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{{Short description|none}}
[[Christianity]] was introduced by Spanish settlers who arrived in [[Jamaica]] in 1509. Thus, [[Roman Catholicism]] was the first Christian denomination to be established. [[Protestant]] missions were very active, especially the [[Baptists]], and played a key role in the [[Abolitionism in the United Kingdom|abolition]] of [[slavery]].<ref name="wcc">{{cite web | url=http://www.oikoumene.org/member-churches/regions/caribbean/jamaica.html | title=Jamaica | publisher=World Council of Churches | date=2008-08-19 | accessdate=July 17, 2012 | author=World Council of Churches}}</ref>
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}
{{infobox religious group
| group = Jamaican Christians
| population = approx. 1,960,000
| regions =
| religions = [[Baptist]], [[Seventh-day Adventist]], [[Roman Catholic]], [[Anglican]]
| languages = Main languages spoken are [[English language|English]] and [[Jamaican Patois]].
}}
[[File:St.-Jago-de-la-Vega.JPG|thumb|right|The Anglican St. Jago de la Vega Cathedral, Spanish Town, Jamaica.]]
[[Christianity]] was introduced by Spanish settlers who arrived in [[Jamaica]] in 1509. Thus, [[Roman Catholicism]] was the first Christian denomination to be established. Later, [[Protestant]] missions were very active, especially the [[Baptists]], and played a key role in the [[Abolitionism in the United Kingdom|abolition]] of [[slavery]].<ref name="wcc">{{cite web | url=http://www.oikoumene.org/member-churches/regions/caribbean/jamaica.html | title=Jamaica | publisher=[[World Council of Churches]] | date=19 August 2008 | accessdate=17 July 2012 | author=World Council of Churches | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120405045342/http://www.oikoumene.org/member-churches/regions/caribbean/jamaica.html | archive-date=5 April 2012 | url-status=dead }}</ref>


==Denominations==
==Denominations==
Line 5: Line 15:
===Anglicanism===
===Anglicanism===
{{Main|Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands}}
{{Main|Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands}}
Anglicanism was introduced by the British in 1664. The first church was built on the spot of the Spanish Church of the Red Cross in [[Spanish Town]], and is the oldest Anglican cathedral outside of the British Isles and the oldest place of continuous worship in the western hemisphere. By the early nineteenth century, abolitionism had propelled other denominations to the forefront, and threatened the established Anglican church. Thus, in 1824, the Diocese of Jamaica, which also included [[Belize]] and [[the Bahamas]], was established. In 1861, the Bahamas became a separate diocese, and, in 1891, the same happened to [[Belize]]. During the 1960s, the [[Cayman Islands]] were added, and, in 2001, the diocese was renamed the [[Anglican Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands|Diocese of Jamaica & the Cayman Islands]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.anglicandiocesejamaica.com/content/aboutus/history.html |title=Our History |publisher=Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands |date=2012-07-18 |accessdate=July 18, 2012 |author=Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131023061725/http://www.anglicandiocesejamaica.com/content/aboutus/history.html |archivedate=October 23, 2013 |df= }}</ref> Today, the diocese is part of the [[Church in the Province of the West Indies]].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/province.cfm?ID=W3 | title=Church in the Province of the West Indies | publisher=The Anglican Communion | work=Provincial Directory | year=2012 | accessdate=July 18, 2012 | author=The Anglican Communion}}</ref>
Anglicanism was introduced by the British in 1664. The first church was built on the spot of the Spanish Church of the Red Cross in [[Spanish Town]], and is the oldest Anglican cathedral outside the British Isles and the oldest place of continuous worship in the western hemisphere. By the early nineteenth century, abolitionism had propelled other denominations to the forefront, and threatened the established Anglican church. Thus, in 1824, the Diocese of Jamaica, which also included [[Belize]] and [[the Bahamas]], was established. In 1861, the Bahamas became a separate diocese, and, in 1891, the same happened to [[Belize]]. During the 1960s, the [[Cayman Islands]] were added, and, in 2001, the diocese was renamed the [[Anglican Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands|Diocese of Jamaica & the Cayman Islands]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.anglicandiocesejamaica.com/content/aboutus/history.html |title=Our History |publisher=Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands |date=18 July 2012 |accessdate=18 July 2012 |author=Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131023061725/http://www.anglicandiocesejamaica.com/content/aboutus/history.html |archivedate=23 October 2013 }}</ref> Today, the diocese is part of the [[Church in the Province of the West Indies]].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/province.cfm?ID=W3 | title=Church in the Province of the West Indies | publisher=[[The Anglican Communion]] | work=Provincial Directory | year=2012 | accessdate=18 July 2012 | author=The Anglican Communion}}</ref>


===Baptist===
===Baptist===


In 1783 George Liele a freed African who was once enslaved in America introduced the Baptist denomination to Jamaica. Liele, born in Virginia became a Christian in Georgia, and then became the first African American to be ordained within the Baptist Church, at First Baptist Church Savannah. He later pastored both black and white Christians in the American South. On gaining his freedom he travelled to Jamaica and became the first 'unofficial' missionary - before Carey and before Judson. In Jamaica he first preached at the Race Course in Kingston, where people of all races came to hear him. He pioneered Baptist tradition in Jamaica, establishing the first Baptist Church - the Ethiopian Baptist Church. Despite having a church membership of over 450 enslaved Africans in 1791 and 3,000 by 1806, he together with his colleague George Baker began to correspond with the Baptist Missionary Society in England, as a means of developing the work in Jamaica, as it was under constant persecution from the Colonial Government and the established Anglican Church. At the forefront of standing up for the truth of the Gospel in pre-emancipation Jamaica, he died in 1828, but not before he had influenced many, such as the revolutionary Sam Sharpe and other Baptists involved in the 1831 'Baptist Wars' which proved to be the final death knell for slavery. He also passed on the baton to Baptist missionaries from the UK - particularly his colleagues William Knibb and Thomas Burchell, who not only learnt from him, but continued his work, and lived to see what he could only have hope for - the abolition of slavery, the freeing of the enslaved, and the establishing of the then-largest mainline Christian denomination in Jamaica - the Baptist Church.<ref>Doreen Morrison,Reaching for the Promised Land: The role of culture, issues of leadership and social stratification within British Caribbean Christianity,PhD Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2012, 47,53</ref>
In 1783 [[George Lisle (Baptist)|George Liele]], a freed African who was once enslaved in America, introduced the Baptist denomination to Jamaica. Liele, born in Virginia became a Christian in Georgia, and then became the first [[African American]] to be ordained within the Baptist Church, at First Baptist Church Savannah. He later pastored both black and white Christians in the [[American South]]. On gaining his freedom he travelled to Jamaica and became the first 'unofficial' missionary - before Carey and before Judson. In Jamaica he first preached at the Race Course in Kingston, where people of all races came to hear him. He pioneered Baptist tradition in Jamaica, establishing the first Baptist Church - the Ethiopian Baptist Church. Despite having a church membership of over 450 enslaved Africans in 1791 and 3,000 by 1806, he together with his colleague George Baker began to correspond with the [[Baptist Missionary Society]] in England, as a means of developing the work in Jamaica, as it was under constant persecution from the Colonial Government and the established Anglican Church. At the forefront of standing up for the truth of the Gospel in pre-emancipation Jamaica, he died in 1828, but not before he had influenced many, such as the revolutionary [[Sam Sharpe]] and other Baptists involved in the 1831 '[[Baptist Wars]]' which proved to be the final death-knell for slavery. He also passed on the baton to Baptist missionaries from the UK - particularly his colleagues [[William Knibb]] and [[Thomas Burchell]], who not only learned from him, but continued his work, and lived to see what he could only have hoped for - the abolition of slavery, the freeing of the enslaved, and the establishing of the then-largest mainline Christian denomination in Jamaica - the Baptist Church.<ref>Doreen Morrison, ''[http://etheses.bham.ac.uk/3481/1/Morrison12PhD.pdf Reaching for the Promised Land: The role of culture, issues of leadership and social stratification within British Caribbean Christianity]'', PhD Thesis, [[University of Birmingham]], 2012, 47,53</ref>


