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History of Christianity in Britain

The history of Christianity in Britain covers the religious organisations, policies, theology and popular religiosity since ancient times.

The Church of St Martin in Canterbury is the oldest extant church building in Britain still in use as a church. It is the oldest Anglican parish church.

The Roman Catholic Church was the dominant form of Christianity in Britain from the 6th century through to the Reformation period in the Middle Ages. The (Anglican) Church of England became the independent established church in England and Wales in 1534 as a result of the English Reformation. In Wales, disestablishment took place in 1920 when the Church in Wales became independent from the Church of England. In Scotland, the (Presbyterian) Church of Scotland, established in a separate Scottish Reformation in the 16th century, is recognized as the national church, but not established.

Following the Reformation, adherence to the Catholic Church continued at various levels in different parts of Britain, especially among recusants and in the north of England.[1] Particularly from the mid-17th century, forms of Protestant nonconformity, including Congregationalists, Baptists, Quakers and, later, Methodists, grew outside of the established church.[2]

Roman Britain Edit

People in Roman Britain typically believed in a wide range of gods and goddesses, and worshipped several of them, likely selecting some local and tribal deities as well as some of the major divinities venerated across the Empire.[3] Both indigenous British deities and introduced Roman counterparts were venerated in the region, sometimes syncretising together, as in cases like Apollo-Cunomaglus and Sulis-Minerva.[4]: 5  Romano-British temples were sometimes erected at locations that had earlier been cultic sites in pre-Roman Iron Age Britain.[4]: 2–3  A new style of "Romano-Celtic temple" developed which was influenced by both Iron Age and imperial Roman architectural styles but also unique from both; buildings in this style remained in use until the 4th century.[5] The cults of various eastern deities had also been introduced to Roman Britain, among them those of the deities Isis, Mithras, and Cybele; Christianity was just one of these eastern cults.[4]: 6  The archaeologist Martin Henig suggested that to "sense something of the spiritual environment of Christianity at this time", it would be useful to imagine India, where Hinduism, "a major polytheistic system", remains dominant, and "where churches containing images of Christ and the Virgin are in a tiny minority against the many temples of gods and goddesses".[6]

England Edit

Celts Edit

The late Romano-British population seem to have been mostly Christian by the Sub-Roman period. The Great Conspiracy in the 360s and increased raiding around the time of the Roman withdrawal from Britain saw some enslaved. Later medieval legends concerning the conversion of the island under King Lucius[8] or from a mission by Philip the Apostle[10] or Joseph of Arimathea[note 1] have been discredited; they are alleged to be "pious forgeries" introduced in attempts to establish independence[12] or seniority[11] in the ecclesiastical hierarchy formalised following the Norman conquest of England and Wales. The first archaeological evidence and credible records showing a community large enough to maintain churches and bishops date to the 3rd and 4th centuries. These more formal organisational structures arose from materially modest beginnings: the British delegation to the 353 Council of Rimini had to beg for financial assistance from its fellows in order to return home.[13] The Saxon invasions of Britain destroyed most of the formal church structures in the east of Britain as they progressed, replacing it with a form of Germanic polytheism. There seems to have been a lull in the Saxon westward expansion traditionally attributed to the Battle of Badon but, following the arrival of Justinian's Plague around 547, the expansion resumed. By the time Cornwall was subjugated by Wessex at Hingston Down in 838, however, it was largely left to its native people and practices which remained inherently Christian in character and St Piran's Oratory is dated to the 6th century, making it one of the oldest extant Christian sites in Britain.[14]

Anglo-Saxons Edit

 
Portrait labelled AVGVSTINVS from the mid-8th-century Saint Petersburg Bede, though perhaps intended as Gregory the Great.[note 2]

In comparison to its uninterrupted continuity in the culturally Brittonic west, Christianity was extinguished in the east with the arrival of the Saxons, and was reintroduced to eastern Britain by the Gregorian Mission, c. 600. Establishing his archdiocese at Canterbury, Augustine of Canterbury failed to establish his authority over the Welsh church at Chester but his mission—with help from Celtic missionaries such as Aidan and Cuthbert—proved successful in Kent and then Northumbria: the two provinces of the English Church continue to be led from the cathedrals of Canterbury and York (est. 735). Owing to the importance of the Scottish missions, Northumbria initially followed the native Church in its calculation of Easter and tonsure but then aligned itself with Canterbury and Rome at the 664 Synod of Whitby. Early English Christian documents surviving from this time include the 7th-century illuminated Lindisfarne Gospels[18] and the historical accounts written by the Venerable Bede.

