Melkite Greek, Russian Greek, Syriac and Ukrainian- Byzantine. In all, there are a total of 225 Catholic elementary schools serving some 65,000 students, while there are 53 Catholic high schools with about 30,000 students enrolled. Together they comprise one of the three largest school systems in California in either the public or private sector. Ethnic services in a very culturally mixed environment are offered to 72 different groups. These services include clergy, liturgy, social services, publications, counseling, and cultural affairs.
When the City of Los Angeles condemned the old St. Vibiana's Catholic Cathedral (build in 1876) in 1996 due to earthquake damage, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles was left without a Cathedral Church. With a population of approximately four million Catholics, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles needed a Cathedral Church that could accommodate nearly 3,000 for special Liturgies and services. The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Los Angeles, Cardinal Roger Mahony, oversaw construction of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, completed in 2002 on West Temple Street in the old Bunker Hill area, near the north end of the downtown civic center. The cost of the 5.6 acre site for the new Cathedral was $10.85 million, and the final cost of the new cathedral was $189.7 million. Every detail of the construction was specified to last at least 500 years. Cardinal Mahony's decision to rebuild the Los Angeles cathedral in such elaborate architecture drew criticism from some, who argued that a church of that size was unnecessary. The cathedral was also criticized for its departure from traditional Catholic aesthetics.See the Christian Science Monitor article on the dedication of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in 2002 at: http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0909/p03s01-ussc.html
* * *
L.A. archdiocese to sell property to fund sexual abuse
settlements
By Gillian Flaccus, ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 15, 2007 (partial article)
The Los Angeles [Roman Catholic] Archdiocese will sell its
administrative headquarters and perhaps other non-parish properties to help pay upcoming
settlements of molestation claims against clergymen, Cardinal Roger M. Mahony said
Tuesday.
Attorneys and other representatives for the alleged sexual abuse victims immediately
dismissed Mahony's announcement as an attempt to generate sympathy for the archdiocese,
which faces more than 500 molestation cases.
If recent payouts are a guide, the final settlement bill could be $500 million to $600
million, and the archdiocese and insurance companies are fighting over how much of the
total the church should pay. Mahony has been under pressure to pay half the amount,
as the Diocese of Orange did in a $100-million molestation settlement in
2004.
SOURCE: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/state/20070515-2006-ca-churchabuse-calif.html
For more information, see the following articles: archives.
* * *
See "SoCal's other wayward bishop" (Bishop Tod D. Brown of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange) by Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times -- October 1, 2007.
* * *
Independent Western Roman Churches
These Old Catholic and other independent Catholic Churches do not recognize the papal authority of the Bishop of Rome of the Roman Catholic Church. See the religious denominations list for Los Angeles County below under section A2.3-A2.5.
Eastern Orthodox Churches
There are many Eastern Orthodox Churches in the Los Angeles area as the result of the immigration of Eastern Europeans, Middle Easterners and Asians-Indians. For links to some of these churches, go to: PROLADES-GLAMA Churches.htm See the religious denominations list for Los Angeles County below under section A1, Eastern Orthodox Traditions: Classification System of Religious Groups in the Americas by Major Traditions and Family Types (PDF), compiled by Clifton L. Holland.
The Protestant Movement
According to Dr. John Orr of USC's Center for Religion and Civic Culture (1999), only 26% of the County's Christians are Protestant, and Los Angeles County Protestantism is no longer led by mainline Protestant denominations such as the Presbyterian Church USA, the United Church of Christ, the Christian Church/Disciples of Christ, American Baptist Churches in the USA, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the United Methodist Church and the Episcopal Church. Only 29% are mainliners--successors of the region's previous mainline "Protestant Establishment." Although the mainline denominations have experienced decline during the past three decades within Los Angeles County, there are now signs that that decline may be bottoming out. Between 1990 and 1997, for example, the Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America have apparently experienced growth, even as the United Methodist Church and the Presbyterian Church USA have continued their descent.
Among Protestants, 55% are evangelical and 16% are Pentecostal. In 1906, in what is now the Little Tokyo district of Los Angeles, a revival held on Azusa Street launched an international Pentecostal movement-a movement that, at the end of the century, is being energized by a surge of Latino converts. Latino Pentecostalism is the major growth area of Southland Protestantism. In the City of Los Angeles, there are about 1,000 Latino Pentecostal churches. According to a recent national survey by the Tomas Rivera Center, although about 77% of Latinos continue to be affiliated with Roman Catholicism, the momentum is toward affiliation with Pentecostalism. That momentum is apparent all over the central areas of the city, where neighborhoods housing Latino immigrants host storefront Pentecostal churches, sometimes at a density of two or three to a block.
SOURCE: http://www.usc.edu/schools/college/crcc/demographics/lacounty.html
See the religious denominations list for Los Angeles County below under section B, The Protestant Movement.
For a list of Christian Bible Colleges, Universities and Theological Seminaries, go to: Christian Education
Marginal Christian Groups
The term "Marginal Christian" identifies those religious groups that have some affinity with Christianity but whose theology, traditions and practices are outside the mainstream of the major Christian traditions: Eastern Orthodox, Western Roman Catholic and Protestant. Included in the Margin Christian category are Christian Science/Religious Science, Christadelphians, Jehovah's Witnesses/The Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints/Mormons and related groups, some of the Jesus People groups (Children of God/The Family), the Unification Church of Rev. Moon and other miscellaneous groups, including the following among Hispanics: God is Love Pentecostal Church (Igreja Pentecostes Deus E Amor, (founded in Sao Paulo, Brazil, in 1962 by David Miranda), Growing in Grace Churches (Iglesias Creciendo en Gracia, Miami, FL), Light of the World Church (Iglesia Luz del Mundo, Mexico), Mita Congregation (Congregacion Mita, Puerto Rico), Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (Igreja Universal do Reyno do Deus, founded in Brazil by Bishop Edir Macedo in 1977) and Voice of the Chief Cornerstone (Voz de la Piedra Angular, Puerto Rico).
See the religious denominations list for Los Angeles County below under section C, Marginal Christian Groups.
For links to Marginal Christian Groups, go to: PROLADES-GLAMA Churches.htm
Other Religions from the Middle East and Asia
Immigrants speaking a variety of languages from many Asian countries, for example, have formed more than 300 Buddhist temples in the Los Angeles area, which some have claimed houses the largest variety of Buddhists in the world (at least 26 varieties). Los Angeles has been a destination for Swamis and Gurus since the early 1900s, including Paramahansa Yogananda who founded the Self-Realization Fellowship in 1920; currently its headquarters are in Hollywood and it has a private park in Pacific Palisades. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi founded the Transcendental Meditation movement in Los Angeles in the late 1950s.
Buddhism - http://www.urbandharma.org/wilshire/churches/buddhist.html
http://www.urbandharma.org/udharma4/socenters.html
http://www.urbandharma.org/pdf/CaliforniaBuddhistCenters-Jan.2007.pdf
Hinduism - http://www.geocities.com/malibutemple/latemp.htm
Islam - http://www.csulb.edu/web/org/msa/islamic_centers_in_california.htm
Shinto /Tenrikyo - http://philtar.ucsm.ac.uk/encyclopedia/shinto/sects.html
http://philtar.ucsm.ac.uk/encyclopedia/shinto/tenrik.html
Sikhism - http://www.sikhs.org/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sikhism
Sufism - http://godlas.myweb.uga.edu/Sufism.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sufism
Zoroastrianism - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoroastrianism http://www.religioustolerance.org/zoroastr.htm
Also, the Los Angeles area is home to adherents of various Ancient
Wisdom, Magick and Psychic-Spiritualist-New Age religions. One branch of the Theosophist
("god-wisdom") movement is centered in Los Angeles (The United Lodge of Theosophists), and another is in
neighboring Pasadena (The Theosophical
Society). The quasi-Jewish Kabbalah Centre (allegedly
teaching the principles of Jewish mysticism) was founded in 1984 in Los Angeles.