===Methodists and Presbyterians===
===Methodists and Presbyterians===
Line 20: Line 30:
===Roman Catholicism===
===Roman Catholicism===
{{Main|Roman Catholicism in Jamaica}}
{{Main|Roman Catholicism in Jamaica}}
Introduced by Spanish settlers in 1509, Peter Matyr ordered the building of the first church in Sevilla Nueva {now known as [[Saint Ann's Bay, Jamaica|Saint Ann's Bay]] and was completed in 1526 a [[monastery]] was set up by the request of the Spanish king in an effort to convert [[Arawaks]]. The effort to convert to the Arawaks failed as they rapidly died from disease. In 1655, a Protestant English force captured Jamaica and Roman Catholicism was removed until 1837.
Introduced by Spanish settlers in 1509, Peter Matyr ordered the building of the first church in Sevilla Nueva {now known as [[Saint Ann's Bay]] and was completed in 1526 a [[monastery]] was set up by the request of the Spanish king in an effort to convert [[Arawaks]]. The effort to convert to the Arawaks failed as they rapidly died from disease. In 1655, a Protestant English force captured Jamaica and Roman Catholicism was removed until 1837.


Today Jamaica is organized as the [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kingston in Jamaica|Archdiocese of Kingston in Jamaica]], which also includes [[Belize]] and the Cayman Islands.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dkinj.html | title=Kingston in Jamaica (Archdiocese) | work=Catholic-Hierarchy | date=2012-07-15 | accessdate=July 18, 2012 | author=Cheney, David M.}}</ref> Of the four suffragan dioceses, two, the dioceses of [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Mandeville|Mandeville]] and [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Montego Bay|Montego Bay]] cover parts of Jamaica.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dmand.html | title=Mandeville (Diocese) | work=Catholic-Hierarchy | date=2011-12-03 | accessdate=July 18, 2012 | author=Cheney, David M.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dmonb.html | title=Montego Bay (Diocese) | work=Catholic-Hierarchy | date=2011-12-03 | accessdate=July 18, 2012 | author=Cheney, David M.}}</ref>
Today Jamaica is organized as the [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kingston in Jamaica|Archdiocese of Kingston in Jamaica]], which also includes [[Belize]] and the Cayman Islands.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dkinj.html | title=Kingston in Jamaica (Archdiocese) | work=Catholic-Hierarchy | date=15 July 2012 | accessdate=18 July 2012 | author=Cheney, David M.}}</ref> Of the four suffragan dioceses, two, the dioceses of [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Mandeville|Mandeville]] and [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Montego Bay|Montego Bay]] cover parts of Jamaica.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dmand.html | title=Mandeville (Diocese) | work=Catholic-Hierarchy | date=3 December 2011 | accessdate=18 July 2012 | author=Cheney, David M.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dmonb.html | title=Montego Bay (Diocese) | work=Catholic-Hierarchy | date=3 December 2011 | accessdate=18 July 2012 | author=Cheney, David M.}}</ref>


===Seventh day Adventists===
===Seventh day Adventists===
The story of the [[Seventh-day Adventists]] in [[Jamaica]], is one of rapid growth and development over more than a century. In 1891, at the request of James Palmer of [[Kingston, Jamaica|Kingston]], the Tract Society (Seventh-day Adventist) in the United States of America mailed literature to Jamaica. He gave one to Mrs. Margaret Harrison who is said to be the first Adventist in Jamaica. Her plea to a General Conference session in Battle Creek, Michigan, resulted in the arrival of the first missionaries to the island, Pastor A J. Haysmer and his wife, on May 26, 1893.
The story of the [[Seventh-day Adventists]] in [[Jamaica]], is one of rapid growth and development over more than a century. In 1891, at the request of James Palmer of [[Kingston, Jamaica|Kingston]], the Tract Society (Seventh-day Adventist) in the United States of America mailed literature to Jamaica. He gave one to Mrs. Margaret Harrison who is said to be the first Adventist in Jamaica. Her plea to a General Conference session in Battle Creek, Michigan, resulted in the arrival of the first missionaries to the island, Pastor A J. Haysmer and his wife, on 26 May 1893.


The church was able to host a meeting of all workers in the West Indies from November 5 to 15, 1898 at Text Lane, in Kingston, Jamaica. By February 1899, there were six organized churches and 15 other congregations, with a total of 502 members and about 100 other Sabbath-keepers. The records show that by May, 1902, this number had grown to 18 churches and 13 other congregations. At its 35th meeting in Oakland, California, in March 1903, the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists voted to receive the Jamaica Conference into the fellowship. Rapid church growth followed although ordained ministers were few, but the lay members shouldered much of the work.
The church was able to host a meeting of all workers in the West Indies from 5 to 15 November 1898 at Text Lane, in Kingston, Jamaica. By February 1899, there were six organized churches and 15 other congregations, with a total of 502 members and about 100 other Sabbath-keepers. The records show that by May 1902, this number had grown to 18 churches and 13 other congregations. At its 35th meeting in Oakland, California, in March 1903, the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists voted to receive the Jamaica Conference into the fellowship. Rapid church growth followed although ordained ministers were few, but the lay members shouldered much of the work.