Normans Edit

 
Canterbury Cathedral, rebuilt in the Romanesque style in the 1070s, in the Gothic style following a fire in 1174, and in the Perpendicular style following an earthquake in 1382.

Christianity in post-conquest England was generally separatist in character, with the right to appoint bishops belonging to the king despite papal objections.[19]

By the 11th century, the Normans had overrun England and begun the invasion of Wales. Osmund, bishop of Salisbury, codified the Sarum Rite and, by the time of his successor, Roger, a system of endowed prebends had been developed that left ecclesiastical positions independent of the bishop. During the reign of Henry II, the rising popularity of the Grail myth stories coincided with the increasingly central role of communion in Church rituals.[19] Tolerance of commendatory benefices permitted the well-connected to hold multiple offices simply for their spiritual and temporal revenues, subcontracting the position's duties to lower clerics or simply treating them as sinecures. The importance of such revenues prompted the Investiture Crisis, which erupted in Britain over the fight occasioned by King John's refusal to accept Pope Innocent III's nominee as archbishop of Canterbury. England was placed under interdict in 1208 and John excommunicated the following year; he enjoyed the seizure of the Church's revenues but finally relented owing to domestic and foreign rivals strengthened by papal opposition.[20] Although John quickly reneged on his payments,[20] Innocent thereafter took his side and roundly condemned the Magna Carta, calling it "not only shameful and demeaning but illegal and unjust".[21] A major reform movement or heresy of the 14th century was Lollardy, led by John Wycliffe, who translated the Bible into English. Posthumously condemned, his body was exhumed and burnt and its ashes thrown into the River Swift.[22]

Even before the Conquest, Edward the Confessor had returned from Normandy with masons who constructed Westminster Abbey (1042) in the Romanesque style. The cruciform churches of Norman architecture often had deep chancels and a square crossing tower, which has remained a feature of English ecclesiastical architecture. England has many early cathedrals, most notably Winchester Cathedral (1079), York Minster (1080), Durham Cathedral (1093), and (New) Salisbury Cathedral (1220). After a fire damaged Canterbury Cathedral in 1174, Norman masons introduced the Gothic style, which developed into the English Gothic at Wells and Lincoln Cathedrals around 1191. Oxford and Cambridge began as religious schools in the 11th and 13th centuries, respectively.

English Reformation Edit

 
Thomas Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury and author of the first two books of common prayer, being burned at the stake during the Marian Persecutions, from John Foxe's Book of Martyrs.

Henry VIII was named Defender of the Faith (Fidei Defensor) for his opposition to Luther's Reformation. The fact he had no living son and the pope's inability to permit him a divorce from his wife while her nephew's armies held Rome, however, prompted Henry to summon the Reformation Parliament and to invoke the statute of praemunire against the English Church, ultimately leading to the 1532 Submission of the Clergy and the 1534 Acts of Supremacy that made the Church of England an independent national church, no longer under the governance of the Pope, but with the King as Supreme Governor. (It is sometimes incorrectly stated that the Church of England was established at this time. The Church of England was a province of the Catholic Church at least since c. 600 AD. when Augustine became the first Archbishop of Canterbury. Therefore the Church of England could not have been established at a time when it had existed for over 900 years.) A law passed the same year made it an act of treason to publicly oppose these measures; John Fisher and Thomas More and many others were martyred for their continued Catholicism. Fear of foreign invasion was a concern until the 1588 rout of the Spanish Armada, but land sales after the Dissolution of the lesser and greater monasteries united most of the aristocracy behind the change. Religious rebellions in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire in 1536, in Cumberland in 1537, and in Devon and Cornwall in 1549 were quickly dealt with. The doctrine of the English Reformation differed little at first except with regard to royal authority over canon law: Lutheranism remained condemned and John Frith, Robert Barnes, and other Protestants were also martyred, including William Tyndale, whose Obedience of a Christian Man inspired Henry's break with Rome and whose translation of the Bible formed the basis of Henry's own authorised Great Bible. Meanwhile, laws in 1535 and 1542 fully merged Wales with England.