The famous Wayfarers Chapel (Swedenborgian
Church) is located on the Palos Verdes Peninsula in the South Bay subregion of Los Angeles
County. The Church of Scientology was
founded in Los Angeles in 1954 by sciencefiction writer L. Ron Hubbard; there are numerous
Scientology churches, museums and recruiting sites in the area, most notably the Celebrity
Centre in Hollywood; Los Angeles is home to the world's largest community of
Scientologists. There is a large concentation of non-Christian religions in the West
Los Angeles-Malibu subregion.
SOURCES: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles%2C_California
For links to non-Christian religions, go to: PROLADES-GLAMA Churches.htm See the religious denominations list for Los Angeles County below under section D, Non-Christian Religious Groups.
To view the latest information on religious groups in the Los Angeles 5-County Area, go to these links:
http://www.ideaministries.com/searchengine/
http://www.at-la.com/@la-god/index.htm
For a general history of Los Angeles County, go to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Los_Angeles%2C_California
Search on Los Angeles A to Z: An Encyclopedia of the City and County, Leonard
and Dale Pitt, UC Press, 1997 at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jengod/Topics_in_LAAZ
* * *
Religious Denominations in Los Angeles County, 2002
As a general introduction to the study
of religious groups in Los Angeles, please consult our
Classification System of Religious Groups in the Americas by Major
Traditions and Family Types (PDF),
compiled by Clifton L. Holland.
TRADITION | CLASCODE | DENCODE | DENOMINATION_NAME |
DENOMINATIONS OF EASTERN ORTHODOX TRADITIONS | |||
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1103 | DAOC | ANTIOCHIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH (DAMASCUS) |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1202 | BUOC | BULGARIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1205 | COCY | CYRIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1210 | GROC | GREEK ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1214 | ROOC | ROMANIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1215 | RUOC | RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1216 | SEOC | SERBIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1219 | UKOC | UKRAINIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1304 | AMOCC | AMERICAN ORTHODOX CATHOLIC CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.13041 | GBOCC | GOD'S BENEVOLENT ORTHODOX CATHOLIC CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1305 | AMOCCK | AMERICAN ORTHODOX CATHOLIC CHURCH (KOCHONES) |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.13051 | CJJ | COMMUNITY OF JAMES THE JUST |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1399 | OEOC | OTHER ORTHODOX CHURCHES |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.1403 | MOLK | UNITED MOLOKAN CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL JUMPERS |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.2101 | NAOC | AMERICAN ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.2103 | BYCC | BYZANTINE CATHOLIC CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.2105 | OCE | ORTHODOX CHURCH OF THE EAST |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.2106 | CSI | CHURCH OF SOUTH INDIA |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.2201 | AAC | ARMENIAN APOSTOLIC CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.22021 | JSOC | JACOBITE SYRIAN ORODOX CHURCH OF INDIA |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.2301 | COPTO | COPTIC ORTHODOX CHURCH |
EASTERN ORTHODOX | A1.2302 | COPA | COPTIC ORTHODOX CHURCH IN AMERICA |
DENOMINATIONS OF WESTERN CATHOLIC TRADITIONS |
|||
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.1000 | RCC | ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - ARCHDIOCESE OF LOS ANGELES |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.2000 | RCRO | ROMAN CATHOLIC RELIGIOUS ORDERS |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.303 | ACC3 | NORTH AMERICAN OLD ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.304 | ORCCNA | OLD ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH IN NORTH AMERICA |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.311 | PNCC | POLISH NATIONAL CATHOLIC CHURCH |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.4014 | ANGCC | ANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.4099 | ACC | ARMENIAN CATHOLIC CHURCH |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.5 | AOCC | APOSTOLIC OLD CATHOLIC CHURCH |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.5 | CUA | CHURCH OF UTRECHT IN AMERICA |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.5 | HOCACP | HOLY ORTHODOX CATHOLIC APOSTOLIC CHURCH IN THE PHILIPPINES |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.5 | MNCC | MEXICAN NATIONAL CATHOLIC CHURCH |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.5 | OCCNA | OLD CATHOLIC CHURCH IN NORTH AMERICA (CATHOLIC) |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.5 | PICCA | PHILIPPINE INDEPENDENT CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE AMERICAS |
WESTERN CATHOLIC | A2.5 | VCLA | THE VALLEY CATHOLIC KOREAN APOSTOLATE |
DENOMINATIONS OF THE PROTESTANT MOVEMENT |
|||
LUTHERAN | B1.101 | ELCA | EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA |
LUTHERAN | B1.102 | ELS | EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN SYNOD |
LUTHERAN | B1.103 | WELS | WISCONSIN EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN SYNOD |
LUTHERAN | B1.105 | LCMS | LUTHERAN CHURCH-MISSOURI SYNOD |
LUTHERAN | B1.110 | CLB | CHURCH OF THE LUTHERAN CONFESSION |
LUTHERAN | B1.199 | OLC | OTHER LUTHERAN CHURCHES |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2101 | RCA | REFORMED CHURCH IN AMERICA |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2102 | CRC | CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2202 | RPC | REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2206 | OPC | ORTHODOX PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2208 | PCA | PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN AMERICA |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.22081 | KPCA | GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE KOREAN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN AMERICA |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2210 | PCUSA | PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH-USA |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2299 | CPC | CHRISTIAN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (KOREAN) |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2301 | UCC | UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2302 | CCCC | CONSERVATIVE CONGREGATIONAL CHRISTIAN CONFERENCE |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2303 | ICC | INDEPENDENT CONGREGATIONAL CHURCHES |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2400 | KAPC | KOREAN AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH |
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN | B1.2400 | ORPCC | OTHER REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES |
ANGLICAN-EPISCOPAL | B1.302 | PEC | PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH |
ANABAPTIST-MENNONITE | B2.1100 | CYMF | CALIFORNIA YEARLY MEETING OF FRIENDS |
ANABAPTIST-MENNONITE | B2.1100 | FUM | FRIENDS UNITED MEETING |
ANABAPTIST-MENNONITE | B2.1100 | MEN | MENNONITE CHURCHES |
ANABAPTIST-MENNONITE | B2.1100 | FRICH | SOCIETY OF FRIENDS-QUAKERS |
BAPTIST | B2.2101 | BGC | BAPTIST GENERAL CONFERENCE |
BAPTIST | B2.2103 | GAGB | GENERAL ASSOCIATION OF GENERAL BAPTISTS |
BAPTIST | B2.2104 | NAFWB | NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FREEWILL BAPTISTS |
BAPTIST | B2.2105 | PBC | PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH |
BAPTIST | B2.2106 | UBC | UNITED FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCH |
