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A Welcome Return to Religion as Attendance Swells in Britain's Churches

Michael Ireland | ASSIST News Service | Updated: Dec 03, 2012

A Welcome Return to Religion as Attendance Swells in Britain's Churches

ISLINGTON, LONDON, UK (ANS) -- Church attendances in the United Kingdom, in freefall for so long, have started to rise again, particularly in Britain’s capital city.

Numbers on the electoral rolls are increasing by well over two per cent every year, while some churches have seen truly dramatic rises in numbers, according to Peter Oborne, writing for the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

Oborne says change is afoot in Britain’s churches. He says that with the chill wind of austerity blowing through the country, religion’s warm embrace looks more and more inviting. Oborne welcomes the resurgence of a national pastime: churchgoing.

Oborne writes that for many years it was accepted that Christianity was all but dead, an anachronistic relic of the past whose foundations had been destroyed by modern science and rationalism, before being left behind by the cultural and sexual revolution of the '60s.

“The figures seem to bear this out,” Oborne writes. “Church attendance -- which stood at around 50 percent in the middle of the 19th century -- had declined to around 12 percent in 1979, or 5.4 million.

“By 1998 it had almost halved to 7.5 percent and when the most recent census was conducted in 2005, it was discovered that only 6.3 percent of the population, some 3.2 million, were regular churchgoers.

“The number of people calling themselves members of the Church of England has collapsed to 20 percent, according to the latest British Social Attitudes Survey, down from 40 percent as recently as 1983. More than half of all Britons, according to British Social Attitudes, say they have ‘no religion’ and never attend a religious service.”

Despondent churchmen judged that there were just too many alternative attractions -- Sunday shopping, sports fixtures and the relentless secularism of modern Britain. Only Islam, fueled by immigration and more disciplined and certain faith, appeared to be growing, Oborne says.

But, as St. Mary’s Upper Street in the heart of London’s secular, left-wing Islington shows, there is still that yearning for faith, he writes.

Over the last 12 months, attendance at the main Sunday service at the church (where Oborne’s wife Martine is curate) has risen by nearly 20 percent, from around 95 to 115.

“Though much of this is down to vicar Simon Harvey’s hard work and charisma, the growing popularity of St Mary’s is part of a much wider and very striking phenomenon,” Oborne says.

“Indeed, as the second decade of the 21st century gets under way, there is surely a change of public mood. There have been many wonderful things about the last half-century, but it is impossible to deny that it has been an era of materialism and selfishness. The religious impulse has not quite vanished, but the teachings of the church have been mocked and suppressed. It may be that in an age of austerity, we are collectively coming back to the profound and ancient verities of the gospels.”

Oborne asked Simon Harvey the secret of his success. A cheerful priest in his mid-forties, he makes no grand pronouncements -- just stresses the importance of being friendly: “This church is massive and it can appear a bit terrifying to local people. For many people, the threshold is the hardest place to cross. We need to get them through the door.” And once inside, Harvey concentrates on making people feel wanted: “Sometimes within hours of coming through the door, they are sitting down for lunch in the vicarage.”

Harvey, who was a minister in Leicester for many years before moving to London, also stresses the importance of being a full-time vicar: “In London, every parish has a church and a minister, whereas in other parts of the country, clergy can cover eight to 12 churches. You’ve got to have a relationship with the minister, you’ve got to have somebody out there in the front of the church.”

St. Mary’s is doing something rather special, says Oborne.

“Islington, so often caricatured as the headquarters of the politically correct, is actually a very divided community. Over the last three decades, bankers and barristers have colonized its beautiful Georgian squares and terraces, sending house prices sky high. But the traditional London working class still live in the borough, battling to stay afloat and often isolated or ignored. These two groups very rarely come together -- but they do so at St. Mary's, which provides the model of a church which grows by building up its links with the local community.”

But there are many other ways of spreading the faith in London, says Oborne. He cites the example of ChristChurch London, whose attendance has soared to an amazing 600 in the seven years since it was founded over a lunch at the Strand Palace Hotel in 2004.

“We couldn’t afford a church building,” remembers the pastor, David Stroud. At first his church met at the New Connaught Rooms in Covent Garden. When the experiment proved successful, ChristChurch sought something larger and now holds services at 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Sundays at the Mermaid Theatre. The evangelical mission is enhanced by prayer groups that meet in homes, coffee shops and restaurants across the capital.

Oborne says ChristChurch may not be a local church, but it nevertheless seeks to develop a community -- mainly students and young professionals, many of whom have recently moved to London. It calls itself non-denominational. “From a sociological point of view,” said Stroud, “the attraction is a longing for community and a search for meaning. We preach an orthodox Christian message. Do that well and you have to lock the doors to keep them out.”

Oborne writes that even more phenomenal growth is being seen in the Pentecostal churches springing up on the suburbs of Britain’s biggest cities, and attracting vast congregations of immigrants from African countries such as Ghana and Nigeria. These Pentecostal churches meet a vast yearning for spirituality and cater to congregations of 10,000 or more. Recently, the Redeemed Church of God reportedly attracted an incredible 40,000-strong congregation for an all-night prayer meeting at London’s ExCel center.

Oborne states that Hillsong, a Pentecostal “megachurch” founded in Australia, attracts a global congregation in London and has seen its membership rise from 200 to more than 10,000 in 12 years. As with other growing churches, it is about more than Sunday worship. As its website announces: “We meet during the week in small informal groups, known as Connect Groups, we serve our local communities together, some people go to evening college to learn more about the God’s word, we socialize together, we do life together ...”