For the next 150 years, religious policy varied with the ruler: Edward VI and his regents favored greater Protestantism, including new books of Common Prayer and Common Order. His sister Mary restored Catholicism after negotiations with the pope ended Rome's claims to the former Church lands,[23] but two false pregnancies left her sister Elizabeth I as her heir. Upon Elizabeth's ascension, the 1558 Act of Uniformity, 1559 Act and Oath of Supremacy, and the Thirty-Nine Articles of 1563 formed the Religious Settlement which restored the Protestant Church of England. The vicissitudes of the clergy during the period were satirised in "The Vicar of Bray". The papal bull Regnans in Excelsis supporting the Rising of the North and the Irish Desmond Rebellions against Elizabeth proved ineffective, but similarly ineffective were the Marian exiles who returned from Calvin's Geneva as Puritans. James I supported the bishops of Anglicanism and the production of an authoritative English Bible while easing persecution against Catholics; several attempts against his person—including the Bye & Gunpowder Plots—finally led to harsher measures. Charles I provoked the Bishops' Wars in Scotland and ultimately the Civil War in England. The victorious Long Parliament restructured the Church at the 1643 Westminster Assembly and issued a new confession of faith. (The English Baptists drew up their own in 1689.) Following the Restoration, onerous Penal Laws were enacted against Dissenters, including the Clarendon Code. Charles II and James II tried to declare royal indulgences of other faiths in 1672 and in 1687; the former was withdrawn in favour of the first Test Act, which—along with the Popish Plot—led to the Exclusion Crisis, and the latter contributed to the Glorious Revolution of 1688.

1689–1945 Edit

 
A stained-glass window in Rochester Cathedral in Kent, incorporating the Flag of England

The religious settlement of 1689 shaped policy down to the 1830s.[24][25] The Church of England was not only dominant in religious affairs, but it blocked outsiders from responsible positions in national and local government, business, professions and academia. In practice, the doctrine of the divine right of kings persisted,[26] old animosities had diminished, and a new spirit of toleration was abroad. Restrictions on Nonconformists were mostly either ignored or slowly lifted. The Protestants, including the Quakers, who worked to overthrow King James II were rewarded. The Toleration Act of 1689 allowed Nonconformists who have their own chapels, teachers and preachers, and censorship was relaxed.[27]

Anti-Catholicism Edit

Harsh penalties on Catholicism remained until the threat of a French restoration of the Catholic Stuart kings ended, but they were seldom enforced, and afterwards were slowly lifted until Catholic emancipation was achieved in 1829. The failure of the pro-Catholic Jacobite rebellions and papal recognition of George III after the death of J.F.E. Stuart in 1766 permitted the gradual removal of anti-Catholic laws, a process known as the Catholic Emancipation, which included the Restoration of the English hierarchy.[28][29]

The Evangelical Revival Edit

 
Statue of Methodism's founder John Wesley in St Paul's Churchyard

The evangelical movement inside and outside the Church of England gained strength in the late 18th and early 19th century. The movement challenged the traditional religious sensibility that emphasised a code of honor for the upper-class, and suitable behaviour for everyone else, together with faithful observances of rituals. John Wesley (1703 – 1791) and his followers preached revivalist religion, trying to convert individuals to a personal relationship with Christ through Bible reading, regular prayer, and especially the revival experience. Wesley himself preached 52,000 times, calling on men and women to "redeem the time" and save their souls. Wesley always operated inside the Church of England, but at his death, it set up outside institutions that became the Methodist Church.[30] It stood alongside the traditional nonconformism of Presbyterians, Congregationalist, Baptists, Unitarians and Quakers. The earlier Nonconformists, however, were less influenced by revivalism.[31]

