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State of the Church in Canada
Christian Info Society inaugurates an annual report on
Christianity as it is expressed across our country. This introduction will
be followed by several articles in our next edition. A more extensive
series is available at CanadianChristianity.com.
By Jim Coggins
CHURCH attendance in Canada is declining rapidly.
Atheism is rising. Christian moral values are being replaced by secular
ones. Canada is no longer a Christian nation. Canadian Christians will soon
be a persecuted minority.
These are some of the understandings – and, in
some cases, misunderstandings – prevalent among Canadians.
But what is the actual state of Canadian Christianity?
The reality is that the situation is far more complex
than it seems at first.
Church attendance has been analyzed by the Canadian
government in censuses and in the General Social Survey, by polling
agencies such as Ipsos Reid and by various scholars – most notably
Reg Bibby, a sociologist at the University of Lethbridge.
While there is always some variation in statistics, the
most obvious trend over the last half-century is that weekly church
attendance has declined very considerably.
The first systematic survey, a Gallup poll, placed
weekly church attendance at 60 percent in 1945. Some surveys place the
figure even higher in the 1950s, approaching 70 percent. However, in
Bibby’s words, weekly attendance dropped “to just over 30
percent in 1975 and to around 20 percent by 2000.”
The assumption has been that the percentage will
continue to drop as Canada becomes more secularized.
That is, it has been expected that church attendance in
Canada will soon reach the levels of Western Europe, where it has dropped
below 10 percent in most countries.
However, Bibby has argued this is not necessarily the
case. His detailed research into the Canadian religious scene has been
outlined in books such as Fragmented Gods and Restless Churches.
Bibby’s most recent major survey, in 2005, pegged
weekly church attendance at 25 percent. Moreover, attendance among teens
aged 15 – 19, which had dropped to 18 percent in 1992, had increased
to 22 percent in 2000.
It is probably too early to tell whether weekly
attendance has really turned the corner. Andrew Grenville, formerly of
Ipsos Reid and now chief research officer with Angus Reid Strategies, told BCCN he remains unconvinced.
While he saw some evidence of church attendance plateauing about the year
2000, a 2006 Ipsos survey showed weekly attendance had dropped further, to
17 percent.
Further, there is considerable uncertainty as to
whether weekly attendance is the best measure of Christian faith in Canada.
Bibby has pointed out that if we ask if people attend church at least
monthly, instead of weekly, the decline is far less drastic. Monthly
attendance dropped from 41 percent in 1975, to 37 percent in 1980, and to
30 percent in 2000 – but rebounded to 34 percent in 2005.
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In other words, in the 25 years between 1980 and 2005,
monthly attendance dropped only 3 percent.
The decline is even less drastic if one looks at yearly
attendance. A 2007 Ipsos study found that 67 percent of Canadians attend a
religious service at least once a year. This level is supported by other
research.
Thus, the question is not so much why half of Canadians
have abandoned the church – but why this half of the Canadian
population now attends church only sporadically.
It could be argued the decline in attendance indicates
a decline in Christian commitment. It could also be asked why the
institutional church has failed to retain the loyalty of so many Canadians
who claim to believe what the church believes.
The decline in weekly attendance may also partly
represent a change in Canadian culture and society. More people work on
Sundays now, for instance.
“Canada is a nation of believers – but not
belongers,” said Grenville. It is not just churches that are losing
members.
Fewer Canadians now belong to Boy Scouts, labour
unions, political parties or service clubs such as Kiwanis or Rotary.
Robert Putnam analyzed this North American trend in his
book Bowling Alone. There has been not just a privatization of religion but
a fragmentation of society.
Bibby has pointed out that the percentage of Canadians
who claim to be atheists is only 7 percent, a very minor change from 6
percent in 1975 – and even some of them attend church occasionally.
The General Social Survey discovered that those with
“no religious affiliation” rose from 12 percent in 1985 to 19
percent in 2004; but most of these people still claim to believe in God.
This is in sharp contrast to the situation in Europe,
where belief in the existence of God has dropped from about 80 percent to
close to 50 percent over the past 30 years.
Two-thirds of Canadians still identify themselves as
Christians. Ipsos studies reveal that 64 percent of Canadians believe the
Bible is the Word of God, 62 percent believe in forgiveness through Christ,
45 percent pray daily, and 41 percent say they have committed their lives
to Christ.
Because of this residual faith in God, compared to the
situation in Europe, both Grenville and Bibby have argued that it is
possible for the church to reconnect with a majority of Canadians.
Over the past 60 years, church attendance in Europe has
experienced a steady and dramatic decline. Over the same period, church
attendance in the United States has shown remarkable stability, remaining
at about 40 percent.
In Canada, church attendance has shown considerable
volatility, ranging from 70 percent to 20 percent. In fact, the 70 percent
in the 1950s represents the ‘high water mark’ and is perhaps
the hardest figure to explain; the data we have suggests that the
percentage was considerably lower in every period before this.
Given this volatility, it is impossible to predict
where Canadian church attendance will go in future, said Grenville.
Referring to the 1950s surge, he stated: “There is no reason it
can’t, or won’t, happen again.”
January 2008
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