Throughout 2025 there were several key pieces of research and news stories that told the story of a shift in both attitudes towards faith and changing patterns of church attendance and people coming to faith. Here, we bring them together in one place.

Belief in Britain — January 2025

Belief in Britain was published in January 2025 and its findings reported by The Independent, The Times and The Daily Mail. It was carried out by research company OnePoll, who surveyed 10,000 people across the UK.


Increase in Bible sales – The Times – March 2025

The Times newspaper reported that sales of the Bible are ​‘rocketing’ in Britain. Between 2019 and 2024 sales increased by 87% from £2.69 million to £5.02 million. 

This was the second marker point that began to point to something new happening. The fact that national news agencies were reporting on these findings positively is also demonstrative of the changing attitudes towards faith.


Students and the Bible – April 2025

‘What do today’s students think about the Bible’ was commissioned by the Fusion organisation and carried out by Savanta Comres. It reported a surprisingly high level of Bible engagement amongst all UK students. Across the whole student population, 29% said they read the Bible at least weekly, including 12% of non-Christian students.

Moreover 50% of all students said that they viewed the Bible as relevant and 44% find it to be reliable. The study also found that non-Christians are remarkably open to reading the Bible with 33% of non-Christian students interested in reading the Bible with a friend.


The Quiet Revival – April 2025

The Bible Society published ​‘The Quiet Revival’ on 7 April 2025. It was the largest study in this list both in terms of scale and impact. It was commissioned by YouGov who surveyed over 13,000 adults. It reported a 50% increase in church attendance over the last six years, with 2 million more people going to church at least monthly now than in 2018.

It found that the most dramatic change has happened amongst young adults with an increase from 4% to 16% of 18 – 24 year olds going to church. There is also growth amongst older generations with the percentage of those over 65 increasing from 15% to 19%. Furthermore, men are more likely to go to church than women and one in five churchgoers are from an ethnic minority.

It also presents evidence for depth as well as breadth, with the study reporting an increase in weekly Bible reading amongst churchgoing Christians and significant benefits of faith including life satisfaction and community engagement.


Z-A Growing Spirituality – May 2025

‘Z-A Growing Spirituality’ was commissioned by Youth for Christ and finds that the spiritual openness of young adults continues in teenagers. It surveys over 1000 11 – 18 year olds and compares their current attitudes to those in 2016.

It finds that belief is God has increased by 16% in the last 9 years along with spiritual experiences (up by 8%), those who pray (up by 12%) and those who would consider themselves a follower of Jesus (up by 12%).


A Passion for Life National Survey Report – October 2025

This study was undertaken by Whitestone Insight who were commissioned by A Passion for Life. 2112 adults were surveyed across Great Britain and participants were asked about their beliefs, engagement with church and what they felt was missing from their lives.

The study corroborated the findings of the Quiet Revival and even found that the picture was slightly more encouraging. It found that 15% of all adults say they are practising Christians and go to church (or watch online). This figure was 30% for men and 22% for women aged 18 – 24. Other findings included higher churchgoing and Christian identity in London compared to the rest of the UK and that over 20% of people would go to church if invited by a friend.