BAPTIST | B2.2303 | ABC | AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCHES IN THE USA |
BAPTIST | B2.2304 | BBF | BAPTIST BIBLE FELLOWSHIP |
BAPTIST | B2.2306 | BMAA | BAPTIST MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA |
BAPTIST | B2.2308 | CAMBC | CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCHES |
BAPTIST | B2.2309 | CBA | CONSERVATIVE BAPTIST ASSOCIATION |
BAPTIST | B2.2310 | GARB | GENERAL ASSOCATION OF REGULAR BAPTISTS |
BAPTIST | B2.23111 | NABC | NORTH AMERICAN BAPTIST CONFERENCE |
BAPTIST | B2.2312 | PNBC | PROGRESSIVE NATIONAL BAPTIST CONVENTION |
BAPTIST | B2.2313 | NBC | NATIONAL BAPTIST CONVENTION |
BAPTIST | B2.2313 | SBC | SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION |
BAPTIST | B2.2314 | NBCA | NATIONAL BAPTIST CONVENTION OF AMERICA |
BAPTIST | B2.2317 | BMISC | OTHER BAPTIST CHURCHES |
BAPTIST | B2.2399 | IBAP | INDEPENDENT BAPTIST CHURCHES |
PIETIST | B2.3102 | MCA | MORAVIAN CHURCH IN AMERICA |
PIETIST | B2.3104 | CB | CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN (ELGIN, IL) |
PIETIST | B2.31041 | BCA | BRETHREN CHURCH (ASHLAND, OHIO) |
PIETIST | B2.31042 | FGBC | FELLOWSHIP OF GRACE BRETHREN CHURCHES |
PIETIST | B2.31043 | BCCA | BRETHREN IN CHRIST CHURCH (ASHLAND, OHIO) |
PIETIST | B2.31049 | OBRCH | OTHER BRETHREN CHURCHES |
PIETIST | B2.32021 | AMEZ | AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL ZION CHURCH |
PIETIST | B2.3206 | CMEC | CHRISTIAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH |
PIETIST | B2.3207 | CUBC | CHURCH OF THE UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST |
PIETIST | B2.3209 | ECC | EVANGELICAL CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH |
PIETIST | B2.3210 | EMCA | EVANGELICAL METHODIST CHURCH OF AMERICA |
PIETIST | B2.3218 | UMC | UNITED METHODIST CHURCH |
PIETIST | B2.3220 | KMC | KOREAN METHODIST CHURCH |
PIETIST | B2.3299 | OMC | OTHER METHODIST CHURCHES |
PIETIST | B2.33021 | KEFC | KOREAN EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH |
PIETIST | B2.3304 | ECCA | EVANGELICAL COVENANT CHURCH OF AMERICA |
PIETIST | B2.33041 | KECCA | KOREAN EVANGELICAL COVENANT CHURCH OF AMERICA |
PIETIST | B2.3306 | EFCA | EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH OF AMERICA |
INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST | B2.403 | IBCH | INDEPENDENT BIBLE CHURCHES |
INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST | B2.404 | WLEE | WITNESS LEE MOVEMENT |
INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST | B2.405 | OFCH | THE CHURCH WHICH IS CHRIST'S BODY (JOHNSON) |
INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST | B2.406 | IFCA | INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST CHURCHES OF AMERICA |
INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST | B2.411 | CCA | COMMUNITY CHURCHES OF AMERICA |
INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST | B2.499 | CPC | CONCORDANT PUBLISHING CONCERN |
INDEPENDENT FUNDAMENTALIST | B2.499 | FBCH | FUNDAMENTAL BIBLE CHURCH |
HOLINESS | B2.503 | ACCN | APOSTOLIC CHRISTIAN CHURCH |
HOLINESS | B2.505 | CMA | CHRISTIAN & MISSIONARY ALLIANCE |
HOLINESS | B2.5051 | COCH | CHURCH OF CHRIST HOLINESS |
HOLINESS | B2.507 | COGA | CHURCH OF GOD (ANDERSON, IN) |
HOLINESS | B2.508 | COGH | CHURCH OF GOD (HOLINESS) |
HOLINESS | B2.5091 | CNAZ | CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE |
HOLINESS | B2.513 | FMCNA | FREE METHODIST CHURCH OF NORTH AMERICA |
HOLINESS | B2.517 | PFCH | PILLAR OF FIRE CHURCHES |
HOLINESS | B2.518 | SARMY | THE SALVATION ARMY |
HOLINESS | B2.519 | TMC | THE MISSIONARY CHURCH |
HOLINESS | B2.521 | WCH | WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH |
HOLINESS | B2.524 | OMSHCNA | ORIENTAL MISSIONARY SOCIETY HOLINESS CHURCH OF N.A. |
HOLINESS | B2.599 | ACCH | ASSOCIATED CHURCHES OF CHRIST (HOLINESS) |
HOLINESS | B2.599 | MCSWF | MISSIONARY CHRISTIAN AND SOUL WINNING FELLOWSHIP |
HOLINESS | B2.599 | OHOLI | OTHER HOLINESS CHURCHES |
HOLINESS | B2.599 | TCKGC | TRIUMPH THE CHURCH & KING CHURCHES |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.601 | CCDC | CHRISTIAN CHURCH-DISCIPLES OF CHRIST |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.602 | TCCON | THE CHRISTIAN CONGREGATION |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.603 | CCNI | CHRISTIAN CHURCHES NON-INSTRUMENTAL |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.604 | CCI | CHRISTIAN CHURCHES-INSTRUMENTAL |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.6041 | CCCOC | CHRISTIAN CHURCHES & CHURCHES OF CHRIST |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.6042 | CIC | COMPAŃERISMO DE IGLESIAS CRISTIANAS |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.699 | ICC | INTERNATIONAL CHURCHES OF CHRIST |
RESTORATION MOVEMENT | B2.699 | OCC | OTHER CHURCHES OF CHRIST |
ADVENTIST | B3.1 | SDAGC | SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH, GEN. CONF. |
ADVENTIST | B3.2 | ACC | ADVENT CHRISTIAN CHURCH |
ADVENTIST | B3.301 | COGSD | CHURCH OF GOD SEVENTH-DAY (DENVER,CO) |
ADVENTIST | B3.305 | IDI | IGLESIA DE DIOS ISRAELITA (ISRAELITE CHURCH OF GOD-MEXICO) |
ADVENTIST | B3.31 | SDCOG | SEVENTH-DAY CHURCH OF GOD |
ADVENTIST | B3.500 | WCOG | WORLDWIDE CHURCH OF GOD (POST-ARMSTRONG) |
ADVENTIST | B3.685 | KGEWM | KINGDOM OF GOD ON EARTH WITHIN MAN |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0105 | CAPRO | IGLESIA DE LOS APOSTOLES Y PROFETAS |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0109 | OAFC | OTHER APOSTOLIC FAITH CHURCHES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.02011 | AIC | ASOCIACION DE IGLESIAS CRISTIANAS |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0202 | COGC | CHURCH OF GOD (CLEVELAND, TN) |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.02051 | PCOG | PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.02062 | COGIC | CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0207 | COGP | CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHESY |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.02071 | CLGPGT | CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD, PILLAR & GROUND OF TRUTH |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0209 | FBHC | FIRE BAPTIZED HOLINESS CHURCH |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.021 | CLGCWFF | CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD CWFF |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0210 | CLADIC | CONCILIO LATINOAMERICANO DE IGLESIAS CRISTIANAS |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0210 | CLADIC | LATIN AMERICAN COUNCIL OF CHRISTIAN CHURCHES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0214 | PHC | PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.02141 | UHPRA | UNITED HOUSE OF PRAYER |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0301 | AAFCJ | ASAMBLEA APOSTOLICA DE LA FE EN CRISTO JESUS |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0303 | BWCLJC | BIBLE WAY CHURCH OF THE LORD JESUS CHRIST |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0305 | PAJC | PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY OF JESUS CHRIST |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0401 | AGGC | ASSEMBLIES OF GOD, GEN. COUNCIL |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.04011 | IDPMI | IGLESIA DE DIOS PENTECOSTAL, MI |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.04013 | KAOG | KOREAN AMERICAN ASSEMBLIES OF GOD |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.04016 | AEPP | IGLESIAS EVANGELICAS DEL PRINCIPE DE PAZ (PRINCE OF PEACE) |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0405 | DFE | DEFENSORES DE LA FE (DEFENDERS OF THE FAITH) |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0406 | ICFG | INTERNATIONAL CHURCH OF THE FOURSQUARE GOSPEL |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0408 | MMM | MOVIMIENTO MISIONERO MUNDIAL |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0409 | OBSC | OPEN BIBLE STANDARD CHURCHES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0410 | PCGA | PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD OF AMERICA |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0411 | VO | VICTORY OUTREACH |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0501 | IECSC | IGLESIA EVANGELICAL INTERNACIONAL |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0602 | FGFCMI | FULL GOSPEL FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0799 | CLW | CHURCH OF THE LIVING WORD |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0801 | AVCH | ASSOCIATION OF VINEYARD CHURCHES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0802 | MCCH | MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CHURCHES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.0805 | CALCH | CALVARY CHAPEL |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1002 | FICWFM | FELLOWSHIP OF INTER-CITY WORD OF FAITH MINISTRIES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1004 | OWOF | OTHER WORD OF FAITH CHURCHES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | CENTRUM | CENTRUM OF HOLLYWOOD (SPONSORED BY YOUTH WITH A MISSION, YWAM) |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | CEH | CHRIST EXTENDED HAND & RECOVERY MINISTRIES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | CFMIS | CHRIST FAITH MISSION |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | IJC | IGLESIA DE JESUCRISTO |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | IECR | INTERNATIONAL EVANGELISM CRUSADES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | ISCC | INTERNATIONAL SOUL CLINIC CHURCH (FOUNDED BY FRED JORDON) |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | IPCOC | INTL PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF CHRIST |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | KWMOLJC | KINGDOM AND WORLD MISSION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | OPEN | OTHER PENTECOSTAL CHURCHES |
PENTECOSTAL | B4.1100 | UWC | UNIVERSAL WORLD CHURCH |
PROTESTANT-UNCLASSIFIED | B5.0 | MCCUP | METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY CHURCHES, UNIVERSAL FELLOWSHIP OF |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | ICCC | INDEPENDENT CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY CHURCHES |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | ICCH | INDEPENDENT COMMUNITY CHURCHES |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | NCHUR | NEIGHBORHOOD FELLOWSHIP CHURCH |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | NSM | NORWEGIAN SEAMAN'S MISSION |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | AWEM | ORIENTAL MISSION CHURCH |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | OCOM | OTHER COMMUNIITY CHURCHES |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | INDNP | OTHER INDEPENDENT NON-PENTECOSTAL CHURCHES |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | UNIN | UNION CHURCHES |
NON-DENOMINATIONAL | B6.0 | RMIS | UNION RESCUE MISSION |
DENOMINATIONS OF MARGINAL CHRISTIAN TRADITIONS | |||
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C1.03 | JWIT | JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C1.05 | WWCOG | WORLDWIDE CHURCH OF GOD (HERBERT W. ARMSTRONG) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C1.052 | ICOG | INTERNATIONAL CHURCH OF GOD (GARNER TED ARMSTRONG) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C1.053 | COGPE | CHURCH OF GOD, PHILADELPHIA ERA |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C1.054 | TPMCOG | TRIUMPH PROPHETIC MINISTRIES (CHURCH OF GOD) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C1.055 | WII | WORLD INSIGHT INTERNATIONAL |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C4.01 | LDS | CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C4.02 | RLDS | REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST LDS |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C4.99 | CFB | CHURCH OF THE FIRST BORN |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.101 | CCS | CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST (MARY BAKER EDDY) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.102 | ICC | INDEPENDENT CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.103 | UCRS | UNITED CHURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE (ERNEST HOLMES) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.104 | RSI | RELIGIOUS SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.105 | IMA | INTERNATIONAL METAPHYSICAL ASSOCIATION |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.201 | USC | UNITY SCHOOL OF CHRISTIANITY |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.203 | IDMRS | INSTITUTE OF DIVINE METAPHYSICAL RELIGIOUS SCIENCE |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.204 | CHTRU | CHURCH OF TRUTH (INTERNATIONAL ALLIANCE OF CHURCHES OF TRUTH) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C6.206 | SNIE | SEICHO-NO-IE (HOME OF INFINITE LIFE, WISDOM AND ABSOLUTE TRUTH) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0101 | CDEL | CHRISTADELPHIANS |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0401 | INIC | IGLESIA NI CRISTO (CHURCH OF CHRIST-PHILIPPINES) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0402 | MOON | UNIFICATION CHURCH (REV. SUN MYUNG MOON, KOREA) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0403 | CMC | CHUNDOKWAN MISSIONARY CHURCH (KOREANS) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0501 | LZDM | IGLESIA LUZ DEL MUNDO (LIGHT OF THE WORLD CHURCH) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0503 | VPA | LA VOZ DE LA PIEDRA ANGULAR (VOICE OF THE CHIEF CORNERSTONE-PUERTO RICO) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0505 | IURD | IGLESIA UNIVERSAL DEL REINO DE DIOS (UNIVERSAL CHURCH OF THE KINGDOM OF GOD-BRAZIL) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.0506 | IDA | IGLESIA DIOS ES AMOR (GOD IS LOVE CHURCH-BRAZIL) |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.09 | ULC | UNIVERSAL LIFE CHURCH |
MARGINAL CHRISTIAN | C7.09 | ULTIR | UNIVERSAL LIFE-THE INNER RELIGION |
NON-CHRISTIAN RELIGIOUS TRADITIONS | |||
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | ADA | ABBOT OF DENKYO-AN |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | ABCONG | AMERICAN BUDDHIST CONGRESS |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | AAVC | ANANDA ASHRAMA AND VEDANTA CENTRE |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | AUMN | AUM NAMO BHAGAVATE VASUDEVAYA FOUNDATION |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | BUDDHIST |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | BUDDHIST SANGHA COUNCIL OF SO CAL |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | CBOSAT | CALIFORNIA BOSATSUKAI |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | HIGASHI HONGWANJI BUDDHIST |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | IBPC | INTERNATIONAL BUDDHIST PROGRESS SOCIETY |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | IZIA | INTERNATIONAL ZEN INSTITUTE OF AMERICA |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | INT'L BUDDHIST MEDITATION CENTER |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | KZBT | KANZEONJI ZEN BUDDHIST TEMPLE |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | KONKO KYO, C/O KONKO CHURCH OF LOS ANGELES |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | KBCO | KOREAN BUDDHIST CHOGYE ORDER, C/O KWAN UM SA TEMPLE |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | LBSUSA | LAO BUDDHIST SANGHA OF THE U.S.A. |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | MAHIK-1 | MAHIKARI OF AMERICA |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | PHODA | PHO DA SON QUAN AM PO (VIETNAMESE BUDDHIST) |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | RA | REIYUKAI AMERICA |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | RINZAI-JI, INC., C/O CIMARRON ZEN CENTER |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | RISSHO KOSEI KAI BUDDHIST |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | RUSA | RYUGU, U.S.A. |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | SAKYA THUBTEN DHARGE LING |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | TABA | THAI-AMERICAN BUDDHIST ASSOCIATION, C/0 WAT THAI OF LOS ANGELES |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | VIETNAMESE UNITED BUDDHIST |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | ZEN CENTER OF LOS ANGELES |