In the building of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination, education and health were essential planks. With the work growing in Jamaica, the need for an Adventist school to train new converts as ministers and church workers for the region became apparent. In 1906, suitable land was acquired at Bog walk and then Riversdale, St. Catherine, for this venture, and the West Indian Training School was established. Its policy of work-study helped students to work while studying in order to assist with the cost of their education. In 1919, the school was relocated to its present home in Mandeville and later became the West Indies College, now [[Northern Caribbean University]] (NCU), with enrollment averaging over 5,000. The Union has grown to cover evangelistic, health, education and youth programs, involving 10 high schools, 22 elementary schools and numerous basic schools, in addition to the ever expanding NCU.
In the building of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination, education and health were essential planks. With the work growing in Jamaica, the need for an Adventist school to train new converts as ministers and church workers for the region became apparent. In 1906, suitable land was acquired at Bog walk and then Riversdale, St. Catherine, for this venture, and the West Indian Training School was established. Its policy of work-study helped students to work while studying in order to assist with the cost of their education. In 1919, the school was relocated to its present home in Mandeville and later became the West Indies College, now [[Northern Caribbean University]] (NCU), with enrollment averaging over 5,000. The Union has grown to cover evangelistic, health, education and youth programs, involving 10 high schools, 22 elementary schools and numerous basic schools, in addition to the ever-expanding NCU.

In 1912, the Adventists opened the “Massage and Hydropathic Treatment Rooms” in Kingston. As demand for its services grew, there were calls for a hospital, and in 1945, the “Andrews Memorial Hospital and Missionary Clinic” was established. Along with the facility, a nursing school was started. Today, Andrews Memorial Hospital provides a facility, with cutting edge medical services such as CT Scan, ultrasound, liptotriptor, surgery, maternity care, dental care and a pharmacy. It collaborates with NCU in training nurses.


In 1912, the Adventists opened the “Massage and Hydropathic Treatment Rooms” in Kingston. As demand for its services grew, there were calls for a hospital, and in 1945, the “Andrews Memorial Hospital and Missionary Clinic” was established. Along with the facility, a nursing school was started.
Throughout its history the expansive of the work of the Jamaica Union Conference has been underpinned by the publishing ministry, with its army of faithful 'colporteur' door to door book selling evangelists.
Throughout its history the expansive of the work of the Jamaica Union Conference has been underpinned by the publishing ministry, with its army of faithful 'colporteur' door to door book selling evangelists.


At the 1936 Adventist world wide General Conference session, Elder A.C. Stockhousen was moved to report: "Jamaica is one of the largest conferences of Seventh-day Adventists in the world.... Today there are 5,335 baptized believers...A more loyal and serious band of believers it would be hard to find anywhere."
At the 1936 Adventist worldwide General Conference session, Elder A.C. Stockhousen was moved to report: "Jamaica is one of the largest conferences of Seventh-day Adventists in the world.... Today there are 5,335 baptized believers...A more loyal and serious band of believers it would be hard to find anywhere."


Today, this continues to be true, and there are currently 3 local conference organizations in Jamaica, but now with over 200,000 members.
Today, this continues to be true, and there are currently 5 local conference organizations in Jamaica, but now with 324,747 members (as of 30 June 2020).


== Percentage of Jamaicans by religious affiliation ==
== Percentage of Jamaicans by religious affiliation ==
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
! Affiliation !! Percentage<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/irf/2008/108531.htm |title=Jamaica | publisher=U.S. Department of State | work=International Religious Freedom Report 2008 | year=2008 | accessdate=July 17, 2012 | author=U.S. Department of State}}</ref>
! Affiliation !! Percentage<ref>{{cite web |url=https://2009-2017.state.gov/j/drl/rls/irf/2008/108531.htm |title=Jamaica | publisher=U.S. Department of State | work=International Religious Freedom Report 2008 | year=2008 | accessdate=17 July 2012 | author=U.S. Department of State}}</ref>
|-
|-
| [[Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee)|Church of God]]|| 24%
| [[Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee)|Church of God]]|| 24%
Line 56: Line 65:
| [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholicism]]|| 2%
| [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholicism]]|| 2%
|-
|-
| [[Reformed churches|Reform]]|| 2%
| [[Reformed churches|Reformed]]|| 2%
|-
|-
| [[Methodism]]|| 2%
| [[Methodism]]|| 2%
Line 78: Line 87:


