• 19 percent of Botswana Christians: believe in salvation through
Jesus Christ, attend church regularly, study the Bible, invest in personal faith development through a church community, accept church leadership positions, and believe they are obligated to
evangelize to others. • 20 percent are Professing Christians
. These persons are also committed to "accepting Christ as Savior and Lord" with an emphasis on personal spirituality over organized religion. • 24 percent are
Liturgical Christians
, predominantly
Lutheran and
Roman Catholic. They are regular churchgoers, exhibit a high level of spiritual activity, and recognize the authority of the church. • 16 percent are Private Christians
. They own a Bible, but rarely read it. Only about one-third attend church. They believe in God and good works, but not necessarily within a church context. This was the largest and youngest segment. Almost none are church leaders. • 21 percent are
Cultural Christians
. They identify as Christians, yet they do not view
Jesus as essential to salvation, exhibiting minimal religious behaviors and attitudes favoring a
universality theology.
Conversion A study from 2015 estimated that about 100
Botswana Muslims convert to Christianity each year, most of whom belong to an evangelical or Pentecostal community. It has been reported that conversion into Christianity is significantly increasing among East
Asians. == Education ==