BUDDHIST | D1.1 | BUDH | ZENSHUJI SOTO MISSION |
CHINESE RELIGIONS | D1.2 | TAO | SHRINE OF THE ETERNAL BREATH OF TAO |
JAPANESE RELIGIONS | D1.3 | CWM | CHURCH OF WORLD MESSIANITY |
JAPANESE RELIGIONS | D1.3 | SHIN | NICHIREN SHOSHU OF AMERICA |
JAPANESE RELIGIONS | D1.3 | PLK | PERFECT LIBERTY KYODAN |
JAPANESE RELIGIONS | D1.3 | REIHA | REIHA-NO-HIKARI KYODAI CHURCH (SHINTO-BASED NEW RELIGION) |
JAPANESE RELIGIONS | D1.3 | SEICHO | SEICHO NO IE CHURCH |
JAPANESE RELIGIONS | D1.3 | TENR | TENRIKYO MISSION HEADQUARTERS USA |
JAPANESE RELIGIONS | D1.3 | TENSH | TENSHINKYO HONCHO (DIVINE MIND TEACHINGS-SPIRITUAL WARRIOR) |
HINDU | D2.1 | HINDU | AVATAR MEHER BABA CENTER |
HINDU | D2.1 | DEVA | DEVA FOUNDATION |
HINDU | D2.1 | DAC | DIVINE AWARENESS CENTER |
HINDU | D2.1 | HINDU | HINDU TEMPLE SOCIETY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA |
HINDU | D2.1 | ISCON | INTL SOC FOR KRISHNA CONSCIOUSNESS (HARE KRISHNAS) |
HINDU | D2.1 | LILA | LILA |
HINDU | D2.1 | YOGA | PURNA YOGA |
HINDU | D2.1 | SAIF | S.A.I. FOUNDATION |
HINDU | D2.1 | SAEEJIS | SAEEJIS TEMPLE OF PEACE |
HINDU | D2.1 | YOGA | SAHAJA YOGA CENTERS |
HINDU | D2.1 | SM | SARVAMANGALA MISSION |
HINDU | D2.1 | SWR | SATSANG WITH ROBERT |
HINDU | D2.1 | SRF | SELF-REALIZATION FELLOWSHIP |
HINDU | D2.1 | YOGA | SIDDHA YOGA DHAM |
HINDU | D2.1 | TM | TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION |
HINDU | D2.1 | VEDA | VEDANTA SOCIETY |
HINDU | D2.1 | VEDA | VEDIC REVELATION CHURCH |
HINDU | D2.1 | VC | VENDANTIC CENTER |
HINDU | D2.1 | WCS | WORLD COMMUNITY SERVICE |
JAIN | D2.2 | JAIN | JAIN |
JAIN | D2.2 | JAIN | RAMA SEMINARS |
SIKH | D2.3 | ECK | ECKANKAR SATSANG SOCIETY |
SIKH | D2.3 | ELANV | ELAN VITAL |
SIKH | D2.3 | SIKH | SIKH |
SIKH | D2.3 | SIKH | SIKH DHARMA |
SANT MAT | D2.4 | DSLS | DIVINE SCIENCE OF LIGHT AND SOUND |
SANT MAT | D2.4 | MPATH | MASTERPATH |
SANT MAT | D2.4 | MSIA | MOVEMENT OF SPIRITUAL INNER AWARENESS |
JUDAISM | D3.01 | JUD | ORTHODOX JUDAISM |
JUDAISM | D3.02 | CJUD | CONSERVATIVE JUDAISM |
JUDAISM | D3.03 | ORJUD | RECONSTRUCTIONIST JUDAISM |
JUDAISM | D3.04 | REFJUD | REFORM JUDAISM |
JUDAISM | D3.05 | OJUD | CHABAD JUDAISM |
ISLAM | D4.2 | ISLAM | ISLAM (VARIOUS SECTS) |
BAHA'I | D4.3 | BAHAI | BAHAÍ |
ANIMISM | B5.0 | ANIM | GARIFUNA RELIGION |
ANIMISM | D5.0 | ANIM | JACUMBA CHURCH |
ANIMISM | D5.0 | MYAL | MYALISM-OBEAH (JAMAICA & WEST INDIES) |
ANIMISM | D5.0 | RASTA | RASTAFARIANISM (JAMAICA & WEST INDIES) |
ANIMISM | D5.0 | SANT | SANTERIA (CUBA & PUERTO RICO) |
ANIMISM | D5.0 | VUDU | VODOU (HAITI) |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | ARWT | AMON RA WISDOM TEMPLE |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | CIL | CHURCH OF ILLUMINATION |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | GNOS | ECCLESIA |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | ECCGN | ECCLESIA GNOSTICA (ECCGN) - THE GNOSTIC SOCIETY |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | FLVXO | FRATERNITAS L.V.X. OCCULTA (FRATERNITY OF THE HIDDEN LIGHT) |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | GACAA | GNOSTIC ASSOCIATION OF CULTURAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESEARCH |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | OWSJ | ORDER OF THE WHITE SHRINE JERUSALEM |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | OTA | ORDO TEMPLI ASTARTE - ORDER OF THE TEMPLE OF ASTARTE |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.01 | IGCU | THE GNOSTIC CENTER OF LOS ANGELES (IGLESIA GNOSTICA CRISTIANA UNIVERSAL) |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.04 | BOTA | BUILDERS OF THE ADYTUM (BADYT) |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.04 | COG | COVENANT OF THE GODDESS-SO. CALIF. COUNCIL |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.08 | PHILRS | PHILOSOPHICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY |
ANCIENT WISDOM | D6.09 | CLIGHT | CHURCH OF LIGHT (CLIGHT) |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.01 | CCOS | CHURCH OF COSMIC LIGHT |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.01 | NSA | SPRITUALIST CHURCH OF REVELATION |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.01 | SUPER | SUPERET LIGHT DOCTRINE CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.01 | SPIR | UNITED SPIRITUALIST CHURCH HQ |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.01 | SPIR | UNIVERSAL HAGAR SPIRITUAL CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.01 | USC | UNIVERSE SOCIETY CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.02 | SWED | SWEDENBORGIAN NEW JERUSALEM CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.02 | SWED | WAYFARERS' CHAPEL-SWEDENBORG |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.03 | TS | THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.03 | THEOS | THEOSOPHY HALL |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.03 | ULT | UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.04 | TEASP | SANCTUARY OF TRUTH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.05 | LCAT | UNITED LIBERAL CATHOLIC CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.07 | AQUAR | AQUARIAN EDUCATIONAL GROUP |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.07 | TARA | TARA CENTER |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.08 | IAMR | I AM ROSE OF LIGHT TEMPLE |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.08 | IAMO | MORNINGLAND TEMPLE |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | AESOC | AETHERIUS SOCIETY |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | ARCFN | ANN REE COLTON FOUNDATION OF NISCIENCE |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | ARCANA | ARCANA WORKSHOPS |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | ASLI | ASPECTS OF LIGHT |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | CGPS | CHURCH OF GENERAL PSIONICS |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | SCIE | CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | CES | CHURCH OF THE ETERNAL SOURCE |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | EDL | EMISSARIES OF DIVINE LIGHT |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | AQUAF | FIRST AQUARIAN CHURCH OF CHRIST |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | ICCH | INNER CIRCLE CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | LCH | LUMINARY CHURCH-HOLISTIC |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | NABPC | NEW AGE BIBLE AND PHILOSOPHY CENTER |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | PRC | PHILOSOPHICO RELIGIOUS CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | PNC | PRE-NICENE CHURCH (DE PALATINE) |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | SSSC | SEMJASE SILVER STAR CENTER, C/O CALIFORNIA STUDY GROUP |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | MISC | SOCIETY-EVOLVING-SELF-MAT |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | STARL | STARLIGHT CHURCH |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | TIC | TEACHING OF THE INNER CHRIST |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | MISC | TEMPLE OF MAN |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | TEG | TEMPLE OF THE ELDER GODS |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | TALL | THE ASSOCIATION OF LOVE AND LIGHT |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | TIM | THOMAS INSTITUTE OF METAPHYSICS |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | UDTLLL | UNIV DOM TEMPLE OF LOVE, LIGHT & LIFE |
