wellinghall: (Islip)
wellinghall ([personal profile] wellinghall) wrote2008-11-17 09:44 pm
Entry tags:

Church membership


In 1990, the Church of England had:
- an electoral roll membership of 1.4 million
- about 1.1m regularly attending Sunday services.

In 1992, the church had:
- 106 bishops
- 10,748 full-time stipendiary clergy (of which 707 were women)
- over 16,000 churches and places of worship.

In addition, the UK also had:
- 5.8m members of the Roman Catholic Church (now adjusted to exclude Ireland)
- 3.2m members of other churches.

In 2006, the church had:
- an electoral roll membership of 1.3m
- about 1.3m regularly attending Sunday services.

At the end of 2007, the church had:
- 106 bishops
- 9,543 full-time stipendiary clergy (of which 1,543 were women)
- over 16,000 churches etc.

In addition, the UK also had:
- 1.6m mass attendees in the Roman Catholic Church (NB different definition than the much larger figure given above)
- 3.3m members of other churches.

ETA: figures for other churches are given with care, as I suspect there may have been some changes of definition or measurement over the years:

Church in Wales: 106,000 in the 1994 almanack, and 69,000 in the 2009 almanack
Episcopal Church in Scotland: 57,000 in 1994, 41,000 in 2009
Church of Ireland: 280,000 in 1994, 300,000 in 2009
Church of Scotland: 753,000 in 1994, 489,000 in 2009
African and afro-carribean churches: 69,000 in 1994; number given as "about 341" in 2009, which has to be an error!
Baptist Church: 212,000 in 1994, 170,000 in 2009
Methodist Church: 408,000 in 1994, 340,000 in 2009
Orthodox Church: not given in 1994, 292,000 in 2009
Pentecostal churches: 115,000 in 1994, 301,000 in 2009
Presbyterian Church in Ireland: 330,000 in 1994, 226,000 in 2009
United Reformed Church: 115,000 in 1994, 145,000 in 2009
Other churches: 300,000 in 1994, 733,000 in 2009

All figures obtained from Whitaker's Almanack for 1994 and 2009.

The icon, by the way, is the church that [livejournal.com profile] adaese and I got married in :-)

[identity profile] ex-robhu.livejournal.com 2008-11-17 11:17 pm (UTC)(link)
So CofE attendance increased by 18% between 1990 and 2006?

I wonder by how much the population increased.
tree_and_leaf: Portrait of John Keble in profile, looking like a charming old gentleman with a sense of humour. (anglican)

[personal profile] tree_and_leaf 2008-11-17 11:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Hey, those figures are much better than I would have expected! The roll may have gone down, but the regular attenders is more significant in some ways, and that's up. We still have too many buildings, though.

Nevertheless: *is cautiously optimistic*

[identity profile] didiusjulianus.livejournal.com 2008-11-18 12:16 pm (UTC)(link)
It strikes me as significant how low these numbers actually are compared to the whole population, and yet how much influence lobbying groups and leaders connected to these churches have. And how people whose religion is "none" are often (wrongly) made to feel theirs is a minority view when clearly it probably isn't.

[identity profile] estiel.livejournal.com 2008-11-20 08:25 pm (UTC)(link)
1.6m mass attendees in the Roman Catholic Church (NB different definition than the much larger figure given above)

Yes, 5.8m "members" was a striking figure. Doubtless it is the same there as here: many people identify themselves as "Catholic" who aren't. They seem to think it's some sort of ethnic identity rather than a faith.

Possible explanation for the decline in male clergy numbers in the CofE: When women were ordained, thousands of clergy left the CofE and became Catholic priests through a papal dispensation that allowed them to be married (not without some resentment from celibate priests, but only mildly, and to an insignificant degree)