Bahá'í Faith is second most prevalent religion in South  Carolina
Melissa Rollins ("SC Now," July 19, 2014) 
Florence, S.C. — Because South Carolina is tucked firmly in the Bible Belt, 
 it should come as no surprise that the main religion in the state is  
Christianity. However, results from a study by the Association of Statisticians 
 
of American Religious Bodies on the second most prevalent religion in the 
50  states might make surprise some South Carolinians. 
Islam, Judaism and Buddhism were the religions that registered the highest 
in  49 states. South Carolina was the solitary state whose second largest 
religion  is the Bahá'í Faith, a monotheistic religion founded in 1844 in 
Iran. 
Florence seems to have a church on every corner, but is there a Bahá'í  
congregation? As a matter of fact, there is. 
Three members recently sat down with the Morning News to share what their  
faith entails and how they came to be a part of it. 
Annette Reynolds has been a Bahá'í since the 1970s. She first encountered 
the  ideas of the faith while leading a 4-H group. 
“I was leading the group right after South Carolina integrated, so we had  
blacks and whites in the group,” Reynolds said. “Still, blacks would sit at 
one  table and whites at the other, except one little white girl. She could 
sit with  both. She told me it was because she was Bahá'í.” 
Reynolds said that she later talked with the girl’s parents and asked what  
Bahá'í was. What she remembers most from that conversation is the fact that 
they  treated her like their equal. 
“That was the first time I had talked with white people and they didn’t 
seem  to think I was inferior,” Reynolds said. “Even when I worked with 
well-meaning  Christian people who were white, they all acted like I was 
inferior. At the  point it became a matter of what do I do, not do I believe. 
If 
these people have  been change this much by this, what do I do to be a part of 
it.” 
Followers of the Bahá'í Faith believe that world peace is achievable by  
having equality for all races and genders, universal education and unity, 
among  other things. 
One of the main beliefs of the faith is Progressive Revelation. That idea  
states that the great teachers of all major religions throughout history 
point  to the same God. The teachings of the Bible and the Quran, as well as 
holy  writings from Hinduism and Buddhism, are considered sacred texts 
alongside the  writings of Baha'u'llah, the founder of the Bahá'í Faith. 
“We believe that all of humanity’s religious heritages belong to them,” 
said  Dr. Louis Venters, a history professor at Francis Marion University and 
a  Bahá'í. “We don’t put anyone in the position of having to choose on  
manifestation or the other; we chose them all. We believe that God gave  
revelation to all of these teachers at different times.” 
Venters has written about the religion’s roots in South Carolina in his 
book  “Most Great Reconstruction: The Bahá'í Faith in Jim Crow South Carolina,  
1898-1965.” He said the faith has been here for roughly 100 years, and 
there are  several notable members from South Carolina’s past, including jazz 
trumpet  player Dizzy Gillespie from Cheraw. 
According to member Nancy Thomas, the Bahá'í Faith is decentralized, with 
no  pastors or clerical hierarchy. 
“This religion is very grassroots,” Thomas said. “There are leaders for 
the  body, but they are voted on by everyone. There are no priests or anything 
like  that. We are all lay people.” 
Venters and Thomas said that while they embrace many religions, differences 
 often are the result of interpretation. 
For example, while some Christian teaching purports that heaven and hell 
are  literal places in the afterlife, Bahá'í s believe that they are best used 
to  describe proximity to God. Sin is anything that works against world 
unity and  peace. 
Another difference for the Bahá'í s is when they meet, which is based on  
their calendar. Instead of a following the typical Gregorian calendar, Bahá'í 
s  follow a 19-month calendar, with 19 days in each month. One the first 
day of  each month, they meet for a feast that includes a time of devotional, 
a business  meeting and fellowship. 
The group in Florence meets in the homes of its members, instead of in a  
central building location. Venters said that there are several dozen members  
that are active participants. There is also a Bahá'í radio station 
broadcast out  of Hemingway. Listeners can tune in at 90.9 FM

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