The Church of England remained dominant, but it had a growing evangelical, revivalist faction: the "Low Church". Its leaders included William Wilberforce and Hannah More. It reached the upper class through the Clapham Sect. It did not seek political reform, but rather the opportunity to save souls through political action by freeing slaves, abolishing the duel, prohibiting cruelty to children and animals, stopping gambling, and avoiding frivolity on the Sabbath. They read the Bible every day. All souls were equal in God's view, but not all bodies, so evangelicals did not challenge the hierarchical structure of English society.[32]

Census of 1851 Edit

As part of the regular census in 1851, the Government conducted a census in England and Wales of attendance at religious services on 30 March 1851. Reports were collected from local ministers who reported attendance at their services on 30 March 1851. The effect of individuals attending multiple services (morning/afternoon/evening) could not be fully accounted for, but the estimated number of individuals attending a service at some point in the day was 7,261,032 people. The number of individuals attending morning services was 4,647,482, and the total number of attendees (including duplicates) was 10,896,066.[33][34] The total population at the time was 17.9 million.

Missionary activity Edit

During the 18th century heyday of the First British Empire, Anglican and Methodist missionaries were active in the 13 American Colonies. The Methodists, led by George Whitefield, were the most successful and after the revolution and entirely distinct American Methodist denomination emerged that became the largest Protestant denomination in the new United States.[35] A major problem for colonial officials was the demand of the Church of England to set up an American bishop; this was strongly opposed by most of the Americans and never happened. Increasingly colonial officials took a neutral position on religious matters, even in those colonies such as Virginia where the Church of England was officially established, but in practice controlled by laymen in the local vestries. After the Americans broke free, British officials decided to enhance the power and wealth of the Church of England in all the settler colonies, especially British North America (Canada).[36]

During the New Imperialism of the 19th century, the London Missionary Society and others like it were active In the British Empire around the world, notably including the work of the Scotsman David Livingstone in Africa. New religious orders were also established within the Anglican fold.

All the main denominations were involved in 19th-century missions, including the Church of England, the Presbyterians of Scotland, and the Nonconformists. Much of the enthusiasm emerged from the Evangelical revival. Within the Church of England, the Church Mission Society (CMS) originated in 1799[37] and went on to undertake activity all around the world, including in what became known as "the Middle East".[38][39]

Missionary societies funded their own operations that were not supervised or directed by the Colonial Office. Tensions emerged between the missionaries and the colonial officials. The latter feared that missionaries might stir up trouble or encourage the natives to challenge colonial authority. In general, colonial officials were much more comfortable with working with the established local leadership, including the native religions, rather than introducing the divisive force of Christianity. This proved especially troublesome in India, were very few local elites were attracted to Christianity. In Africa, especially, the missionaries made many converts. By the 21st century there were more Anglicans in Nigeria than in England, and they were culturally and theologically much more conservative.[40][41]

Missionaries increasingly came to focus on education, medical help, and long-term modernisation of the native personality to inculcate European middle-class values. They established schools and medical clinics. Christian missionaries played a public role, especially in promoting sanitation and public health. Many were trained as physicians, or took special courses in public health and tropical medicine at Livingstone College, London.[42]

1900–1945 Edit

 
Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1903-1928

In the 20th century, the Liturgical and Ecumenical Movements were important developments. Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1903 to 1928, was perhaps the most influential of the churchmen.[43]

A curious case was Ernest Barnes (1874 – 1953), Anglican Bishop of Birmingham, who was a highly visible modernist opposed to Anglo-Catholic practices and rituals. He preached Darwinism and ridiculed many Christian beliefs, especially the sacrament of Holy Communion and the bodily Resurrection of Christ. This led to calls that he should resign as a bishop; he refused, but Davidson made a gentle attack on Barnes in an open letter.[44][45]

