Counting Religion in Britain, November 2024

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 110, November 2024 features nine short articles on fourteen new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link No 110 November 2024

OPINION POLLS

  • Crisis in the Church of England: resignation of the Archbishop of Canterbury
  • Assisted dying Bill: polling of British public by Focaldata and More in Common
  • Belief in an afterlife, a nation divided into thirds: More in Common poll
  • Ipsos Veracity Index, 2024: trust in professions and groups to tell the truth

FAITH ORGANIZATION STUDIES

  • Participation of ethnic minorities in Church of England ministry and leadership
  • Ethnic diaspora congregations in Scotland: Brendan Research report
  • Provision of religious education in primary schools in England and Wales
  • Intolerance and discrimination against Christians in Europe

PEOPLE NEWS

  • Profile of Fiona Tweedie, church statistician

Please note: Counting Religion in Britain is © Clive D. Field, 2024

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Counting Religion in Britain, July 2024

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 106, July 2024 features ten short articles on new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link No 106 July 2024

OPINION POLLS

  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: where do British public sympathies lie?

FAITH ORGANIZATION STUDIES

  • Charitable giving by UK Christians: Stewardship’s Generosity Report, 2024
  • Male and female ministry in the Church of England
  • Scottish Episcopal Church annual report and accounts, 2023
  • Methodist Church statistics for mission, October 2023: preliminary data
  • Presbyterian Church of Wales statistics
  • UK general election, 2024: a clue to the religion of parliamentarians?

OFFICIAL STATISTICS

  • UK armed forces biannual diversity statistics, April 2024

ACADEMIC STUDIES

  • Revisiting English urban religion in the 1950s: three northern case studies
  • Church of England ministry in south-west England

Please note: Counting Religion in Britain is © Clive D. Field, 2024

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Counting Religion in Britain, June 2024

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 105, June 2024 features fourteen short articles on new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link No 105 June 2024

OPINION POLLS

  • UK general election, 2024: Survation/Jewish Chronicle poll of Jewish voting intentions
  • UK general election, 2024: Savanta/Hyphen poll of Muslim voting intentions
  • UK general election, 2024: deselection of David Campanale as a LibDem candidate
  • Attitudes to faith in public life: another Institute for the Impact of Faith in Life poll

FAITH ORGANIZATION STUDIES

  • UK general election, 2024: more briefings from Theos
  • UK general election, 2024: briefings from the Religion Media Centre
  • UK general election, 2024: How might Jewish electors vote?
  • Voice for Justice UK report on The Costs of Keeping the Faith
  • General Synod paper: parlous state of Church of England diocesan finances
  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: impact on the UK film and television workforce

OFFICIAL STATISTICS

  • Religious marriages in England and Wales, 2021 and 2022

ACADEMIC STUDIES

  • Churchgoing in Britain during the fin de siècle
  • Coronavirus chronicles: religious affiliation and Covid-19 vaccine uptake in England

NEW DATASET

  • Release of European Social Survey, round 11 data for the UK

Please note: Counting Religion in Britain is © Clive D. Field, 2024

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Counting Religion in Britain, November 2023

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 98, November 2023 features seventeen short articles on new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link No 98 November 2023

OPINION POLLS

  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: British attitudes towards Israel at war
  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: perceptions of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia
  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: Savanta poll of Muslim voting intentions
  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: Savanta poll of Labour councillors
  • Emotional responses to death and dying in the UK: latest Theos report
  • Mental health, job satisfaction, and the Institute for the Impact of Faith in Life
  • Practising Christians’ attitudes to sharing their faith: Savanta poll
  • Effectiveness of Churches in helping during the cost of living crisis: YouGov poll
  • ‘Blasphemy’ in UK schools: the teachers’ perspective

FAITH ORGANIZATION STUDIES

  • Church attendance in the Church of England―Glimmers of hope? Perhaps not
  • Survey of financial pressures among Church of England ordinands in training
  • Religion at work: Pearn Kandola Research report
  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: anti-Semitic incidents
  • Fall-out from Israel-Hamas conflict: poll of UK Jews on post-7 October experiences