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Protestantism in Jamaica]]
*[[United Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands]]
*[[United Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands]]
*[[United Sabbath-Day Adventist Church]]
*[[United Sabbath-Day Adventist Church]]
Line 83: Line 93:
==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

{{Religion in Jamaica}}


{{North America topic|Christianity in}}
{{North America topic|Christianity in}}

Latest revision as of 17:20, 25 November 2024

Jamaican Christians
Total population
approx. 1,960,000
Religions
Baptist, Seventh-day Adventist, Roman Catholic, Anglican
Languages
Main languages spoken are English and Jamaican Patois.
The Anglican St. Jago de la Vega Cathedral, Spanish Town, Jamaica.

Christianity was introduced by Spanish settlers who arrived in Jamaica in 1509. Thus, Roman Catholicism was the first Christian denomination to be established. Later, Protestant missions were very active, especially the Baptists, and played a key role in the abolition of slavery.[1]

Denominations

[edit]

Anglicanism

[edit]

Anglicanism was introduced by the British in 1664. The first church was built on the spot of the Spanish Church of the Red Cross in Spanish Town, and is the oldest Anglican cathedral outside the British Isles and the oldest place of continuous worship in the western hemisphere. By the early nineteenth century, abolitionism had propelled other denominations to the forefront, and threatened the established Anglican church. Thus, in 1824, the Diocese of Jamaica, which also included Belize and the Bahamas, was established. In 1861, the Bahamas became a separate diocese, and, in 1891, the same happened to Belize. During the 1960s, the Cayman Islands were added, and, in 2001, the diocese was renamed the Diocese of Jamaica & the Cayman Islands.[2] Today, the diocese is part of the Church in the Province of the West Indies.[3]

Baptist

[edit]

In 1783 George Liele, a freed African who was once enslaved in America, introduced the Baptist denomination to Jamaica. Liele, born in Virginia became a Christian in Georgia, and then became the first African American to be ordained within the Baptist Church, at First Baptist Church Savannah. He later pastored both black and white Christians in the American South. On gaining his freedom he travelled to Jamaica and became the first 'unofficial' missionary - before Carey and before Judson. In Jamaica he first preached at the Race Course in Kingston, where people of all races came to hear him. He pioneered Baptist tradition in Jamaica, establishing the first Baptist Church - the Ethiopian Baptist Church. Despite having a church membership of over 450 enslaved Africans in 1791 and 3,000 by 1806, he together with his colleague George Baker began to correspond with the Baptist Missionary Society in England, as a means of developing the work in Jamaica, as it was under constant persecution from the Colonial Government and the established Anglican Church. At the forefront of standing up for the truth of the Gospel in pre-emancipation Jamaica, he died in 1828, but not before he had influenced many, such as the revolutionary Sam Sharpe and other Baptists involved in the 1831 'Baptist Wars' which proved to be the final death-knell for slavery. He also passed on the baton to Baptist missionaries from the UK - particularly his colleagues William Knibb and Thomas Burchell, who not only learned from him, but continued his work, and lived to see what he could only have hoped for - the abolition of slavery, the freeing of the enslaved, and the establishing of the then-largest mainline Christian denomination in Jamaica - the Baptist Church.[4]

Methodists and Presbyterians

[edit]

The Presbyterians and Methodists have made significant contributions to education.[1]

Moravians

[edit]

The Moravian Church was the first denomination that seriously undertook the teaching of Christianity to the slaves. In 1754 two wealthy plantation owners living in England invited the Moravians to send missionaries to their estates in Jamaica. They are still active today especially in the parishes of Manchester, Saint Elizabeth, and Westmoreland.

Roman Catholicism

[edit]

Introduced by Spanish settlers in 1509, Peter Matyr ordered the building of the first church in Sevilla Nueva {now known as Saint Ann's Bay and was completed in 1526 a monastery was set up by the request of the Spanish king in an effort to convert Arawaks. The effort to convert to the Arawaks failed as they rapidly died from disease. In 1655, a Protestant English force captured Jamaica and Roman Catholicism was removed until 1837.