Although the overall population was growing steadily, and the Catholic membership was keeping pace, the Protestants were slipping behind. Out of 30-50 million adults, they dropped slowly from 5.7 million members in 1920, and 5.4 million in 1940, to 4.3 million in 1970.[46]: 273–65  The Church of England decline was parallel. Methodism, the largest of the Nonconformists reached a peak of 841,000 members in Great Britain in 1910, slipped to 802,000 in 1920, 792,000 in 1940 729,000 in 1960, and 488,000 in 1980.[47] The Nonconformists had built a strong base in industrial districts that specialised in mining textiles agriculture and fishing; those were declining industries, whose share of the total male workforce was in steady decline, from 21 per cent in 1921 to 13 per cent in 1951. As families migrated to southern England, or to the suburbs, they often lost contact with their childhood religion.[46]: 282  Political reverberations were most serious for the Liberal Party, which was largely based in the Nonconformist community, and which rapidly lost membership in the 1920s as its leadership quarrelled, the Irish Catholics and many from the working-class moved to the Labour Party, and part of the middle class moved to the Conservative party.[48] Hoping to stem the membership decline, the three major Methodist groups united in 1932.[49] In Scotland the two major Presbyterian groups, the Church of Scotland and the United Free Church, merged in 1929 for the same reason. Nonetheless the steady declension continued.[46]: 284–85  The Nonconformists showed not just a decline in membership but a dramatic fall in enthusiasm. Sunday school attendance plummeted; there were far fewer new ministers. Antagonism toward Anglicanism sharply declined, and many prominent Nonconformists became Anglicans, including some leading ministers. There was a falling away in the size and fervour of congregations, less interest in funding missionaries, a decline in intellectualism, and persistent complaints about the lack of money.[50] Commentator D. W. Brogan reported in 1943:

In the generation that has passed since the great Liberal landslide of 1906, one of the greatest changes in the English religious and social landscape has been the decline of Nonconformity. Partly that decline has been due to the general weakening of the hold of Christianity on the English people, partly it has been due to the comparative irrelevance of the peculiarly Nonconformist (as a part from Christian) view of the contemporary world and its problems.[51]

One aspect of the long-term decline in religiosity was that Protestants showed increasingly less interest in sending their children to faith schools. In localities across England, fierce battles were fought between the Nonconformists, Anglicans, and Catholics, each with their own school systems supported by taxes, and secular schools, and taxpayers. The Nonconformists had long taken the lead in fighting the Anglicans, who a century before had practically monopolised education. The Anglican share of the elementary school population fell from 57 per cent in 1918 to 39 per cent in 1939.[52] With the sustained decline in Nonconformist enthusiasm their schools closed one after another. In 1902, the Methodist Churches operated 738 schools; only 28 remained in 1996.[53]

Britain continued to think of itself as a Christian country; there were a few atheists or nonbelievers, and unlike the continent, there was no anti-clericalism worthy of note. A third or more prayed every day. Large majorities used formal Church services to mark birth, marriage and death.[46]: 280–90  The great majority believed in God and heaven, although belief in hell fell off after all the deaths of the World War.[54] After 1918, Church of England services stopped practically all discussion of hell.[55]

As anti-Catholicism declined sharply after 1910, the Catholic Church grew in numbers, grew rapidly in terms of priests and sisters, and expanded their parishes from intercity industrial areas to more suburban locales. Although underrepresented in the higher levels of the social structure, apart from a few old aristocratic Catholic families, Catholic talent was emerging in journalism and diplomacy. A striking development was the surge in highly publicised conversion of intellectuals and writers including most famously G. K. Chesterton, as well as Christopher Dawson, Maurice Baring, Ronald Knox, Sheila Kaye-Smith, William E. Orchard, Alfred Noyes, Rosalind Murray, Arnold Lunn, Eric Gill, David Jones, Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, Manya Harari, and Frank Pakenham.[56]

Since 1945 Edit

Present debates concern the ordination of women and the acceptance of homosexuality within the Church and clergy. The established church continues to count many more baptised members, although immigration from other countries means that the restored Catholic Church in England and Wales now has greater attendance at its weekly services.[57][58]