PSYCHIC-SPIRITUALISM-NEW AGE | D7.09 | UWB | UNIVERSAL WHITE BROTHERHOOD, C/O PROSVETA U.S.A. |
ATHEIST | F1.0 | AU | ATHEISTS UNITED |
ATHEIST | F1.0 | EC | LOS ANGELES ETHICAL CULTURE |
AGNOSTIC | F2.0 | UU | UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALIST |
UNCLASSIFIED RELIGIOUS GROUPS | |||
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | BYZANTINE DIOCESE |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | DAWN OF ENLIGHTENMENT |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | EARLY CHURCH OF KOREANS |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | FOLLOWERS OF THE GREAT MOTHER |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | GREAT I AM |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | HUMAN ALMA |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | JOELS WORLD CHURCH OF LOVE |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | JOURNEY: A SPIRITUAL COMMUNITY |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | MISSION MARIA STELLA MARDOSEWICZ (POLISH CATHOLIC MARTYR) |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | NEHKLANK TEMPLE OF AMERICA |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | ROCK OF LOS ANGELES |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | SANJAYA |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | SANSEI DODAN OF AMERICA |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | SHRAVAN |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | SOCIETY OF STEPHEN |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | SPIRITUAL ALLIANCE OF TRUTH |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | THE CHURCH OF TOMORROW INC |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | THE NEW CHURCH OF HOLLYWOOD |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | THE RESCUE ARMY |
UNCLASSIFIED | G1.0 | UNCL | UNION-ARMENIAN BROTHERHOOD |
CREATED BY CLIFTON L. HOLLAND OF PROLADES ON 20 SEPTEMBER 2002 |
|||
THE GLAMA DATABASE
INCLUDES 8,896 CONGREGATIONAL LISTINGS FOR LOS ANGELES COUNTY, |
NOTE: CLEAN UP THIS LIST AS TO "UNCLASSIFIED" GROUPS
* * *
by John Orr
USC's Center for Religion and Civic Culture, 1999
At a meeting sponsored by the Center for Religion and Civic Culture, a politically active
Protestant denominational leader expressed frustration: "It's wrong to say
there is a Los Angeles religious community," he argued. "In fact, we're
incredibly fragmented. I'm often introduced to people who I'm told are important
religious figures in Los Angeles. To tell you the truth, I've never heard of most of
them."
The frustration expressed by this denominational executive probably could not have been avoided as Los Angeles has by-passed London and New York as the world's most religiously pluralist metropolitan region. More than 600 separate faith communities have established religious centers in Los Angeles neighborhoods, and these communities conduct their affairs in a large number of different languages and in a large number of racial/ethnic enclaves. Most of their clergy are strangers to one another.
During the 1920s and 1930s Los Angeles was a bastion of Anglo Protestantism, reflecting the values of Midwestern parishioners who had been carried to the Southland on the Southern Pacific Railroad. Well into the 1970s, Protestant denominational leaders enjoyed comfortable, influential ties with the city is still-strong "downtown business establishment," which itself was largely Protestant.
The Immigration Act of 1965, however, created the condition for a radically different religious future for the City of Angels-a future that would anoint Roman Catholicism as the area's dominant religious group. Today Roman Catholicism is the single largest faith tradition in Los Angeles County, with 294 parishes and 3,631,368 adherents. Among Christians, 71% are Catholics. Between 1980 and 1997, Roman Catholicism experienced a 36% growth.
According to Louis Velasquez, director of the Los Angeles
Archdiocese Office of Hispanic Ministry, approximately 70% of Roman Catholics in Los
Angeles County are Latino, mostly immigrants from Mexico and Central America.
Father Gregory Courier, speaking for the three-county Los Angeles Archdiocese, suggests
that as many as one million undocumented immigrant Catholics probably remain uncounted.
Sixty-percent of these Latino Catholics, Valasquez says, speak Spanish as their
primary language. Spanish masses are held at over two thirds of the Archdiocese's 287
parishes, and in most of these parishes, Spanish language masses make up about 80% of the
total number of masses offered.
An additional 10% of Roman Catholics in Los Angeles County are Asian, weighted toward first and second generation immigrants from East Asia, especially from Korea and the Philippines. Nine percent are African-American.
Today only 26% of the County's Christians are Protestant, and Los Angeles County Protestantism is no longer led by mainline Protestant denominations such as the Presbyterian Church USA, the United Church of Christ, the Disciples of Christ, American Baptist, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the United Methodist Church, and the Episcopal Church. Only 29% are mainliners--successors of the region's previous mainline "Protestant Establishment." Although the mainline denominations have experienced decline during the past three decades within Los Angeles County, there are now signs that that decline may be bottoming out. Between 1990 and 1997, for example, the Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America have apparently experienced growth, even as the United Methodist Church and the Presbyterian Church USA have continued their descent.
Among Protestants, 55% are evangelical and 16% are Pentecostal. In 1906, in what is now the Little Tokyo district of Los Angeles, a revival held on Azusa Street launched an international Pentecostal movement-a movement that, at the end of the century, is being energized by a surge of Latino converts. Latino Pentecostalism is the major growth area of Southland Protestantism. In the City of Los Angeles, there are about 1,000 Latino Pentecostal churches. According to a recent national survey by the Tomas Rivera Center, although about 77% of Latinos continue to be affiliated with Roman Catholicism, the momentum is toward affiliation with Pentecostalism. That momentum is apparent all over the central areas of the city, where neighborhoods housing Latino immigrants host storefront Pentecostal churches, sometimes at a density of two or three to a block.
Los Angeles County's Jewish community appears to be experiencing a slight growth, from approximately 503,000 in the mid-to-late 1980s to approximately 519,000 in 1997. Of these, approximately 34% are affiliated with temples and synagogues. In 1990, Jews made up 10.3% of the population that identified with Judeo-Christian traditions.
There are roughly 30,000 Iranian Jews in Los Angeles. Most live in Los Angeles's exclusive West Side. Eighty-five percent are self-employed. Their employment is concentrated in sales, technology, and administrative support services. After their arrival in Los Angeles, about 90% of Iranian Jews maintain their pre-immigration level of religious practice.
According to anecdotal reports, attendance at Buddhist temples and meditation centers is rapidly growing in Los Angeles County. There currently are 131 Buddhist temples and meditation centers in Los Angeles County.
Islam is also on the rise, making Southern California the third largest concentration of practicing Muslims in the United States, with 58 mosques, community centers, and study centers in Los Angeles County. According to J. Gordon Melton, who regularly charts the growth and decline of the nation's faith traditions, 40% of American Buddhists and Muslims reside in Southern California.
In Los Angeles County, there are 6 Bahai worship centers, 18 Hindu temples, 16 Shinto worship centers, and 28 Tenrikyo churches and fellowships.