OFFICIAL AND QUASI-OFFICIAL STATISTICS

  • Census, 2021, England and Wales: new article and data on sexual orientation
  • Police-recorded hate crimes in England and Wales, 2022–23: revised data
  • Equality and Human Rights Monitor, 2023

Please note: Counting Religion in Britain is © Clive D. Field, 2023

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A less Christian future for England and Wales

The breakdown of the census religion counts by age and sex, released 30 January 2023, helps us to picture the religious landscape in the decades ahead. The obvious change is well known, though perhaps not yet fully grasped: the proportion of the population that is Christian is being squeezed from two directions. People of Christian heritage increasingly say that they have no religion, and at the same time, Islam and other minority religions have a growing share.

The graph below shows the percentage of people in the Christian and no religion categories by age, according to the 2021 census in England and Wales. The two lines are in nearly mirror image: Christian losses are mostly gains to no religion. Parents answer the census questions for their children, and as many are not inclined to ascribe a religious affiliation to infants or young children, the Christian line starts very low. By about age 10 children are described as Christian with roughly the same frequency as their parents (who are around age 40). Teenagers start to demonstrate their independence, and so we see a hump in the reported affiliation of children. The Christian share hovers around 30 percent for adults now in their 20s and rises steadily across older generations, approaching (though not quite reaching) 80 percent in the earliest cohorts. Conversely, more than half of people in their 20s have no religion, while among the elderly not quite one in ten are unaffiliated.

The picture for the three largest religious minorities – Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs – is interestingly different. Children are assigned to a religion immediately. Muslims constitute more than 10 percent of every year of age through 18, though the proportion falls rapidly thereafter. There is an additional bulge in the 30s and early 40s, however, which might be the result of refugee inflows or spousal migration in the past decade or two.


It is simple to predict that within a few decades, at least one in six people in England and Wales will belong to a non-Christian religion, even in the absence of further immigration. Muslims will be 11%, Hindus 2%, Sikhs 1%, and other groups (including Buddhists and Jews) a further 2%. In practice migration will continue to boost both Christian and non-Christian numbers. At some point it is likely that some people of non-Christian heritage will say that they have no religion, but for the moment these ethno-religious labels are a persistent component of social identity.

In a previous post, I noted that many people who ticked the Christian box in the 2011 census chose ‘No religion’ ten years later. We can learn more by looking at the no religion shares of the Christian-heritage population (estimated by summing the Christian, no religion and religion not stated categories) in 2011 and 2021. The graph below is focused on people aged 25 and older, who are generally living independently and have reasonably settled identities. Census respondents aged 25+ in 2011 were 35+ in 2021, and we can compare their responses in the two censuses.

The shift towards no religion is distributed remarkably evenly across all years of age. It is slightly more pronounced among younger cohorts, but the intercensal gap is relatively constant. As Sir Bernard Silverman pointed out in his comment on my post last week (and as I mentioned in a BRIN post ten years ago about the 2011 results), however, this comparison almost certainly underestimates the amount of individual switching that occurred. Net migration to the UK has added at least two million people over the past decade, most of whom will have a religious identity. The additional Christians will have depressed the ‘no religion’ proportions shown above for 2021. If the new arrivals were disproportionately young adults, the drift from Christian to no religion in those birth cohorts will be more pronounced than implied by this graph. More precision will have to wait until further data from the census become available.

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Counting Religion in Britain, December 2022

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 87, December 2022 is a special 14-page edition devoted to the first release of data from the religion question in the 2021 Census of Population in England and Wales.

This issue of BRIN’s monthly bulletin consists of tables, commentary, and a selection of media reporting of the results of the religious census. A copy of the full text can be downloaded from this link No 87 December 2022

Any other items of religious statistical news from December will be held over to the January 2023 edition of Counting Religion in Britain.

At the time of writing, the most significant new resource, apart from the census, is the Church of England’s Statistics for Mission, 2021, which can be found at: https://www.churchofengland.org/system/files/private%3A//2022-12///2021StatisticsForMission.pdf

The BRIN team wish all our users a peaceful and restful festive break. We look forward to ‘seeing’ you again in 2023.

