Friday Night Theology
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Every year, the government produces an annual report detailing the Social Trends of the United Kingdom. This year’s report has just been released and its section on religious participation is making the atheists angry. In the report, we discover that almost a third of adults have not participated in sport in the previous 12 months, that the average charitable giving by UK adults was £4 per week, that a quarter of households have two cars, and that some parts of the Christian church have almost doubled over the last ten years. Perhaps, this is what angered the atheists.

Now to put that rise in context, we need to also acknowledge that over that ten-year period the historic denominations saw a distinct decline. This was particularly true of the Anglican church which went from 29% to 22% of the population. Nevertheless, between 1996 and 2006, the proportion of the population claiming to belong to a particular religion dropped a mere 3 % from 57% to 54%.

This hardly squares with the National Secular Society’s claim that we are a “dwindling minority” and that the church is dying on its knees, particularly when you realise that it is the evangelical parts of the church that are showing the most vibrancy. The report reflects the rise of the independent Christian churches, the vast majority of which are evangelical, from 4.7% of the population to 9.6% over the last ten years. It is also probably the case that a large part of the decline is due to a reduction in the less committed sections of the church. After all, when you have senior churchmen wondering whether there actually is a God, or whether Jesus really did rise from the dead, you have to ask yourself in what sense they were Christian in the first place. So, maybe what is taking place here is the kind of pruning that fosters new growth.

Moreover, all of this fits in with the Tearfund survey of last year which revealed that 15% of the adult population attend church at least once a month. When we bear in mind that the most popular sporting and cultural activities do little better then we realise the church is actually in a very healthy position. For, according to the Social Trends report, swimming – the most popular sport – was participated in by 16% of the adult population in the previous four weeks, and cinema – the most popular communal leisure activity – was enjoyed by just 17% of the population in the previous month.

Yet, despite the fact that church attendance is on a par with these other pursuits, you never hear anyone say that they are in terminal decline. So, it’s no wonder the atheists are getting angry. Yes, Sunday church attendance is declining, but at nothing like the fatal rate that they suggest. And parts of the church – particularly the evangelical church – remain extremely healthy. And for that, we can thank God.

Justin Thacker, Head of Theology

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Latest comments :
(The views below are the authors', and not necessarily those of the Evangelical Alliance.)

Written by David Young on 09 May 2008 at 21.01
I am being as crass as the faith I am criticising, Jethro. I am in the process giving credit to the number of people who profess to be Christians but deserve not to be treated as if they actually believed in such garbage.

There are stupider beliefs in the world than the atonement-trinity combination, but off hand I can't recall that many.
Written by Jethro on 07 May 2008 at 11.28
You would have thought that the Almighty would have more important things to do in the world than send revival to Lakeland, Florida. I doubt many atheists will be apoplectic about that - certainly not David Young.

By the way, David, aren't you being a little guilty of skewing the questions in your rhetorical referendum. Basically you're asking who would sign up to a list of beliefs which you have pre-identified as stupid. A dwindling minority, for sure, but Christian faith can be expressed less crassly.
Written by Bill Smith on 26 April 2008 at 10.50
The Secular Society is probably angry because it is powerless to do anything about the growth of "true church". Religion will probably dwindle away, not a bad thing! But nothing in earth, or hell can prevent the building of the church. Jesus is the builder, therefore the work cannot fail. Also, I would suggest, they are angry because not only is church growing, but it must become very very tiring trying to constantly convince yourself that something that is right in front of you is not there!!
The fresh outbreak of revival at Lakeland in Florida must be sending them apoplectic!! Hallelujah. Jesus is Lord of all.

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