While Protestant sects have contributed greatly to the state's history and
development, more than half the state's population is Roman Catholic, a fact
that has had a profound effect on Massachusetts politics and policies.
Both the Pilgrims, who landed on Plymouth Rock in 1620, and the Puritans, who
formed the Massachusetts Bay Company in 1629, came to the land to escape
harassment by the Church of England. These early communities were based on
strict religious principles and forbade the practice of differing religions.
Religious tolerance was included in the Charter of 1692, to protect the
Baptists, Anglicans, and Catholics who had by then arrived in the colony.
The major influx of Roman Catholics came in the 1840s with the arrival of the
Irish in Boston. By the 1850s, they had migrated to other towns and cities and
formed the backbone of the state's industrial workforce. Later migration by
Italian Catholics, German Catholics, and Eastern European Jews turned the state,
by 1900, into a melting pot of religions and nationalities, although many of
these minorities did not win substantial acceptance from the Protestant elite
until the World War II era.
As of 2000, there were 3,092,296 Roman Catholics in Massachusetts,
representing nearly half of the total population. The largest Protestant
denominations were: the United Church of Christ, 121,826 adherents; the
Episcopal Church, 98,963; the American Baptists (USA), 52,716,156; and the
United Methodist Church, 64,028. The 2nd-largest religious affiliation is
Judaism, with about 275,000 adherents in 2000. The Muslim population the same
year was about 41,497 people. Though membership numbers were not available,
reports noted that there were about 57 Buddhist congregations and 20 Hindu
congregations throughout the state. About 35% of the population were not counted
as members of any religious organization.
Although small, the Church of Christ, Scientist, is significant to
Massachusetts's history. Its first house of worship was founded in 1879 in
Boston by Mary Baker Eddy, who four years earlier had published the Christian
Science textbook Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. In
Boston, the church continues to publish an influential newspaper, the
Christian Science Monitor.
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