Tag: 2023 census

Dr Lynne Taylor
Jack Somerville Senior Lecturer in Pastoral Theology, University of Otago
Director and Researcher, AngelWings Ltd
© Lynne Taylor, 2024, www.lynnetaylor.nz  

Photo by Peter Hammer on Unsplash

The 2023 Census data on religious affiliation, released in October 2024, contains few surprises. The number and proportion of people of no religion has continued to grow, at a slower rate than previously. Overall, there has been a decline in both the number and proportion of Christians. As with other censuses, different denominations and groupings show different rates of decline, and some have grown. The number of people who stated they were “Christian” without further clarifying has continued to grow. There is a lot to explore and consider in the data, and what follows is an initial analysis of some of the numbers.

No religion

The number of people in New Zealand stating that they have no religious affiliation continues to rise, increasing from 1,663,348 in 2013 to 2,576,049 in 2023 (an increase of 58% over the decade).  This means that people of no religion now make up 52% of the New Zealand population.

While the increase between 2018 and 2023 is (at 14%) still large, the rate of increase has slowed: between 2013 to 2018 the increase had been 38%: over 2.5 times the 2018-2023 rate. At an average of 2.8% per year, the 2018 to 2023 increase is slightly more than twice the NZ population increase of 1.3% per year (averaged 2018-2023).

A similar pattern is seen for those who object to answering the religion question. This increased by 98% over the ten years, to 342,705, but most of that growth occurred in the 5 years to 2018, when there was an 81% increase. (There was a 10% increase in the 2018-2023 period.)

The number of people who said they were agnostics increased between 2018 to 2023 (by 14%, to 7434). However, the number of atheists declined (by 7%, to 6549). (Incidentally, the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster also declined, by 4.5% to 3297!)

Christian – not further defined

Of high proportional increase is the number of people who state that they are Christian, but do not further define their denominational affiliation. This population has increased at a rate considerably higher than population growth, increasing by 69% from 216,177 to 364,644 from 2013 to 2023. However, the rate of increase of this population has also slowed – from 42% in the 2013 to 2018 period to 18% in the 2018 to 2023 period. (The annualised rate of increase is 3.7% in the 2018-2023 period, down from 8.5% between 2013 and 2018.)

This continues a trend of declining importance of denominational affiliation. Now, 22.5% of those who indicate they are Christian do not name any denominational affiliation in the Census, compared with 11.5% in 2013.

Christian – denominations

The number and proportion of people naming an affiliation with most Christian denominations has declined markedly over the past ten years. Generally, this continues an expected decline, including as these populations age. The largest declining denominations are shown here:

Denomination20132023% change
Anglican459,771245,301-47%
Baptist53,49328,548-47%
Brethren nfd and Open Brethren12,8525,097-60%
Catholic492,321449,484-9%
Methodist nfd97,32041,337-58%
Presbyterian316,332179,535-43%

Also showing an overall decline are the Pentecostal groupings of churches (down 11% overall). However, individual Pentecostal ‘denominations’ show varying patterns of growth and decline. Looking at the larger groupings, some grew between 2013 and 2018 but declined to 2023 (Destiny, Elim, New Life, Vineyard). Only Assemblies of God showed sustained growth in both periods, although most of the growth occurred 2013 to 2018 (8%, cf 9% for the decade; 1% 2018-2023).

Denomination20132023% change
All Pentecostal7443966213-11%

Other groupings (with over 1000 adherents) to show sustained growth in both intercensal periods are Seventh-day Adventists (up 25% over the decade, to 18,204), Korean Christian (4,110), Reformed Baptist (195% increase to 1,152), Plymouth or Exclusive Brethren (28%, to 7,170), Churches of Christ (together all subcategories increased from 2145 in 2013 to 4203 in 2023; up 96%). Wesleyan Methodists first featured in 2018 and increased by 11% to 5,136 in 2023. Tongan Methodists showed sustained growth: from 4509 in 2013 to 12540 in 2023 (178%), with most of that growth occurring in the 2013 to 2018 period. Some other ethnic churches also showed sustained growth: Cook Island (no denomination stated), 38%; Samoan Congregational, 136%; (Methodists not elsewhere classified also grew by 207% over the ten years to 3753.)

The number of people simply calling themselves Evangelical declined by 32% to 4149, while those saying they are “born again” increased from 7917 to 29,061 over the decade (but had peaked at 33,486 in 2018). “Jesus followers” were first recorded in 2018 and increased to 2073 in 2023.

Christian – overall

Overall, the number and proportions of Christians in Aotearoa has continued to decline, but the rate of decline has been relatively stable over the decade: 1.5% per year between 2013 and 2018 and 1.4% per year between 2018 and 2023.