Whilst identifying significant decline in statistical data of church attendance from the 1950s onwards, Paul Backholer, author of Britain, A Christian Country, found notable exceptions to the decline, which includes the up to two million people who attended Billy Graham's United Kingdom campaigns from 1954-55. With Wembley Stadium filled to overflowing with 120,000 people, Graham's meeting on Sunday 23 May 1954 was called, "Britain's biggest religious meeting of all time."[59] Subsequent renewal movements include the Pentecostal movement, the Charismatic Renewal and more recently, rapid growth in ethnic minority churches. Whilst church attendance continues to decline, he concludes Britain remains, "Historically and culturally Christian in nature," something he notes is recognised by significant leaders of minority faiths in Britain, as an expression of tolerance.[60]

Roman Catholics Edit

English Catholicism continued to grow throughout the first two thirds of the 20th century, when it was associated primarily with elements in the English intellectual class and the ethnic Irish population. Rates of attending Mass remained very high in stark contrast with the Anglican church and Nonconformist Protestant churches.[61] Clergy numbers, which began the 20th century at under 3,000, reached a high of 7,500 in 1971.[62]

By the latter years of the 20th century low numbers of vocations also affected the church[63] with ordinations to the priesthood dropping from the hundreds in the late 20th century into the teens in 2006–2011; 20 men were ordained to the diocesan priesthood in 2011 and 31 in 2012.[64]

The upward social movement of Irish Catholics out of the working-class into the middle-class suburban mainstream often meant their assimilation with broader, secular English society and loss of a separate Catholic identity. The Second Vatican Council has been followed, as in other Western countries, by divisions between traditional Catholicism and a more liberal form of Catholicism claiming inspiration from the Council. This caused difficulties for not a few pre-conciliar converts, though others have still joined the Church in recent decades (for instance, Malcolm Muggeridge and Joseph Pearce), and public figures (often descendants of the recusant families) such as Paul Johnson; Peter Ackroyd; Antonia Fraser; Mark Thompson, Director-General of the BBC; Michael Martin, first Catholic to hold the office of Speaker of the House of Commons since the Reformation; Chris Patten, first Catholic to hold the post of Chancellor of Oxford since the Reformation; Piers Paul Read; Helen Liddel, Britain's High Commissioner to Australia; and former Prime Minister's wife, Cherie Blair, have no difficulty making their Catholicism known in public life. The former Prime Minister, Tony Blair, was received into full communion with the Catholic Church in 2007.[65] Catherine Pepinster, Editor of Tablet, notes: "The impact of Irish immigrants is one. There are numerous prominent campaigners, academics, entertainers (like Danny Boyle the most successful Catholic in showbiz owing to his film, Slumdog Millionaire), politicians and writers. But the descendants of the recusant families are still a force in the land."[66][67][68]

Scotland Edit

Early history Edit

Scottish Reformation Edit

 
In 1559, John Knox returned from ministering in Geneva to lead the Calvinist reformation in Scotland.

During the 16th century, Scotland underwent a Protestant Reformation that created a Calvinist national Kirk, which became Presbyterian in outlook and severely reduced the powers of bishops. Remnants of Catholic and Episcopal religion remained, however. In the earlier part of the century, the teachings of first Martin Luther and then John Calvin began to influence Scotland, particularly through Scottish scholars, often training for the priesthood, who had visited Continental universities.[69] The Lutheran preacher Patrick Hamilton was executed for heresy in St. Andrews in 1528.[70] The execution of others, especially the Zwingli-influenced George Wishart, who was burnt at the stake on the orders of Cardinal Beaton in 1546, angered Protestants. Wishart's supporters assassinated Beaton soon after and seized St. Andrews Castle, which they held for a year before they were defeated with the help of French forces. The survivors, including chaplain John Knox, were condemned to be galley slaves in France, stoking resentment of the French and creating martyrs for the Protestant cause.[71] Limited toleration and the influence of exiled Scots and Protestants in other countries, led to the expansion of Protestantism, with a group of lairds declaring themselves Lords of the Congregation in 1557 and representing their interests politically. The collapse of the French alliance and English intervention in 1560 meant that a relatively small, but highly influential, group of Protestants were in a position to impose reform on the Scottish Church. A confession of faith, rejecting papal jurisdiction and the mass, was adopted by Parliament in 1560, while the young Mary, Queen of Scots, was still in France.[70]: 120–1 

