Protestantism in Canada

Protestantism in Canada has existed as a major faith in Canada ever since parts of northern Canada were colonized by the English. As of 2001, 29.2% of Canadians identified as Protestant.[1] According to a study by Pew Researchers published in 2013, 27% of Canadians are Protestant. Based on 2011 estimates, Protestant faiths collectively form the third largest religious group in Canada after the largest, Roman Catholicism, and the second largest group, those with no religious affiliation.[2]

Protestantism in Canada
OrientationChristianity
PolityVarious
RegionCanada
Members29.2% of Canadians (8,654,850 as of 2001)[1]

Statistics

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Christian Denominations in Canada
19911 2001 20112
Number % Number % Number %
Total Population 26,944,040 29,639,035 32,852,300
Christian 22,503,360 83 22,851,825 77 22,102,700 67.3
Total Protestant 9,427,675 34.9 8,654,845 29.2
- United Church of Canada 3,093,120 11.5 2,839,125 9.6 2,007,610 6.1
- Anglican Church of Canada 2,188,110 8.1 2,035,495 6.9 1,631,845 5.0
- Baptist 663,360 2.5 729,470 2.5 635,840 1.9
- Lutheran 636,205 2.4 606,590 2.0 478,185 1.5
- Protestant, not included elsewhere3 628,945 2.3 549,205 1.9
- Presbyterian 636,295 2.4 409,830 1.4 472,385 1.4
Roman Catholic 12,203,625 45.2 12,793,125 43.2 12,728,900 38.7
Christian Orthodox 387,395 1.4 495,245 1.7 550,690 1.7
Christian, not included elsewhere4 353,040 1.3 780,450 2.6
No Religious Affiliation 3,397,000 12.6 4,900,095 16.5 7,850,600 23.9
Other 1,093,690 4.1 1,887,115 6.4 2,703,200 8.1
1For comparability purposes, 1991 data are presented according to 2001 boundaries.
2The 2011 data is from the National Household Survey[2] and so numbers are estimates.
3Includes persons who report only “Protestant”.
4Includes persons who report “Christian”, and those who report “Apostolic”, “Born-again Christian” and “Evangelical”.

History

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Under French control

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In the early 1600s, the French were the first European nation to establish permanent colonies in Canada, calling the areas they colonized New France.[3] The French attempted to set up these colonies in a way that established the Roman Catholic Church as the foundation of colonial society and gave the Roman Catholic Church a monopoly on religion, with only French-born Roman Catholics being allowed to immigrate to New France after 1627 .[4] The majority of French were Roman Catholic, but there were smaller populations of Protestants and Jews in New France. These non-Catholics who were barred from public worship, public office, and most professions.[4] But the French aspiration to make Roman Catholicism the foundation of society in New France was never fully realized. With the British conquest of Canada during the French and Indian War and the subsequent signing of the Treaty of Paris (1763), which officially recognized the transition of control over France's Canadian territories to the British Empire, the British began to focus on Protestant expansion in the region.[4]

Under British control

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There had been prior efforts to introduce Protestantism to the areas of Canada under British control in the years leading up to British control of Canada being officially awarded in the Treaty of Paris. The first large communities of Protestants established by the British were in the Maritimes. Due to prior French control, this territory was inhabited by native populations and French Roman Catholics. The British could not convince British Protestants to immigrate to this area, but the British were intent on introducing Protestantism to counterbalance French Roman Catholic influence, incentivizing French and German Protestants to move to the territory. Thousands moved to Nova Scotia and were known as the Foreign Protestants.[5] The British sought to expand Protestant faith throughout the territory through missionary conversions of native populations and the immigration of Protestants to Canada, favoring the British Church of England and initially suppressing the Roman Catholic Church .[4] Recognizing the majority-Catholic nature of the former French colonies and hoping to prevent Catholic and Protestant conflict, the Treaty of Paris included an acceptance of Roman Catholicism under British rule as Catholicism is a Christian faith.[6] Following the American Revolution, there was a large influx of United Empire Loyalist Protestants from the United States into Canada. Immigrants from many different Protestant faiths came to Canada, introducing these various Protestant faiths to the religious landscape and further preventing the establishment of the Church of England as Canada's official religion. This ambition was wholly abandoned by the mid-1800s, with Christian religious pluralism fully acknowledged and accepted, though Canada was still considered a Christian society.[5] An 1871 census shows that at one point, the majority of Canadians were some form of Protestant, with 56.45% of the population identifying as belonging to a Protestant Faith.[7] There was eventually an influx of Roman Catholic and other non-Protestant Christian immigrants to Canada, and Roman Catholicism eventually eclipsed Protestantism as the religious group with the most adherents in 1961. Roman Catholics have remained the largest religious group in Canada since 1961 and Protestant membership is declining.[8] Religion has played a large role in Canadian public life and politics, and secularization in Canada was a long process. Though it began long before then, the 1960s saw the dramatic secularization of Canadian institutions, such as education. Canada detached their institutions from religion as part of an effort to modernize these institutions.[4]