Altogether, 32% of New Zealanders state that they are of Christian religious affiliation – 1,620,555 people.

Māori religions

The 2023 reporting separates Māori religions, and I have not included any Māori religions or Christian denominations above. Overall, Māori religions, beliefs and philosophies have increased by 16% over the decade. An increase in Rātana is partially offset by a decline in Ringatū.

Other religions

Many other religions are growing. After Christianity, Hinduism is the largest religion, and its adherents increased by 59% in the decade from 89,085 in 2013 to 142,008 in 2023. The number of people of Islamic faith also increased, by nearly 50%, from 45,960 in 2013 to 68,538 in 2023. For context, the number of people affiliated with Hinduism and the Islamic faith (210,546) is now larger than Pentecostal, Methodist, Baptist and Brethren combined (141,195).

The number of people of New Age religions increased by 17% overall between 2013 and 2023 (to 21,540), with a higher rate of increase in the latter 5 years (1.9% per annum between 2018 and 2023, compared with 1.4% growth per annum 2013 to 2018).

Final thoughts

Overall, there is an ongoing decline in the number of people affiliated with Christianity – but much of that decline is due to people no longer naming an affiliation with a particular historically large denomination. Christians are increasingly likely to name themselves as simply that: Christian. Some smaller denominations are growing, and there continues to be growth in some ethnic groupings of churches.

More analysis is needed on all this data. The ethnic differences need to be unpacked further, as do other groupings. When available, cross tabulations with age and ethnicity will enable further analysis and insights. Watch this space!

If citing, use: Taylor, Lynne (2024) “2023 Religious Affiliation: The Numbers.” https://lynnetaylor.nz/2023-religious-affiliation-the-numbers

Card from Jesus Deck – A Census of the Whole World

It is an exciting day for me! My first Monday (aka AngelWings day) since a massive release of 2023 Census data!!

As well as being generally interested in a whole host of data (and I’ll be back to make some comments on that), I’m excited because it means that I can start to prepare the 2023 Community Profiles: I have been providing such profiles to churches for the past 30(!) years…

I came up with the idea of producing Community Demographic profiles when I was doing my honours in human geography in 1992 – I took a course/paper on geographic information systems (they were new and exciting then!) and SuperMap 2 had just been released, containing the 1991 Census data. It was amazing! I could see the potential for churches to understand their communities, and wrote an assignment on it, later pitching the idea of providing community profiles, to (the newly established) Vision New Zealand.

They said yes, to fresh-out-of-uni me! Alan Withy was a key supporter, and Bruce Patrick as well. I remember Keith Hay Homes helped fund the purchase of the software and some generous denominations also pitched in advance payments, which enabled it to go ahead. (The software and hardware was Quite Expensive, as you might imagine.)

I developed the original profile, and have streamlined and amended over the years. I’ve done hundreds and hundreds of them… certainly over 1000.

I’ve provided profiles to churches of all denominations, but especially for Baptist churches, having produced them FREE as part of my role there since 1997. Most Baptist churches ask for them as part of the process of finding a new minister. They were also part of the church review documents (when external consultants did reviews). I also reviewed each BU Tindall Application based on the demographics (which Tindall loved and wanted me to do for more groups, but this idea fizzled with the delay to the 2011/2013 census).

In 2008, I took a roadshow (well, I flew) to Christchurch, Wellington and Auckland where I walked through what the 150 participants might learn from their profiles. When I was asked to speak at Arrow leadership training, I’d provide the profiles (free!) and we’d work through them together.

Having moved to Adelaide, and with the delay to the 2011 Census, I was seriously considering stopping providing profiles before the 2013 data came out. I was doing my PhD by then, and wondered if it was time to stop. BUT! I attended a course taught by John and Olive Drane, at which John randomly handed out cards from the Jesus Deck. The card I was given is pictured and it seemed very much like a God-prompt to continue😊And here I still am.

What’s involved in preparing profiles? A three-stage process…

  • I take the data from Stats NZ and get it into a format that I can work with. (That small sentence requires Quite A Bit Of Work)
  • I prepare a profile template into which I can copy and paste data from the spreadsheets
  • Once all that is done, it is pretty speedy to produce a profile (provided the church provides good information on which areas to include)

Today’s task is to see what will be involved in getting the 2023 data into a usable format. Each time has been different and a new tool has been released this time around. I’m hoping it will be as intuitive as the demo seemed to be and that the path forward will be quickly obvious…

People find the profiles helpful, saying:

  • “Thanks for this work – very, very interesting.”
  • “Many thanks for this, it makes interesting reading”
  • “Your resource looks really good and is something that would be helpful for local congregations to get to know their local context.”
  • “Thanks Lynne this is super helpful”

Watch this space for more!