A Comres survey commissioned by the BBC for Palm Sunday**
does not look good for the Church of England despite a predictable effort to
spin the findings.
In the survey, 51% of people surveyed identified as
Christian. Half of the people surveyed said they didn’t believe in the
resurrection, while only 31% of people identifying as Christian said they did.
Only 17% of people thought the Bible version was literally true while 26%
believed but thought the Bible shouldn’t be taken literally.
Although Christmas is now far more celebrated, the
resurrection is the core tenet of Christianity and Easter is its most important
festival. No resurrection, no Christianity. To quote the Bible: Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that
believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live. (John 11:25) And
yet more than two thirds of Christians don’t believe that.
Sidebar: I wrote
about how Jesus is not the only one claiming to be resurrected here.
Belief and church attendance have been falling for quite
some time. The figures for belief in this survey are slightly better than those
in a YouGov survey from last year which found that only 46% of people identify
as Christian. This was a much bigger survey and so is more likely to represent
the population as a whole (nearly 12,000 as opposed to around 2,000 people).
The YouGov survey also found that more people believe in ghosts than in a
Creator.
According to the current survey, 37% of people identifying
as Christian never go to Church. Another survey by the Church of England itself
found that only 2% of the population go to the Church of England at Easter. The
flock really has strayed far from the Good Shepherd (probably because they know
he’s going to herd them off to the slaughterhouse so we can all eat our traditional
Easter roast lamb and rosemary).
The survey also looked at belief in life after death. It
found that only 46% of people said they believed in it and the same number said
they didn’t. If you don’t believe in an afterlife then the Church’s carrot and
stick tactics are not going to work on you.
Sidebar: of those
who do believe in an afterlife, 56% were women and 36% were men. I looked at
why women may believe more than men in many kinds of supernatural phenomena (and
non-evidence based medicines) here.
The Church is fighting a rearguard action and trying to spin
the findings that 20% of the non-religious believe in some sort of life after
death and that 9% of non-believers do believe that the resurrection happened.
The Bishop of Manchester, the Right Reverend David Walker,said: "This important and welcome survey proves that many British people,
despite not being regular churchgoers, hold core Christian beliefs”. He
describes the results as “surprisingly high levels of religious belief among
those who follow no specific religion, often erroneously referred to as secularists
or atheists”.
Let’s unpack this a bit. Firstly, the Church doesn’t have a
monopoly in life after death belief. About a third of the people (32%) who believed
in some sort of life after death believe in reincarnation, hardly a Christian
doctrine.
Secondly, 9% believing in the resurrection is not a ‘surprisingly
high level’ when you look more closely and see that these are people who ‘do
not belong to a religious group’ according to the survey. They are not identified
as non-believers or claiming to be atheist or secular, he’s just grasping at
straws because any kind of belief, however small or tenuous is better than
nothing. He does deserve credit for his top
skills at ignoring all the stats that don’t reflect well on the Church though.
That’s quite an impressive mental contortionist act.
Thirdly, he is conflating atheists and secularists. Atheism
means no belief in God whereas secularism is a political belief in the need for
separation of Church and State. You can be religious and secular, as many
people are.
Like a lot of Easter eggs, the Bishop’s claims are hollow
and crack under the slightest pressure.
There is also dissension in the Christian ranks. Reverend Dr
Lorraine Cavenagh is the acting general secretary for Modern Church, which
promotes liberal Christian theology. She said "Science, but also intellectual
and philosophical thought has progressed. It has a trickle-down effect on just
about everybody's lives.
"So to ask an adult to believe in the resurrection the
way they did when they were at Sunday school simply won't do and that's true of
much of the key elements of the Christian faith."
A cynical person might say that the Church wants us all to believe
like children at Sunday School do. Many of these children also believe in Santa.
Would it be mean to point out that in 2002 a survey found
that a third of Church of England clergy don’t believe in the physical resurrection?
That’s a bit of an own goal. It’s also unfair to people who do believe if they’re
being led by people who don’t.
These findings follow the Cadbury Easter egg fiasco where self-proclaimed
vicar’s daughter Theresa May and Archbishop Sentamu got very hot under the dog
collar about Cadbury’s and the National Trust dropping the word Easter from
their eggs and egg hunt. I wrote about that here (short version – it’s not
true).
Does any of this really matter to most of us who are more
interested in hot cross buns, chocolate eggs and maybe some roast lamb next
Sunday?
The Bishop of Manchester also said: "This demonstrates
how important beliefs remain across our society and hence the importance both
of religious literacy and of religion having a prominent place in public
discourse."
This is the crux of the matter. The Church will not give up
its power and influence. It will not give up unelected bishops in the House of
Lords or its tax-free benefits or state-funded Church schools and hospital
chaplains or its general right to meddle in people’s lives. It wants the right
to cherry-pick who gets to go to its schools, to mislead children in sex
education classes and to discriminate against women and non-hetero cis men.
Church leaders are deluding themselves about the relevance
of their beliefs and their jobs in a multi-cultural society. Yes, this country
has a Christian heritage, religion has shaped society and history but it is not
the sole influence. Societies evolve and the Church is looking increasingly
like a dinosaur just before the meteors hit. Or, to add another simile, the Church
is like a ferret that will not let go once its jaws have locked on.
So the Church of England has the last laugh. Whatever
surveys show, there is no prospect of change any time soon. It’s much easier to
hold onto power than to gain it. Inertia, cowardice and the status quo prevail.
Happy Easter.
** Palm Sunday is the one before Easter where the Bible says
Jesus entered Jerusalem on a donkey and people waved palm leaves at him.
To play Devil's advocate: Can it be argued that the continuing existence of the established church acts as a bulwark against the growth of unchecked cults etc. that may be unsettling or even disruptive to our society? The CofE is after all Richard Dawkin's 'favourite' religion, inasmuch that it appears to allow some form of dissent and appears to be relatively open to the march of knowledge. It is the only religion, apart from Buddhism (which is more a way of life than a religion) that tacitly allows its adherents (by which I mean attendees at church) to be atheist, agnostic or even from another religion entirely - it even allows ME in whenever I have to attend some socially unavoidable ritual! I am not a complete apologist, but I am able to see other points of view without resorting to automatic nay-saying.
ReplyDeleteCan it be argued that, sometimes, it may be worth holding on to a benign or relatively passive enemy than destroying the balance of power and allowing anything and anyone to take its place?: Isis, the growth of nationalism, Trump... etc. are all examples of what can happen when a power vacuum is created
Just a thought...
....Clearly not :-)
ReplyDelete