Perhaps what I wrote wasn't clear. I suggested that new immigrants are more likely than others to have a religion.…
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Dear Mette Thanks very much for your observation, which I have posted online. Unfortunately, we have had no national censuses…
Net migration to the UK has added at least two million people over the past decade, most of whom will…
I have read a 10 year old article about the positive effect of immigrant communities on Church attendance in the…
Eddie You can email them to c.d.field@bham.ac.uk Best wishes. Clive
Recent Comments
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4 responses to “Church Attendance in England, 2005”
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[…] A.-L. Zwilling le 22 septembre 2010 Siobhan McAndrew a posté il y a quelques jours, sur le blog British religion in numbers, un petit article récapitulatif des questions que soulève la mesure de l’assistance […]
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Adrian Dexter
thank you for your report it was very helpful and interesting.
most of my insights into church attendance have been based upon the Brierly Report of 2001, so it is good to get some up to date information.
Brierly,in his report stated that South Yorkhire was to County with the lowest church attendance in the UK, at 4.5%. i am not too sure whether your figures are calculated County by County or my some other measure? i would be interested to know the details.
in your report you state ” The ‘bottom ten’ range from 3.6% in South Holland in Lincolnshire, followed by Kirklees, Wychavon (Worcs.), Telford and Wrekin, Doncaster, Fenland, Ashfield (Notts.), Bolsover (Derbyshire), Rotherham (S. Yorks), and North East Lincolnshire, which pulls up the rear at 2.6%. I don’t know enough about these areas to suggest why; some may host high proportions of non-Christians.”
I would be interested if you could send me the Sources for your comments above, as i am unable to locate them on the links given.
i am a Christian and a resident in Rotherham and believe that two contributing factors have led to the low Church attendance in this area. Firstly is because of a high mixture of cultures in Rotherham. (according to the 2001 cenus 96.06% are white – but later research places Ethinic Minorities at 7.5%).
However, for me the major factor for a lack of Church attendance is the Social demographic of the White population. Rotherham ranks high in social depravation, and the Church has in recent years took on a middle-class feel to it. For many, christianity is not a “working man’s religion” and for a strong working class community such as Rotherham, the way the Church portrays itself is often irrelevant to those it seeks to influence.
a hundred Years ago it was a different story, the Pentecostal churches in South Yorkshire connected strongly amongst this social group offering a sense of hope and purpose to the Miners and Steelworkers. And a hundred years before that, the methodist church made significant advances amongst the same communities. to this day there are over 20 methodist churches in the borough and at least 7 pentecostal churches.
The men of Yorkshire have a world-wide reputation of being “hard” men, and unless the Church can adapt its approach, or regain the approach it had 100 years ago, it will probably continue to be an irrelevance to the wideer community.
one last point. South Yorkshire has always had a sense of strong community matched by a sense of strong competition. the loyalty levels are very high but when trust is broken, finding forgiveness is almost impossible. i have heard of families who will not speak to certain members of their family because of decisions made 20 years ago.
there is a sense of suspicion and a sense of division across the borough, and that people are very parochial. and to a certain degree in the past, the church has too reflected that same attitude between churches. this is an issue that the Church is only now starting to address.
whilst we would always like to find someone else to blame for the churces decline. we have to admit that the blame lies solely at the door of the church.
the future of the church will depend on its ability to communicate its unchanging message effectively to a changing world.
Adrian Dexter
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[…] little over 6% of the UK’s population attending Church, it would be unrealistic to deny the profound impact that religion – particularly Christianity […]
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