Today Jamaica is organized as the Archdiocese of Kingston in Jamaica, which also includes Belize and the Cayman Islands.[5] Of the four suffragan dioceses, two, the dioceses of Mandeville and Montego Bay cover parts of Jamaica.[6][7]

Seventh day Adventists

[edit]

The story of the Seventh-day Adventists in Jamaica, is one of rapid growth and development over more than a century. In 1891, at the request of James Palmer of Kingston, the Tract Society (Seventh-day Adventist) in the United States of America mailed literature to Jamaica. He gave one to Mrs. Margaret Harrison who is said to be the first Adventist in Jamaica. Her plea to a General Conference session in Battle Creek, Michigan, resulted in the arrival of the first missionaries to the island, Pastor A J. Haysmer and his wife, on 26 May 1893.

The church was able to host a meeting of all workers in the West Indies from 5 to 15 November 1898 at Text Lane, in Kingston, Jamaica. By February 1899, there were six organized churches and 15 other congregations, with a total of 502 members and about 100 other Sabbath-keepers. The records show that by May 1902, this number had grown to 18 churches and 13 other congregations. At its 35th meeting in Oakland, California, in March 1903, the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists voted to receive the Jamaica Conference into the fellowship. Rapid church growth followed although ordained ministers were few, but the lay members shouldered much of the work.

In the building of the Seventh-day Adventist denomination, education and health were essential planks. With the work growing in Jamaica, the need for an Adventist school to train new converts as ministers and church workers for the region became apparent. In 1906, suitable land was acquired at Bog walk and then Riversdale, St. Catherine, for this venture, and the West Indian Training School was established. Its policy of work-study helped students to work while studying in order to assist with the cost of their education. In 1919, the school was relocated to its present home in Mandeville and later became the West Indies College, now Northern Caribbean University (NCU), with enrollment averaging over 5,000. The Union has grown to cover evangelistic, health, education and youth programs, involving 10 high schools, 22 elementary schools and numerous basic schools, in addition to the ever-expanding NCU.

In 1912, the Adventists opened the “Massage and Hydropathic Treatment Rooms” in Kingston. As demand for its services grew, there were calls for a hospital, and in 1945, the “Andrews Memorial Hospital and Missionary Clinic” was established. Along with the facility, a nursing school was started. Throughout its history the expansive of the work of the Jamaica Union Conference has been underpinned by the publishing ministry, with its army of faithful 'colporteur' door to door book selling evangelists.

At the 1936 Adventist worldwide General Conference session, Elder A.C. Stockhousen was moved to report: "Jamaica is one of the largest conferences of Seventh-day Adventists in the world.... Today there are 5,335 baptized believers...A more loyal and serious band of believers it would be hard to find anywhere."

Today, this continues to be true, and there are currently 5 local conference organizations in Jamaica, but now with 324,747 members (as of 30 June 2020).

Percentage of Jamaicans by religious affiliation

[edit]
Affiliation Percentage[8]
Church of God 24%
Seventh-day Adventist 12%
Pentecostalism 10%
Baptist 7%
Anglicanism 4%
Roman Catholicism 2%
Reformed 2%
Methodism 2%
Jehovah's Witnesses 2%
Moravian 1%
Brethren[which?] 1%
Christian total 99
No affiliation 21%
Other 10%
Unstated 6%
Total 100%

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b World Council of Churches (19 August 2008). "Jamaica". World Council of Churches. Archived from the original on 5 April 2012. Retrieved 17 July 2012.
  2. ^ Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands (18 July 2012). "Our History". Diocese of Jamaica and the Cayman Islands. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  3. ^ The Anglican Communion (2012). "Church in the Province of the West Indies". Provincial Directory. The Anglican Communion. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  4. ^ Doreen Morrison, Reaching for the Promised Land: The role of culture, issues of leadership and social stratification within British Caribbean Christianity, PhD Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2012, 47,53
  5. ^ Cheney, David M. (15 July 2012). "Kingston in Jamaica (Archdiocese)". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  6. ^ Cheney, David M. (3 December 2011). "Mandeville (Diocese)". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  7. ^ Cheney, David M. (3 December 2011). "Montego Bay (Diocese)". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  8. ^ U.S. Department of State (2008). "Jamaica". International Religious Freedom Report 2008. U.S. Department of State. Retrieved 17 July 2012.