This freelance exuberance has spread into Britain’s cathedrals too, says Oborne. According to Lynda Barley, the head of research at the Archbishops’ Council, attendance at Britain’s 43 cathedrals rose by seven percent last year, with 15,800 adults and more than 3,000 children attending Sunday service. More than 1.7 million attend Church of England services in the average month.

Oborne says: “This figure could be larger, but it is still enormous, far more than the number who attend football matches, often assumed to be Britain’s favorite weekend activity. But church people tend not to be as newsworthy as footballers. Their Christian values stand at an angle to the brash, thrill-seeking, instant consumer culture that has become dominant in Britain over the last half-century.

“These eternal values do not simply make themselves known through attendance at Sunday services. Churches are today finding all kinds of new ways of connecting with the local community.”

The National Trust chairman Sir Simon Jenkins has tellingly observed: “As neighborhood facilities such as the post office, the shop, the pub, the surgery, the police house, the branch library and the village school disappear, it is ironic that the one ubiquitous beacon of local community in a secular society is one that has stood since the Middle Ages, the church steeple.”

Oborne states that more than 1.5 million people now use their churches as a base for voluntary work, according to the National Churches Trust. In Islington, for example, a group of churches provide night shelters for the homeless during the winter months.

Jacqui Mair, a civil servant, marshals an army of volunteers (sometimes including Oborne) who provide dinner, breakfast and a comfortable night’s sleep for the men and women who come in for a night of sanctuary.

“This means that churches are starting to regain some of the social function they enjoyed in the Middle Ages. During the last century churches tended to be regarded as hushed and sacred places, but they are starting to use their amazing cultural heritage to stretch the Christian message,” Oborne writes.

Oborne also cites as an example the Rev. Rob Gillion, rector of Holy Trinity, Sloane Square, and also of St. Saviour’s Church, Walton Place, which lies tucked behind the famous Harrods Department Store.

Oborne says Gillion was an actor for 14 years before being called to the church.

Since then, Oborne writes, Gillion has invited young people from inner-city London to take part in drama workshops at St Saviour’s (where the “Intermission” theater is based), culminating in the staging of a play. Gillion calls his a “theater church,” which he compares to “a sanctuary for wild birds.” People come when they are wounded and need help – “hopefully we will build them up, heal them, and help them fly.”

The Rev. Paul Turp at St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch (who it is now known, emerged last year as the inspiration for "Rev," the Bafta-winning BBC sitcom), also takes pleasure in breaking the rules, Oborne reports.

Turp insists that people come first and foremost to his church in order to experience holiness and that his job is to “respond to the spiritual needs of the congregation. I try and do what Jesus did, because I think he was really rather good at it.” Completely unstuffy, Turp tells his congregation to “come as you are” and has no hesitation in using his famous church for theater and music schools, concerts and plays.

The picture outside London is not quite as rosy, but the dramatic decline in church attendance over the last few decades has nevertheless slowed, Orborne says. The same applies in the Roman Catholic Church -- in 2008, some 918,000 attended Mass, a slight increase on the figure of 915,000 the year before. Similarly, the Baptist Union saw a small increase in attendance during the last decade.

Oborne goes on to say that in The Death of Christian Britain, the sociologist Scot Callum Brown argues that the collapse of churchgoing in Britain was very sudden. “In unprecedented numbers, the British people since the '60s have stopped going to church ... have stopped marrying in church and have neglected to baptize their children.”

Oborne says the book was written in 2003, and there is every reason to accept that his somber conclusion was true for the time.

“But something has changed,” Oborne says. Giles Fraser, who famously resigned as the Canon of St Paul’s last autumn in a complaint against the treatment by the church authorities of the Occupy protesters, argues that a hunger for spirituality and meaning lies behind the recent rise in church attendances.

“The underlying soundness of the church will always tell,” says Fraser. “There will always be a hunger in people for more than shopping. The Church does not have to be trendy to meet that need.”

When church attendances began to plummet in the 60s, says Fraser, “the only value people were prepared to accept was freedom. That became the trump card that was always played, the only way of looking at the world. The Church is good at articulating other values -- the community rather than the individual.”

James Jones, Bishop of Liverpool, agreed: “I’m firmly of the view there’s a spiritual impulse in everybody. But this impulse is episodic. For instance at times of bereavement or trouble, people open up and become more sensitive to the Christian faith. I believe the same happens with society. When the material world gets knocked people are forced to think again and that’s when Christianity does have something important to say. People are aware there’s a big shift in society coming along, even though they might not understand it. So I’m not surprised that the ground is now more fertile for the spread of the Christian message.”

A sentiment with which Simon Harvey, surplice waving outside St. Mary’s Upper Street in the former Socialist Republic of Islington, wholeheartedly concurs, says Oborne.

Looking out at the shoppers on Upper Street going about their business, Harvey says: “Every bar, retailer and coffee shop out there knows its clientele. But the church is there for everybody.”

Michael Ireland is the senior international correspondent for ANS. He is an international British freelance journalist who was formerly a reporter with a London (United Kingdom) newspaper and has been a frequent contributor to UCB UK, a British Christian radio station.

Publication date: January 4, 2012

A Welcome Return to Religion as Attendance Swells in Britain's Churches