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Counting Religion in Britain, July 2022

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 82, July 2022 features sixteen new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link No 82 July 2022

OPINION POLLS

  • Perceptions of prejudice against religious groups as a problem in contemporary society
  • Importance of a British prime minister being a Christian: Deltapoll for Mail on Sunday

FAITH ORGANIZATION STUDIES

  • Coronavirus chronicles: Easter church attendance before and after the pandemic
  • Peer evangelism among young people in the UK
  • Anti-Semitism in English secondary schools and colleges: Henry Jackson Society report
  • Merseyside Jewish community census, 2021: summary report
  • Attacks on mosques and Islamic institutions in the UK: Muslim Census survey

OFFICIAL AND QUASI-OFFICIAL STATISTICS

  • Coronavirus chronicles: vaccination rates by religion as at 31 May 2022
  • Civil Service statistics, 2022: profile by religion or belief

ACADEMIC STUDIES

  • Coronavirus chronicles: Covid-19’s impact on the body, mind, and soul of Anglicans
  • Analysing the ‘Muslim penalty’ in the British labour market
  • Relationship between religiosity and Parkinson’s disease in England and the USA
  • Effectiveness of school mindfulness programmes in minimizing mental health risks
  • Reviewing the statistics of the secularization history of Britain
  • Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion, Volume 32 (2022)
  • Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion, Volume 13 (2022)

Please note: Counting Religion in Britain is © Clive D. Field, 2022

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Counting Religion in Britain, March 2022

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 78, March 2022 features 10 new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link No 78 March 2022

OPINION POLLS

  • Coronavirus chronicles: Covid-19 and British Jewish and Muslim communities
  • Anglican attitudes towards same-sex marriage: YouGov poll for Ozanne Foundation
  • Antisemitism Barometer, 2021: surveys of the British public and Jews
  • Removal of British citizenship: the case of Shamima Begum, the Islamic State bride

FAITH ORGANIZATION STUDIES

  • United Reformed Church statistical returns: not such a happy birthday
  • Coronavirus chronicles: Church of England cathedral statistics, 2020

OFFICIAL AND QUASI-OFFICIAL STATISTICS

  • Updates on religious censuses: England and Wales, Scotland, Ireland

ACADEMIC STUDIES

  • Four recent journal articles

NEW DATASETS

  • UK Data Service, SN 855354: Catholics in Britain Survey, 2019
  • Pew Research Center: Global Attitudes Survey, Spring 2021

Please note: Counting Religion in Britain is © Clive D. Field, 2022

Posted in Covid-19, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Education, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious Census, Religious prejudice, Survey news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Counting Religion in Britain, February 2022

Counting Religion in Britain, No. 77, February 2022 features 13 new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link: No 77 February 2022

OPINION POLLS

  • Changing public views on the possible timeline and causation for human extinction
  • Fashion and faith: Savanta ComRes poll for Tearfund

FAITH ORGANIZATION STUDIES

  • Churches and mental health: Christian Research Resonate panel survey
  • Safeguarding LGBT+ Christians survey, 2021
  • Jewish identities of UK and European Jewry
  • Anti-Semitic incidents in the UK exhibit steep rise during 2021
  • Coronavirus chronicles: Jewish mortality exceeds 1,000

OFFICIAL AND QUASI-OFFICIAL STATISTICS

  • Coronavirus chronicles: odds of testing positive for Covid-19 vary by religious group
  • Census of population, Scotland, 2022
  • Scottish Household Survey: analysis of religion in relation to culture in 2020
  • Religious affiliation of the legal profession in 2021

ACADEMIC STUDIES

  • Religion and science: still a gap to close among the clergy
  • Coronavirus chronicles: doubts about the long-term viability of online worship

Please note: Counting Religion in Britain is © Clive D. Field, 2022

Posted in church attendance, Covid-19, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Social Capital, Religious Census, Religious prejudice, Survey news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment