Christianity Demographics History of Christianity Chi-rho page of the 8th-century
Lichfield Gospels.
Saint George is recognised as the
patron saint of England and the
flag of England consists of
his cross. Prior to
Edward III, the patron saint was
St Edmund.
St Alban is also honoured as England's
first martyr. Other notable saints from the early period of Christianity in England include
Saint Ethelbert and Saint
Morwenna.
Protestantism Church of England (Anglicanism) The
established church of the realm is the
Church of England, whose
supreme governor is the
British monarch, currently . In practice, the church is governed by its bishops under the authority of
Parliament. Twenty-six of the church's 42 bishops are
Lords Spiritual, representing the church in the
House of Lords. The dioceses of England are divided between the
two provinces of
Canterbury and
York, both of whose archbishops are considered
primates. The church regards itself as the continuation of the Catholic church introduced by
St Augustine's late
6th-century mission to
Kent as part of the
Christianisation of Anglo-Saxon England, although this is disputed owing to procedural and doctrinal changes introduced by the 16th-century
English Reformation, particularly the
Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion and the
Book of Common Prayer. In 2010, the Church of England counted 25 million baptised members out of the 41 million Christians in Great Britain's population of about 60 million. In 2009, it claimed to baptise one in eight newborn children. In 2018, research conducted by
YouGov found that 56% of Christians in England identified as members of the Church of England. The same study found that 63% of those identifying with the Church of England "never or hardly" attend church. In 2016, according to a research survey, 19.8% of the population of England and Wales identified as Anglican; additionally half of those who reported being raised Anglican identified as 'No religion.' Generally, anyone in England may marry or be buried at their local
parish church, whether or not they have been baptised in the church. Actual attendance has declined steadily since 1890, with around one million, or 10% of the baptised population attending Sunday services on a regular basis, defined as once a month or more. Three million- roughly 15%- join Christmas Eve and Christmas services. In 2012, there were around active and ordained clergy. The
Free Church of England is another Anglican denomination which separated from the Church of England in the 19th century in opposition to shifts in doctrine and ceremony which brought the established church closer to Roman Catholicism. The Free Church of England is in communion with the
Reformed Episcopal Church in the
United States and
Canada.
Catholicism The
Catholic Church in England and Wales is directed by the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales, whose current president is
Vincent Nichols, the
Archbishop of Westminster. To highlight the historical Catholic continuity of Nichols' office, dating back to Pope Gregory I's appointment of St. Augustine and that pope's sequent bestowal of the pallium on the appointee, the installation rites of pre-Reformation Catholic Archbishops of Canterbury and earlier Archbishops of Westminster were used at his installation as Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster. In 1851, the Catholic Church was formerly forbidden from using the names of the Anglican dioceses by the
Ecclesiastical Titles Act. It is divided among
five provinces headed by the archbishops of Westminster,
Liverpool,
Birmingham, and
Southwark in England and
Cardiff in Wales. The Catholic Church considers itself a continuation of the earliest
Celtic Christian communities, although its formal hierarchy needed to be refounded by the
Gregorian mission to the
Saxon kingdoms in the 6th and 7th centuries and again following the
English Reformation. In 1766,
Papal recognition of
George III as the legitimate ruler of Great Britain opened the way for the
Catholic Emancipation, easing and ultimately eliminating the
anti-Catholic Penal Laws and
Test Acts. This process sometimes faced great popular opposition, as during the 1780
Gordon Riots in London.
Daniel O'Connell was the first Catholic
member of Parliament. Considering the "actual condition of Catholicism in England," the number of Catholics, and the obstacles "removed which chiefly opposed" it,
Pope Pius IX issued in 1850 the
bull Universalis Ecclesiae to restore "the normal diocesan hierarchy." More recently, the
royal family has been permitted to marry Roman Catholics without fear of being disqualified from succession to the throne. The number of Catholics peaked in the 1960s, but has been on a gradual decline ever since. Recent immigration from Catholic countries, particularly
Poland and
Lithuania, has slowed the church's decline. concentrated in the
northwest. In 2018, research conducted by
YouGov found that 17% of all Christians in England identified as Catholic. In 2016, 8.3% of the population of England and Wales identified Catholic.
Other No other church in England has more than a million members, with most quite small. church in
Birmingham,
West Midlands.
Pentecostal churches are growing and, in terms of church attendance, are now third after the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church. There are three main denominations of Pentecostal churches: the
Assemblies of God in Great Britain (part of the
World Assemblies of God Fellowship), the
Apostolic Church, and the
Elim Pentecostal Church.
Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion is a small society of
evangelical churches, founded in 1783, which today has 23 congregations in England. There is also a growing number of independent,
charismatic churches that encourage Pentecostal practices at part of their worship, such as
Kingsgate Community Church in
Peterborough, which started with 9 people in 1988 and now has a congregation in excess of 1,500. Various forms of Protestantism developed from the ferment of the
English Civil War onwards. The
Quakers (formally, the Religious Society of Friends) were founded by
George Fox in the 1640s. Following the
Great Ejection of 1662, about a tenth of Church of England ministers gave up their livings to lead the newly formed
dissenting churches. Notable dissenting groups were the
Presbyterians, the
Independents (or
Congregationalists) and the
Baptists. In the 18th century some Presbyterians favoured ideas known as
Rational Dissent which evolved into, among others,
Unitarianism, which still has more than 100 congregations in the 21st century.
Methodism developed from the 18th century onwards. The Methodist revival was started in England by a group of men including
John Wesley and his younger brother
Charles as a movement within the Church of England, but developed as a separate denomination after John Wesley's death. The primary church in England is the
Methodist Church of Great Britain. The
Salvation Army dates back to 1865, when it was founded in East London by
William and
Catherine Booth. Its international headquarters are still in London, near St Paul's Cathedral. There is one
Mennonite congregation in England, the
Wood Green Mennonite Church in London. . Most
Greek Orthodox Church parishes fall under the jurisdiction of the
Archdiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain, based in London and led by
Nikitas, the
Archbishop of Thyateira and Great Britain. Created in 1932, it is the diocese of the
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople that covers England, Wales and Scotland. A Greek Orthodox community already existed at the time the UK was formed, worshipping in the Imperial Russian Embassy in London. in 1837, an autonomous community was set up in Finsbury Park in London. In 1850, the first new church was built, on London Street in the city. In 1882, St Sophia Cathedral was constructed in London, in order to cope with the growing influx of Orthodox immigrants. By the outbreak of
World War I, there were large Orthodox communities in London,
Manchester and Liverpool, each focused on its own church.
World War II and its aftermath also saw a large expansion among the Orthodox Communities. Today, there are
seven churches bearing the title of Cathedral in London as well as in
Birmingham (the
Dormition of the Mother of God and St Andrew) and
Leicester. In addition to these, there are eighty-one churches and other places where worship is regularly offered, twenty-five places (including university chaplaincies) where the divine liturgy is celebrated on a less regular basis, four chapels (including that of the Archdiocese), and two monasteries. As is traditional within the Orthodox Church, the bishops have a considerable degree of
autonomy within the Archdiocese. The
Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas in
Toxteth, Liverpool, was built in 1870. It is an enlarged version of
St Theodore's church in
Constantinople and is a Grade II
Listed building. There are
Russian Orthodox groups in England. In 1962,
Metropolitan Anthony (Bloom) of Sourozh founded and was for many years the bishop, archbishop and then
metropolitan bishop of the diocese of the
Russian Orthodox Diocese of Sourozh, the Moscow Patriarchate's diocese for Great Britain and Ireland. It is the most numerous Russian Orthodox group in the country. There are also the
Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia churches and some churches and communities belonging to the
Patriarchal Exarchate for Orthodox Parishes of Russian Tradition in Western Europe's
Episcopal Vicariate in the UK. As well as the Russian and Greek Orthodox churches, there are also the
Serbian Orthodox Church and the
Ukrainian Orthodox Church all in London and a non-canonical
Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church in Manchester. The
Antiochian Orthodox Church have the
St. George's Cathedral in London and a number of parishes across England. All
Coptic Orthodox parishes fall under the jurisdiction of the
Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria Pope of Alexandria. The
Coptic Orthodox Church in Britain and Ireland is divided into three main districts: Ireland, Scotland, and
North England; the
Midlands and its affiliated areas; and
South Wales. There is one Patriarchal Exarchate at
Stevenage,
Hertfordshire. Most British converts belong to the
British Orthodox Church, which is canonically part of the Coptic Orthodox Church. There is also the
Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church and the
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church in London. There is also the
Armenian Apostolic Church in London.
Islam was one of the first mosques in England to be allowed to broadcast the
adhan using loudspeakers. At the
2021 United Kingdom census, 3,801,186 Muslims lived in England, or 6.7% of the population. The Muslim population had grown by over a million compared to the 2011 census. At the 2011 Census, 2.7 million Muslims lived in England, where they formed 5.0% of the population. Muslim scholarship was well known among the learned in England by 1386, when
Chaucer was writing. In the Prologue to the
Canterbury Tales, there is among the pilgrims wending their way to Canterbury, a 'Doctour of Phisyk' whose learning included
Razi,
Avicenna (Ibn Sina,
Arabic ابن سينا) and
Averroes (Ibn Rushd, Arabic ابن رشد). Ibn Sina's canon of medicine was a standard text for medical students well into the 17th century. Today Islam is the second largest religion in England. In 2011, about 38% of English Muslims lived in
London, where they made up 12.4% of the population. There are also large numbers of Muslims in
Birmingham,
Manchester,
Bradford,
Luton,
Slough,
Leicester and the
mill towns of Northern England such as Huddersfield, Dewsbury, Oldham. Today there are Baháʼí communities across the country from
Carlisle to
Cornwall. ==Dharmic religions==