Southern California is the largest growth area in the United States for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Nevertheless, Mormonism in Los Angeles County experienced a slight decline between 1990 and 1997-from 103,286 to 96,300 members, probably because of an outflow of members to the Inland Empire.
Religious Group | Number of temples, churches, mosques or synagogues | Number of adherents | % of total population | % of total adherents |
---|---|---|---|---|
Roman Catholic | 278 | 3,806,377 | 40 | 68.8 |
Jewish | 202 | 564,700 | 5.9 | 10.2 |
Southern Baptist Conv. | 312 | 111,634 | 1.2 | 2 |
Mormon | 239 | 97,347 | 1 | 1.8 |
Muslim | 48 | 92,919 | 1 | 1.7 |
American Baptist Chrs. | 211 | 73,217 | 0.8 | 1.3 |
Independent Charismatic | 11 | 71,500 | 0.8 | 1.3 |
Assemblies of God | 260 | 64,327 | 0.7 | 1.2 |
United Methodist | 177 | 54,676 | 0.6 | 1 |
Intl Foursquare Gospel | 225 | 52,362 | 0.6 | 0.9 |
Religious Congregations and Membership in the United States: 2000, Glenmary Research Center, Nashville, TN
Religious Group | Number of temples, mosques, or synagogues | Number of adherents | % of total population | % of total adherents |
---|---|---|---|---|
Baha'i | 44 | 6,346 | NA* | NA* |
Hindu | 37 | NA* | NA* | NA* |
Muslim | 48 | 92,919 | 1 | 1.7 |
Jewish | 202 | 564,700 | 5.9 | 10.2 |
Sikh | 14 | NA* | NA* | NA* |
Buddhist | 145 | NA* | NA* | NA* |
Religious Congregations and
Membership in the United States: 2000, Glenmary Research Center, Nashville, TN
* Data not available
SOURCE: http://www.usc.edu/schools/college/crcc/demographics/lacounty.html
* * *
Religious Congregations and Membership in the Los Angeles CSMA
(5-County Consolidated Statistical Metropolitan Area)SOURCE: American Religion Data Archive - ARDA/Glenmary Research Center: 1990, 2000
Top 15 Reporting Religious Bodies: Los Angeles-Riverside-Orange County, CA (CMSA)
The ARDA-Glenmary Database lists 122 denominations and 4,044 congregations for Los Angeles County in 2000, whereas the PROLADES-GLAMA Database lists 371 denominations and 8,896 congregations for Los Angeles County in 1997. See the following summary report for details: LACO Denominational List, 1997.NOTE: The ARDA-Glenmary Research Center Database lists 7,079 congregations of all religious groups for the Los Angeles 5-country region (CMSA) in 2000, whereas the PROLADES database documents the existance of 12,460 congregations for the same geographical region in 1997. Therefore, the Glenmary data should be considered partial and incomplete based on this comparision.
LOS ANGELES COUNTY DATA COMPARISON:
* * *
CMSA / Census Population Change, 1990 to 2000 |
CMSA | | |-------------------------------|---------------------- |
Code | Rank | Area Name | April 1, 2000 | April 1, 1990 | Number | Percent |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
5602 1 New York--Northern New Jersey--Long Island, NY--NJ--CT--PA CMSA 21,199,865 19,549,649 1,650,216 8.4% |
4472 2 Los Angeles--Riverside--Orange County, CA CMSA 16,373,645 14,531,529 1,842,116 12.7% |
1602 3 Chicago--Gary--Kenosha, IL--IN--WI CMSA 9,157,540 8,239,820 917,720 11.1% |
8872 4 Washington--Baltimore, DC--MD--VA--WV CMSA 7,608,070 6,727,050 881,020 13.1% |
7362 5 San Francisco--Oakland--San Jose, CA CMSA 7,039,362 6,253,311 786,051 12.6% |
6162 6 Philadelphia--Wilmington--Atlantic City, PA--NJ--DE--MD CMSA 6,188,463 5,892,937 295,526 5.0% |
1122 7 Boston--Worcester--Lawrence, MA--NH--ME--CT CMSA 5,819,100 5,455,403 363,697 6.7% |
2162 8 Detroit--Ann Arbor--Flint, MI CMSA 5,456,428 5,187,171 269,257 5.2% |
1922 9 Dallas--Fort Worth, TX CMSA 5,221,801 4,037,282 1,184,519 29.3% |
3362 10 Houston--Galveston--Brazoria, TX CMSA 4,669,571 3,731,131 938,440 25.2% |
0520 11 Atlanta, GA MSA 4,112,198 2,959,950 1,152,248 38.9% |
4992 12 Miami--Fort Lauderdale, FL CMSA 3,876,380 3,192,582 683,798 21.4% |
7602 13 Seattle--Tacoma--Bremerton, WA CMSA 3,554,760 2,970,328 584,432 19.7% |
SOURCE: http://www.census.gov/population/cen2000/phc-t3/tab03.txt
* * *
Immigrant Religion in the
Center of Angels
Donald E. Miller, Jon Miller and Grace R. Dyrness
Los Angeles: Center for Religion and Civic Culture, USC, 2001
Excerts from the Executive Summary follows.
NOTE: To view the entire document, go to: http://www.usc.edu/schools/college/crcc/private/docs/publications/immigrantreligion.pdf
* * *
From the suburban fringes to South-Central
and the heart of downtown, the Los Angeles area is undergoing a remarkable and exuberant
expansion of churches, mosques, Buddhist temples and synagogues. The best known of the new
religious institutions is the $189-million Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown
Los Angeles. But the building program is remarkably varied and includes megachurches for
evangelicals, the 1,600-seat Korean Valley Christian Presbyterian Church in Porter Ranch,
the Faithful Central Bible Church at the former site of the 17,500-seat Forum in Inglewood
and the Hindu Temple in Malibu.
The upsurge in religious building reflects an intensification of faith-based activities
across the region. Church membership in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino
counties, according to the American Religion Data Archive, grew 24% in
the 1990s, a rate of growth about twice that of the area's population. In contrast,
membership growth nationally was flat.
This growth has numerous sources, most significantly the number of immigrants who
have migrated to the Los Angeles area over the last few decades. Virtually all major
denominations, from Catholicism and Judaism to Islam and evangelical Protestantism, credit
much of their recent expansion to the spiritual demands of newcomers. Others note the
rising need among L.A.'s dispersed middle-class population for a community connection in a
city whose sprawl and high-pitched energy are obstacles to simple human contact.
The revival in religiosity represents a new stage in the evolution of Los Angeles
as a city. It reflects both the city's changing character and its continuing spiritual
restlessness. From Mesopotamian times on through the Middle Ages to the
great Protestant revivals in Britain and America in the early 20th century, the quest for
spiritual meaning has been among the most notable characteristics of great cities.
"The city," observed French theologian Jacques Ellul, "is not just a
collection of houses with ramparts, but also a spiritual power."
A heightened sense of religiosity is nothing new in Los Angeles. Founded
as an exclusively Catholic city under the Spanish, L.A.'s first great religious
transformation came with the huge influx of Midwestern and Northeastern middle-class
Americans at the turn of the century. By the 1920s, the city was a bastion
of such traditional Protestant groups as the [Baptists,] Methodists, Presbyterians and
Anglicans.
The city's new Protestant consciousness had many positive effects.
Mainstream Protestantism preached the importance of hard work and clean government, values
that played crucial roles in the city's transition from a cow town to a major metropolis.
But Protestant hegemony also fostered prejudice against other religions, effectively
excluding their followers, most notably Catholics and Jews, from the city's ruling elites.