Knox, having escaped the galleys and spent time in Geneva as a follower of Calvin, emerged as the most significant figure of the period. The Calvinism of the reformers led by Knox resulted in a settlement that adopted a (partial) Presbyterian polity and rejected most of the elaborate trappings of the medieval Church. The reformed Kirk gave considerable power to local lairds, who often had control over the appointment of the clergy. There were widespread, but generally orderly outbreaks of iconoclasm. At this point the majority of the population was probably still Catholic in persuasion and the Kirk found it difficult to penetrate the Highlands and Islands, but began a gradual process of conversion and consolidation that, compared with reformations elsewhere, was conducted with relatively little persecution.[70]: 121–33 

In the 1690s the Presbyterian establishment purged the land of Episcopalians and heretics, and made blasphemy a capital crime. Thomas Aitkenhead, the son of an Edinburgh surgeon, aged 18, was indicted for blasphemy by order of the Privy Council for calling the New Testament "The History of the Imposter Christ"; he was hung in 1696.[72]: 64–65  Their extremism led to a reaction known as the "Moderate" cause that ultimately prevailed and opened the way for liberal thinking in the cities.

18th Century Edit

 
Ebenezer Erskine whose actions led to the establishment of the Secession Church.

The early 18th century saw the beginnings of a fragmentation of the Church of Scotland—which was reconstituted on a fully Presbyterian basis after the Glorious Revolution. These fractures were prompted by issues of government and patronage, but reflected a wider division between the hard-line Evangelicals and the theologically more tolerant Moderate Party. The battle was over fears of fanaticism by the former and the promotion of Enlightenment ideas by the latter. The Patronage Act of 1712 was a major blow to the evangelicals, for it meant that local landlords could choose the minister, not the members of the congregation.[72]: 73–75  Schisms erupted as the evangelicals left the main body, starting in 1733 with the First Secession headed by figures including Ebenezer Erskine. The second schism in 1761 lead to the foundation of the independent Relief Church.[73] These churches gained strength in the Evangelical Revival of the later 18th century.[74] a key result was the main Presbyterian church was in the hands of the Moderate faction, which provided critical support for the Enlightenment in the cities.

Long after the triumph of the Church of Scotland in the Lowlands, Highlanders and Islanders clung to an old-fashioned Christianity infused with animistic folk beliefs and practices.[citation needed] The remoteness of the region and the lack of a Gaelic-speaking clergy undermined the missionary efforts of the established Church.[citation needed] The later 18th century saw some success, owing to the efforts of the SSPCK missionaries and to the disruption of traditional society.[75] Catholicism had been reduced to the fringes of the country, particularly the Gaelic-speaking areas of the Highlands and Islands. Conditions also grew worse for Catholics after the Jacobite rebellions and Catholicism was reduced to little more than a poorly-run mission. Also important was Scottish Episcopalianism, which had retained supporters through the civil wars and changes of regime in the 17th century. Since most Episcopalians had given their support to the Jacobite rebellions in the early 18th century, they also suffered a decline in fortunes.[73]

