Religious belief 'falling faster than church attendance' in Britain

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**Religious belief ‘falling faster than church attendance’
******By Matt Barnwell and Amy Iggulden
(Filed: 17/08/2005)

Organised religion is in near-terminal decline in Britain because parents have only a 50-50 chance of passing on belief to their offspring, a study claimed yesterday.

By contrast, parents without faith are successful in producing a new generation of non-believers, it said.

The report identified institutional religion as having a “half-life” of one generation, as children are only half as likely as their parents to say that it is important in their lives.

The generational decline is too advanced to reverse, the report suggested, as the proportion of people who believe in God is declining faster than church attendance.

Dr David Voas, who oversaw the study at the University of Manchester, said religion would reach “fairly low levels” before very long.

“The dip in religious belief is not temporary or accidental, it is a generational phenomenon - the decline has continued year on year,” he said. “The fact that children are only half as likely to believe as their parents indicates that, as a society, we are at an advanced stage of secularisation.”

The findings appear to contradict the commonly accepted theory that people “believe without belonging” - the idea that religious belief is robust even though churchgoing is in longer-term decline.

According to the survey, which was based on 14 years of data from 10,500 households, the importance of belief in God fell by 5.3 per cent to 32.5 per cent between 1991 and 1999.

This compared with a fall of 3.5 per cent in the proportion of people who attended church services over the same period and a 2.9 per cent decrease in the proportion who said they were affiliated to a particular religion.

The Church of England reacted with disbelief at the suggestion that faith was declining, and said that parental influence was not the only factor in preserving inter-generational belief.

“There is an assumption that people ‘catch’ religion from their parents, but many people come to faith through the grandparents, schools, and their friends,” said Steve Jenkins, a spokesman.

He said that the study had not released “proper evidence”.

“There is nothing to back up the claims, and our recent statistics show that congregations are actually increasing, as is the number of ordinations.” Last year 564 people were selected to become new clergy, the highest figure in six years. And congregations in 2003 had increased in size by 1 per cent.

But the National Secular Society, which has 3,000 paid-up members, welcomed the survey results.

“We find [belief] embarrassing as a country and it is time we accepted that,” said Terry Sanderson, the vice president. “People may say they believe in Christianity but if you question them even slightly it becomes clear that they cannot accept the central tenets of its faith - they don’t believe in its supernatural explanations.”

The study, which used figures from the British Household Panel and British Social Attitudes surveys, found that parents had the greatest influence on children’s beliefs, and that although a child with only one religious parent was half as likely to inherit their faith as a child with two religious parents, the decline could be slowed by the fact that religious parents tended to have more children.

The study also found generational decline evident throughout the Islamic and Jewish faiths, but from a much higher starting point.

news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/08/17/nrelig17.xml
 
Pray that this is the winter, for it may just be a spring time revival may come to be. If there is one thing that Christ knows how to do that is how to raise Himself up from the dead. Don’t lose faith, keep praying.
 
I honestly don’t know how so many will ever believe in and worship God, when so many believe He is dead. But I will keep praying though, what else can we do?
 
Well the study is clearly correct, altough there are probably a few rogues. Church attendance in Britain has done nothing but drop recently, however I did find the fact that alot of people (about 65 youths) are still being confirmed a year at my church very strange, its almost like people want to be catholic, but cant be bothered going to church. I would also say that the different religion parents influencing their kids depends on how strict they are. I was always made to go to church as a child by my mum, but now I choose to, this is something I sort of resent and appreciate. I feel a bit sorry for Cardinal Murphy O’Connor, because realistically what can one do to try and boost church attendance in a changing world?
 
I believe that the BBC and various major newspapers recently reported on a large survey that showed that “Traditional Christianity” (i.e. Anglicanism and Catholicism) was decreasing whereas the Pentacostals/Black Churches were increasing. However, the Orthodox Church seemed the one bucking the trend and was reported as being the only “traditional” Church to be experiencing growth. Granted, much of this is probably due to the immigrants but from my understanding, many people are swimming the Bosphorus so to speak.

I think what can be concluded is that people are on the whole losing interest in the “liberal” brand of Christianity and are looking to more consevative churches (e.g. Pentacostals may not be “traditionalist” in the dogma sense, but are consevative in the general sense). In respect of the Orthodox Church, I think the conversions are from people who have explored Church history and concluded that their home is with the OC.

In respect of Catholicism, I think that with a more “traditional” leadership, it may stop its flock leaving.

Anton
 
My plans are to move to Britain and become a priest. Perhaps I will be able to do something about it from within.
 
Servus Pio XII:
My plans are to move to Britain and become a priest. Perhaps I will be able to do something about it from within.
Well I hope all the best for you, and you will need all the blessings you can get for such an uphill endeavor.

So you better not stop praying those rosaries.:gopray2:
 
My plans are to move to Britain and become a priest. Perhaps I will be able to do something about it from within.
Nice plan, sometimes I think the same, but am unsure. Hate to have to say it, but it probably wont make much of a difference, we have some really nice clergy members and bishops, but even they cant solve the problem. However, we also have a shortage of priests, and are beginning toaccept them from developing countries, so if you were to move here, promotion would probably be quick… 🙂

Also I just noticed we were born on the same day!!! 👍
 
Maybe this will be the legacy that Benedict leaves behind, making as big a contribution to the renewed spirituality in Britain and Europe and JP II did in eliminating the oppression of communism. In a way, seems like a phase in Europe to me:
  1. Nazism grows in Europe - oppression
  2. World War II - oppression
  3. Yalta/Communism - oppression
  4. 1989 fall of Communism - freedom!
These societies have embraced freedom after so many years (Europe in general not so much Britain although it’s part of their continent), they are immersed in the secular instead of realizing that freedom comes from truth, and the truth the the Word of God defines the purpose of life on earth. So I agree, maybe this is a 30-40 year phase which will return to spirituality, just like the return from communism. Let’s not give up!!
 
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