Also in the 1920s and especially during the 1930s, Los Angeles became a national
center of Christian fundamentalism. Impoverished refugees from the Dust
Bowl, cut off from their Great Plains roots and adrift in a large, seemingly unknowable
city, found solace in the "old-time religion" of such evangelists as [Charles E.
Fuller of the Church of the Open Door] and Aimee Semple McPherson of the Foursquare Gospel
Church.
In the ensuing decades, many marginal religious movements, from astrologers to
faith healers, attracted followings. "Los Angeles leads the world in all the
healing sciences," commented the journalist Morrow Mayo, "except perhaps
medicine and surgery."
In the 1950s and 1960s, religion in Los Angeles fit a more normal American
pattern. In a city of big businesses and global ambitions, L.A.'s religious
communities were represented by "serious" ecclesiastical leaders such as the
Catholic archbishop, the leader of the Episcopal church and the head of the Jewish
Federation of Greater Los Angeles.
This staid corporate model no longer describes L.A.'s religiosity.
Although established religious institutions still matter, the current revival of religious
life is essentially entrepreneurial, which befits a city that is ethnically diverse and
whose economy is dominated by small businesses. It is dispersed and fragmented, unfolding
across an archipelago of faiths rather than in a single, sacred precinct.
In the shadows of the city's new religious buildings grows a proliferation of
smaller and more eclectic congregations. It's not uncommon for four or more
congregations, each speaking a different language and professing a different faith, to
share the same facility. This is particularly true of the more evangelical churches, whose
rapid growth has yet to bring them the economic power to find permanent spaces amid L.A.'s
high-cost real estate. Still, according to the American Religion Data Archive,
the number of places of worship in the L.A. area in 2000 rose by about 400 over the
previous 10 years.
Established religious institutions, although more well heeled than storefront houses of
worship, may be unprepared to adjust to the fast-changing diversification of religious
life. The Jewish Federation, for example, the traditional bulwark of the
city's 600,000 Jews, is a diminishing force. Despite the growth of L.A.'s Jewish community
in both numbers and wealth, says Rob Eshman, editor of the Los Angeles Jewish
Journal, the federation annually raises about the same amount of money as it did
a decade ago.
Instead, Eshman says, more Jewish money is flowing to specialized institutions like the
Simon Wiesenthal Center, the Skirball Cultural Center and the Museum of Tolerance.
Fund-raising also is increasingly connected to the region's 30 Hebrew day schools that
educate about 10,000 Jewish children, according to the Bureau of Jewish Education.
"You have a kind of entrepreneurial spirit in the L.A. Jewish community that's also
very dynamic and fragmented," Eshman says. "The overall organization of the
community tends to be relatively weak, but the individual synagogues are very
strong."
Greater ethnic diversity also has changed the profile of the city's Jewish
community. First-generation immigrants and their offspring make up nearly 45% of
the L.A. Jewish community. This has led to the establishment of numerous shuls, some of
which attempt to maintain Jewish practices that originated in places like Iran and
elsewhere in the Near East, where Jewish roots are deeper than in Christian Europe.
Similar patterns are evident in the growth of Christian churches. Largely
because of the influx of Latino immigrants, the Catholic Church gained about 1.5 million
adherents in the 1990s, a 34% increase over the previous decade. As a result, Catholicism
is once again the region's predominant faith.
Although the sexual-abuse scandal has tarnished the reputation of the L.A. archdiocese and
threatens to strain church finances, grass-roots Catholic religious life in Los Angeles
continues to expand, with virtually all parishes reporting increases in attendance and
social activities, according to Kevin O'Connor, director of development for the
archdiocese. In much of the city, the church has become increasingly Spanish-speaking, but
Mass is also celebrated in at least 30 languages every weekend.
Mainline Protestantism and more traditional fundamentalist groups have not fared
as well. Yet, many Protestant groups are expanding their social services
and redirecting their ministries to accommodate the region's changing population. The
United Methodist Church, which shrank by nearly one-quarter during the 1990s,
recently established 12 new ministries, 11 of which target Spanish, Chinese or other
non-English-speaking constituencies.
But the most dramatic growth is in religions that historically have been outside
the mainstream. The largest number of new building projects is being
undertaken by evangelical Christian groups like the Assemblies of God. Pentecostal
churches are the fastest-growing of all denominations in terms of membership. Many
of these churches, such as the Vineyard in Santa Monica or the Oasis in Mid-Wilshire, are
Southern Californian in their lack of traditional focus. Their strong emphasis on
music and contemporary sermonizing appeals to a wide range of urbanites, among them
singles, divorced parents and others alienated from more traditional churches.
SOURCE: http://www.joelkotkin.com/Religion/LAT%20A%20Revival%20Under%20Many%20Tents%20in%20L.A..htm
L.A.'s Stained Glass Blessing: St. James in the City Episcopal Church
How one Wishire District church has changed over time: 1927 - 2007.
By Paul Pringle, Los Angeles Times Staff
Writer
September 30, 2007
As Downtown Revives, so do Congregations
A growing, diverse population in the L.A. neighborhood results in new parishes and bigger old ones.
Compare the parallel history of religion
among the major race-ethnic groups in Los Angeles
Ethnic /Ancestry and Religious Info & Histories
The Hispanic American CommunityThe Asian American & Pacific Islander Communities (an overview of all subgroups)
City of Los Angeles
County of Los Angeles
County of Orange
- Asian Indian
- Cambodian
- Chinese
- Filipino
- Hmong
- Indonesian
- Japanese
- Korean
- Laotian
- Pacific Islanders
- Thai
- Vietnamese
The African American Community
U.S. Department of Commerce/U.S. Census Bureau: PRESS RELEASE
18 September 2003
First County Population Estimates by Race and Ethnicity Since 2000 Show Diversity Changing Local Demographics
The U.S. Census Bureau today issued its first county population estimates by age, sex, race and Hispanic origin since Census 2000, pinpointing at the local level what was previously found to be the case for the nation and the states - that America is becoming more racially and ethnically diverse. The estimates for the nation's 3,141 counties were as of July 1, 2002. The race data presented below cover the population who reported as one race alone or as one race in combination with one or more races. The federal government treats Hispanic origin and race as distinct concepts. Separate questions are asked on Hispanic origin and race. For further details, see U.S. Census Bureau Guidance on the Presentation and Comparison of Race and Hispanic-Origin Data (June 12, 2003).
The findings which follow are for counties with a minimum population of 100,000:
- American Indians and Alaska natives - Los Angeles County, CA, had the largest population (156,000); in Navajo County, Ariz., American Indians made up the highest percentage of the total population (50 percent); another Arizona county, Maricopa, had the largest numerical increase from 2000 to 2002 (9,000) and Fairfax County, Va., showed the highest percentage jump (45 percent).
- Asians - Los Angeles County, CA, had the largest population (1.3 million) and the largest numerical increase (47,000); in Honolulu County, Hawaii, Asians made up the highest share of the total population (62 percent); and Forsyth County, GA., had the largest percentage increase (139 percent).
- Blacks - Cook County, Ill., had the largest population (1.4 million); in Orleans Parish, LA., blacks made up the highest proportion of the total (68 percent); Broward County, FL., had the largest numerical increase from 2000 to 2002 (50,000); and Forsyth County, GA., the largest percentage increase (88 percent).
- Hispanics (may be of any race) - Los Angeles County, CA, had the largest population (4.5 million) and numerical increase (300,000); Webb County, Texas, was the county where Hispanics comprised the highest proportion of the total population (95 percent); and Henry County, GA., had the largest percentage increase (46 percent).
SOURCE: http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2003/cb03-143.html