Data source: Gina A. Zurlo, ed., World Religion Database (Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2024).
Glossary item | Definition |
---|---|
Shaivites | Worshippers of Shiva (Siva) in several schools, including Pasupata, Kashmiri, Siddha, Gorakhnatha, Vira; also diversity according to geographic location in India. |
shakubuku | (Japanese). The aggressive-conversion process practiced by the New Religious movement, Soka Gakkai. |
shaman | A priest-doctor who uses magic to cure the sick, to divine the hidden, and to control events that affect people’s welfare. |
shamanists | Ethnoreligionists with a hierarchy of shamans and healers. |
sharia | (Arabic). Islamic law. |
sheik, sheikh | Muslim religious leader or cleric or scholar; an Arab chief. |
Shias | (Shi’is). Followers of the smaller of the 2 great divisions of Islam, rejecting the Sunna and holding that Mohammed’s son-in-law Ali was the Prophet’s successor and itself divided into the Ithna-Ashari Ismaili, Alawite and Zaydi sects. |
Shintoists | Followers of the indigenous religion of Japan, a collective of native beliefs and mythology dating back to 660 BCE and includes worship at public shrines in devotion to a number of gods. |
Sikhs | Followers of the Sikhism, founded by Guru Nanak in the 15th century in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent. Traditions include Akali, Khalsa, Nanapanthi, Nirmali, Sewapanthi, and Udasi. |
skeptic | (skeptic). An unbeliever, agnostic. |
skepticism | The doctrine that any true knowledge is impossible or that all knowledge is uncertain especially in matters of religion; agnosticism. |
slumdwellers | Persons residing in make-shift dwellings on the streets of the world’s cities. |
sociolect | An idiom or dialect differing from a standard only in pronunciation, accent, or special vocabulary. |
sociology of religion | The study of religion from the standpoint of the science of society, social institutions, and social relationships. |
sociopeople | A people or population group defined primarily by some sociological category such as class, caste, occupation, age, abode, for which a specific evangelistic strategy may be developed; sometimes regarded as a bridge people useful for initiating evangelism. |
sorcerer | A person who practices sorcery; a wizard, magician. |
sorcery | The use of power gained from the assistance or control of evil spirits, especially for divining; necromancy, wizardry, black magic. |
source_type | Source of the data, such as Census, Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), Afrobarometer Surveys, Pew Global Attitude Surveys (PGAP), World Values Surveys (WVS). |
Southern Buddhism | Theravada or Hinayana (qv). |
sovereign country | A nation, being an autonomous independent country free of external control. |
speakers | Users of a language capable of conversing in it. |
spirit writing | Automatic writing held to be produced under the action of spirits; pneumatography. |
Spirit, Spiritual | Adjectives widely used among African indigenous churches and in their official names, referring to the element of their control by the Holy Spirit. |
spiritism | Belief in the action or agency of spirits of the dead producing mediumistic phenomena. See high spiritism, low spiritism. |
Spiritists | Non-Christian spiritists or spiritualists, or thaumaturgicalists; high spiritists, as opposed to low spiritists (Afro-American syncretists), followers of medium-religions, medium-religionists. |
Data on 18 categories of religion, including non-religious, by country, province, and people.
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Membership data, year begun, and rates of change.
Population and religion data on all major cities & provinces.
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