Post-independence

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The secularization of Canadian society marks a significant institutional and social departure from European-controlled Canadian society, as Canada has transitioned into a post-colonial society, they have attempted to detach from those religious institutional links established by the British Empire. However, while the Protestant faith has particularly declined since secularization, Evangelical Protestantism has grown more popular in Canada.[4] Canada's largest Protestant branch, the United Church of Canada, underwent dramatic liberalization during the 1960s, abandoning evangelical tendencies and creating a gap in the religious market, which may have benefited Evangelical denominations in terms of gaining followers, particularly in more socially conservative areas of the country that are resistant to the modernization and liberalization that has accompanied Canadian Independence and secularization.[9] There has also been an increase in the numbers of those with no religious affiliation and those belonging to a non-Protestant or Catholic faith.[citation needed] While Protestantism was once the faith of the majority in Canada, the Protestant share of the population has declined by over half of what it was around 150 years ago.[8]

Notable branches

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United Church of Canada

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The United Church of Canada is the largest Protestant group in Canada, with 2011 estimates suggesting the membership of just over 2 million.[2] Officially formed in 1925, the United Church of Canada is the amalgamation of almost all of Canada's Congregationalists and Methodists and most of Canada's Presbyterians, and many Christian independents.[10] The United Church of Canada is a mainline Protestant faith, though its founding denominations were evangelical. The church has since gone through efforts to increase inclusivity and liberalization beginning in the 1960s, with declining membership also beginning in the 1960s.[10] Despite declining membership, the United Church of Canada remains the largest Protestant branch and the second-largest Christian branch behind Roman Catholicism, with the church still an influential force in Canada.

Anglican Church of Canada

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Originally named the Church of England in the Dominion of Canada, the Anglican Church of Canada traces its origins to the Church of England and the British colonization of Canada.[11] Following the British occupation of formerly French territories, the British began introducing Protestantism to Canada, largely through their own Church of England. The modern Anglican Church of Canada is independent from the Church of England and is one of 45 churches in the worldwide Anglican Communion. With 2011 estimates suggesting membership of over 1.6 million members in Canada, the Anglican Church of Canada is Canada's second-largest Protestant faith and third largest Christian faith.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Population by religion, by province and territory (2001 Census)". 2005-01-25. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  2. ^ a b c d "2011 National Household Survey: Immigration, place of birth, citizenship, ethnic origin, visible minorities, language and religion". 2013-05-08. Retrieved 2021-10-21.
  3. ^ Morton, Desmond (1999). Canada: A Millennium Portrait. Toronto: Dundurn. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-4597-1085-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Bramadat, Paul; Seljak, David (2008). Christianity and Ethnicity in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 7–15, 38–39. ISBN 978-0802095848.
  5. ^ a b Kaufman, Will; Macpherson, Heidi (2005). Britain and the Americas: Culture, Politics, And History: A Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-85109-431-8.
  6. ^ "Avalon Project - Treaty of Paris 1763". avalon.law.yale.edu. Retrieved 2021-10-21.
  7. ^ "Historical statistics, principal religious denominations of the population". www150.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 10-21-21.
  8. ^ a b Canada, Statistics (October 1972). "The 1971 Canadian Census Data Access Programme". Population Index. 38 (4): 424–427. doi:10.2307/2733685. ISSN 0032-4701. JSTOR 2733685.
  9. ^ Rawlyk, George A. (1997). Aspects of the Canadian evangelical experience. Montreal, Que.: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-6648-4. OCLC 243587524..
  10. ^ a b Whytock, Jack C. (2013-01-01). "Don Schweitzer (Ed.), The United Church of Canada. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, Waterloo 2012, xxiv + 306 pp. ISBN 978-15-54-58331-7. CND $33.50". Church History and Religious Culture. 93 (4): 4, 112. doi:10.1163/18712428-13930420. ISSN 1871-241X.
  11. ^ "A brief history". The Anglican Church of Canada. Retrieved 2021-10-21.

Further reading

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