About Me

My photo
I have a burning need to know stuff and I love asking awkward questions.

Thursday, January 01, 2009

Church attendance 'to fall by 90%'

Jamie Doward for The Observer

21 December 2008

In one of the most holy weeks in the Christian calendar, a report says that in just over a generation the number of people attending Church of England Sunday services will fall to less than a tenth of what they are now. Christian Research, the statistical arm of the Bible Society, claimed that by 2050 Sunday attendance will fall below 88,000, compared with just under a million now.

The controversial forecast, based on a "snapshot" census of church attendances, has been seized upon by secular groups as proof that the established church is in decline. But the Church of England has rejected the figures, saying they were incomplete and ignored new ways of worshipping outside the church network. According to Dr Peter Brierley, former executive director of Christian Research, by 2030 just under 419,000 people will attend an Anglican Sunday service. By 2040 the number will be down to 217,200, falling to 153,800 five years later. By 2050, if the trend prediction is correct, only 87,800 will be attending. The figures stand in contrast to the picture of faith described by the prime minister earlier this month. In a preface to a new report, Faith in the Nation, Gordon Brown said: "Faith in Britain today is very much alive and well. At the last census, more than three-quarters of the population said they belonged to a faith ... people's religious identities go right to the heart of their sense of themselves and their place in society and the world."

Keith Porteous-Wood of the National Secular Society said: "Church attendance has already been in decline for over 60 years, all over Britain, in all major denominations and across all age groups, except the over-65s. Independent statisticians now have enough data to predict confidently that the decline will continue until Christianity becomes a minority sect of largely elderly people, in little more than a generation." The forecast was made by Christian Research in its annual statistical publication, Religious Trends. Benita Hewitt, the organisation's new executive director, said she accepted that the figures were disputed and stressed she did not believe they showed people were turning away from religion. "As with all forecasting, we are living in rapidly changing times at the moment and it is very difficult to predict what things will look like in the coming years," she said.

The Reverend Lynda Barley, head of research and statistics for the Archbishops' Council, said the figures represented only a "partial picture" of religious trends, adding: "Church life has significantly diversified so these traditional statistics are less and less meaningful in isolation." Studies suggest figures for Sunday attendance represent only 58 per cent of the number of people who attend in an average month. Attendance at Church of England cathedral services has been growing , while church groups have attracted new congregations by holding meetings in venues such as pubs or at car boot sales.

[Whilst somewhat less than definitive this report does seem to indicate that religious observance within the UK is in terminal decline – no matter what others inside and outside the church claim. I wonder if there will be a time in the not too distant future when people will only know about Christianity (or maybe even religion in general) through the study of history.]

8 comments:

wstachour said...

I'm skeptical, but hopeful, that this prediction will come true. I think we haven't really come to grips with what it is in the human psyche that needs and invents these mythologies almost universally; and without a scientific grasp of this, we are likely to continue to be at the mercy of this anti-rational part of our collective brain.

Education seems to scrub off the ghost film, so concentration on effective schools is a good place to start.

OldLady Of The Hills said...

Interesting! I have never quite understood the wholesale belief in "The Bible"....and that probably sounds blasphemous...lol!
I think religion ruins more people than Drugs!

HAPPY HAPPY NEW YEAR, dear CK!

dbackdad said...

While not as drastic as the UK, attendance has even dropped over here -- "From 1992 to 2003, average attendance at a typical church service has dropped by 13% whereas the population of America has increased by 9% ..." -- from Trends among Christians in the U.S..

Our society definitely seems to be less parochial. Previous generations would grow up in a certain area, only get news from that area, and would overwhelmingly follow whatever their parents did. Cable TV, the internet, more news sources, etc. have changed that. Hopefully, each succeeding generation breeds out more and more racism and mysticism.

Thomas Fummo said...

and THIS is also why I wanna move to Britain :-D
Italy's gonna end up as the backward little third-world country where other countries send aid and stuff.

CyberKitten said...

wunelle said: I'm skeptical, but hopeful, that this prediction will come true.

Ditto

wunelle said: I think we haven't really come to grips with what it is in the human psyche that needs and invents these mythologies almost universally..

I'm not so sure that its a 'need' in the same way that we need food, water and sex. It definitely needs understanding though. As you rightly say without understanding the phenomena of religion we will never be totally immune from it.

Naomi said: I have never quite understood the wholesale belief in "The Bible"....

It *totally* confounds me too.

naomi said: and that probably sounds blasphemous...lol!

I'm sure if He does exist he'll forgive you [grin]

naomi said: HAPPY HAPPY NEW YEAR, dear CK!

Thanks. Here's hoping for a good 2009.

dbackdad said: Cable TV, the internet, more news sources, etc. have changed that. Hopefully, each succeeding generation breeds out more and more racism and mysticism.

We can certainly hope so! The Internet gets blamed for a lot of things but it just might ulitmately be responsible for a more reasonable cosmopolitan humanity. Now *there's* a hope!

TF said: and THIS is also why I wanna move to Britain :-D

Well, we are one of the most Secular countries in the world - despite the best efforts of some.... [laughs]

TF said: Italy's gonna end up as the backward little third-world country where other countries send aid and stuff.

Everything can change. Even Italy!

Sadie Lou said...

Don't you guys think enough time has gone by that IF humans were moving in a more positive direction, we would have seen a leaning towards embracing diversity by now?
In my opinion, we are more polarized than we have ever have been before.
Tolerance for individuals that are different than us has decreased. It is evident even in this small sampling of blog comments. I would say church attendance is down because accountability is down.
:)
~Sadie

CyberKitten said...

Sadie said: Don't you guys think enough time has gone by that IF humans were moving in a more positive direction, we would have seen a leaning towards embracing diversity by now?

That would depend what you mean by 'diversity' in this context. Do you mean that as societies progress (if in fact they do) that they are more tollerant to *any* belief system? Personally I would imagine that they would encourage out-dated belief systems to pass into history.

Sadie said: In my opinion, we are more polarized than we have ever have been before.

If two opposing belief systems are both making strong truth claims its hardly surprising that polarisation takes place - there may be *some* middle ground between the two positions but that ground will be the most contested of all of them.. so not exactly a safe place to be!

Sadie said: Tolerance for individuals that are different than us has decreased.

I think in many ways it has increased. In the US just look at the election of the first black President. Around the Western world there is an increased acceptence of Gay relationships. Both I think are positive signs.

Sadie said: I would say church attendance is down because accountability is down.

'Accountability'? Whose accountability & to what? I don't understand what you mean.

Oh... Good to have you debating here. I've missed your voice on my Blog.

Sadie Lou said...

"I think in many ways it has increased. In the US just look at the election of the first black President. Around the Western world there is an increased acceptence of Gay relationships. Both I think are positive signs."

ooo--gotcha!
The first Black Prez is also against gay marriage ( a mortal sin for gay rights activists) and gay marriage was voted down again all over the place including liberalville--California
(if you will remember previous blog posts of mine, I'm sure you know which way I voted--it's not what people would think)

Anyhoo, I meant accountability for Christians.
Church attendance *might* be down due to a lack of what I like to call "serious" Christians.
The polls are wrong--most of the people in the West who call themselves Christians--are NOT.
A christian, by definition, is someone who follows (and on a more serious note) obeys Christ and his Word.
Not going to church is "forsaking the fellowship"
In the words of both Frodo & Jesus.
:)