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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

for thinking Christianity is declining in the UK because the churches lost credibility and community while other faiths didn’t?

252 replies

LoveWFH · 10/02/2026 21:11

This is not about belief in God versus no God. It is about institutions and what people experience on the ground. The Church of England in particular feels like a faded bureaucracy. Empty buildings. Clergy stretched thin. Services that feel performative or stuck in a time capsule. A lot of talk about tradition but very little that speaks to how people actually live now.

There is also the trust issue. Abuse scandals. Cover ups. Financial mismanagement. A sense that when the church fails it protects itself first and the vulnerable last. You can only ask people to suspend disbelief for so long when the institution itself looks morally compromised. Younger people especially are ruthless about hypocrisy and the church gives them plenty to work with.

Then there is the class and culture gap. Christianity in the UK often feels tied to establishment power and respectability. It does not feel like it belongs to ordinary people anymore. It feels like something you inherit rather than choose. Something you tick at a wedding or funeral rather than something that shapes your life. When belief becomes purely ceremonial it is already on life support.

By contrast other faiths seem to be growing because they are lived not just referenced. They have visible daily practices. Clear moral frameworks. Strong community networks. You see them meeting regularly supporting each other showing up for births deaths crises celebrations. There is structure and discipline but also belonging. For migrants especially faith communities replace the support systems the state no longer provides.

There is also confidence. Other faiths are not embarrassed by themselves. They do not constantly apologise for existing or dilute their beliefs in the hope of being liked. People are drawn to certainty in an uncertain world. Not cruelty or dogma but clarity. Christianity in the UK often sounds unsure of what it even stands for anymore beyond being inoffensive.

So AIBU for thinking this is not some mystery about secularism but a very predictable outcome of an institution that lost its moral authority community roots and sense of purpose while others doubled down on theirs?

OP posts:
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Sskka · 22/02/2026 08:19

Sskka · 16/02/2026 07:38

https://www.biblesociety.org.uk/research/quiet-revival

There’s data here. I should confess that I am a little sceptical about it, even though it’s exactly what I’ve been expecting would happen and I am myself part of it. Our churches locally do seem healthy enough but they remain few, and the fact is that I’m not yet seeing fervour in my corner of the country, and the uptick is just a bit too sharp to persuade me that there isn’t some wishful thinking going on here.

Having said that, anecdotally there are plenty of accounts—including on this thread—of expanding church attendances, there is similar data from other countries like France and Finland, and yougov has been reporting an uptick among the young in the UK for several years now too, albeit more modest than this report indicates.

One really interesting thing I haven’t seen mentioned is that I’m now seeing street preachers around regularly again. There was a twenty-period where they seemed to have vanished but they’re back. And they’re all younger men too.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0k1jddl51no

Right on cue, here’s a BBC piece suggesting those numbers are probably rogue polls. Much as I want to believe them, my own eyes suggest the BBC is more correct on this one. There’s definitely something happening, but imo we’re still a few years away from seeing the sharp turn upwards.

Illustration of young woman reading a bible

Is there really a 'quiet revival' of religion among Gen Z?

A fierce debate is taking place about whether there really has been a revival in Christianity.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0k1jddl51no

Sskka · 26/03/2026 21:57

Sskka · 22/02/2026 08:19

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0k1jddl51no

Right on cue, here’s a BBC piece suggesting those numbers are probably rogue polls. Much as I want to believe them, my own eyes suggest the BBC is more correct on this one. There’s definitely something happening, but imo we’re still a few years away from seeing the sharp turn upwards.

Edited

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpwjxx5eyn1o

Poll withdrawn because of flaws in the methodology. So frustrating. While I’m sure there is a story to tell about increasing faith among the young, a sudden statistical surge which isn’t visible to the naked eye was pretty clearly not it.

Hate seeing an overstated case, even when it’s a case I like. Doubtless the poll will now finally get some attention from the smuggest people on earth.

The back view of a young woman looking down the aisle of a church with wooden pews either side of her. She has a dark blonde ponytail and is wearing grey-green trousers, an orange, black and red striped top and has a purple rucksack.

Church attendance report pulled after YouGov finds 'fraudulent' responses

The original report claimed a rise in young people attending church in England and Wales.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpwjxx5eyn1o

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