lpetrich
Contributor
UK Church in Crisis: Only 2% of Young Adults Identify as C of E | Jonathan MS Pearce noting Church in crisis as only 2% of young adults identify as C of E | World news | The Guardian
From the Guardian article's graph of religious-affiliation percentages, I select the numbers for 2002 and 2017:
The biggest decline in C of E identifiers was in people 45 - 54 years old, from 35% in 2002 to 11% in 2017.
Quoting from the Guardian again,
From the Guardian article's graph of religious-affiliation percentages, I select the numbers for 2002 and 2017:
- Church of England: 32% - 14%
- Roman Catholic: 9% - 8%
- Other Christian: 14% - 18%
- Non-Christian: 4% - 8%
- None: 41% - 52%
The biggest decline in C of E identifiers was in people 45 - 54 years old, from 35% in 2002 to 11% in 2017.
Quoting from the Guardian again,
The demographic breakdown in the new data is particularly unwelcome news for the church. Younger people are significantly less likely to identify with the C of E than older age groups, and evidence suggests that people rarely join organised religion in later life. The trend indicates that affiliation with the C of E could become negligible with successive generations.
