Denmark
Highly secular Lutheran heritage — most Danes are members of the Folkekirken but rarely practice; small evangelical and Free Church minorities; growing immigrant Muslim community.
Localized version for English
Denmark is religiously mixed and largely secular as a country. The dominant religious context is: Highly secular Lutheran heritage — most Danes are members of the Folkekirken but rarely practice; small evangelical and Free Church minorities; growing immigrant Muslim community.
Denmark is largely secular as a national culture, and the deconstructions happening here are concentrated in specific sub-communities rather than the country as a whole. Pick the pillar page that fits the specific tradition you grew up in — Catholic, evangelical, Pentecostal, JW, Orthodox Jewish, or Muslim — the broader country context is comparatively forgiving.
Leaving organized religion in Denmark is, for most people, a private and largely social affair. The wider culture is secular enough that being non-religious is unremarkable, and the cost is mostly inside the immediate family rather than across the community.
City coverage in Denmark
Copenhagen
1.2M
Århus
238K
Odense
146K
Aalborg
122K
Frederiksberg
95K
Esbjerg
72K
Horsens
59K
Randers
56K
Kolding
55K
Vejle
51K
Hvidovre
49K
Greve
48K
Herning
45K
Roskilde
44K
Silkeborg
42K
Næstved
41K
Charlottenlund
40K
Ballerup
40K
Vanløse
37K
Fredericia
37K
Hørsholm
37K
Helsingør
35K
Viborg
35K
Køge
34K
Holstebro
32K
Slagelse
32K
Taastrup
31K
Hillerød
31K
Rødovre
30K
Albertslund
30K
Svendborg
28K
Sønderborg
27K
Hjørring
25K
Holbæk
25K
Frederikshavn
24K
Nørresundby
22K
Haderslev
21K
Skive
21K
Glostrup
21K
Ringsted
20K
Stenløse
20K
Ishøj
19K
Birkerød
19K
Farum
18K
Nykøbing Falster
17K
Aabenraa
16K
Kalundborg
16K
Nyborg
16K
Lillerød
15K
Korsør
15K
Solrød Strand
15K
Ikast
15K
Frederikssund
15K
Grenaa
14K
Nakskov
14K
Rønne
14K
Middelfart
14K
Skanderborg
14K
Vallensbæk
14K
Værløse
13K