19th century Edit

 
Thomas Chalmers statue in George Street, Edinburgh

After prolonged years of struggle, in 1834 the Evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act, which allowed congregations to reject unwanted "intrusive" presentations to livings by patrons. The following "Ten Years' Conflict" of legal and political wrangling ended in defeat for the non-intrusionists in the civil courts. The result was a schism from the church by some of the non-intrusionists led by Dr Thomas Chalmers known as the Great Disruption of 1843. Roughly a third of the clergy, mainly from the North and Highlands, formed the separate Free Church of Scotland. The evangelical Free Churches, which were more accepting of Gaelic language and culture, grew rapidly in the Highlands and Islands, appealing much more strongly than did the established church.[75] Chalmers's ideas shaped the breakaway group. He stressed a social vision that revived and preserved Scotland's communal traditions at a time of strain on the social fabric of the country. Chalmers's idealised small equalitarian, kirk-based, self-contained communities that recognised the individuality of their members and the need for cooperation.[76] That vision also affected the mainstream Presbyterian churches, and by the 1870s it had been assimilated by the established Church of Scotland. Chalmers's ideals demonstrated that the Church was concerned with the problems of urban society, and they represented a real attempt to overcome the social fragmentation that took place in industrial towns and cities.[77]

In the late 19th century the major debates were between fundamentalist Calvinists and theological liberals, who rejected a literal interpretation of the Bible. This resulted in a further split in the Free Church as the rigid Calvinists broke away to form the Free Presbyterian Church in 1893.[73] There were, however, also moves towards reunion, beginning with the unification of some secessionist churches into the United Secession Church in 1820, which united with the Relief Church in 1847 to form the United Presbyterian Church, which in turn joined with the Free Church in 1900 to form the United Free Church of Scotland. The removal of legislation on lay patronage would allow the majority of the Free Church to rejoin Church of Scotland in 1929. The schisms left small denominations including the Free Presbyterians and a remnant that had not merged in 1900 as the Free Church.[73]

Catholic Emancipation in 1829 and the influx of large numbers of Irish immigrants, particularly after the famine years of the late 1840s, principally to the growing lowland centres like Glasgow, led to a transformation in the fortunes of Catholicism. In 1878, despite opposition, a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical hierarchy was restored to the country, and Catholicism became a significant denomination within Scotland.[73] Episcopalianism also revived in the 19th century as the issue of succession receded, becoming established as the Episcopal Church in Scotland in 1804, as an autonomous organisation in communion with the Church of England.[73] Baptist, Congregationalist and Methodist churches had appeared in Scotland in the 18th century, but did not begin significant growth until the 19th century,[73] partly because more radical and evangelical traditions already existed within the Church of Scotland and the free churches. From 1879 they were joined by the evangelical revivalism of the Salvation Army, which attempted to make major inroads in the growing urban centres.[74]

20th and 21st centuries Edit

In the 20th century existing Christian denominations were joined by other organisations, including the Brethren and Pentecostal churches. Although some denominations thrived, after World War II there was a steady overall decline in church attendance and resulting church closures for most denominations.[74] Talks began in the 1950s aiming at a grand merger of the main Presbyterian, Episcopal and Methodist bodies in Scotland. The talks were ended in 2003, when the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland rejected the proposals.[78] The religious situation was also altered by immigration, resulting in the growth of non-Christian religions. In the 2001 census 42.4 per cent of the population identified with the Church of Scotland, 15.9 per cent with Catholicism and 6.8 with other forms of Christianity, making up roughly 65 per cent of the population (compared with 72 per cent for Britain as a whole). Of other religions Islam was at 0.8 per cent, Buddhism, Sikhism, Judaism and Hinduism were all at around 0.1 per cent. Other religions together accounted for 0.6 per cent of respondents and 5.5 per cent did not state a religion. There were 27.5 per cent who stated that they had no religion (which compares with 15.5 per cent in Britain overall).[79][80] Other more recent studies suggest that those not identifying with a denomination, or who see themselves as non-religious, may be much higher at between 42 and 56 per cent, depending on the form of question asked.[81]

Wales Edit

Early history Edit

Welsh Reformation Edit

Bishop Richard Davies and dissident Protestant cleric John Penry introduced Calvinist theology to Wales. They used the model of the Synod of Dort of 1618-1619. Calvinism developed through the Puritan period, following the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II, and within Wales' Methodist movement. However few copies of Calvin's works were available before the mid-19th century.[82] In 1567 Davies, William Salesbury, and Thomas Huet completed the first modern translation of the New Testament and the first translation of the Book of Common Prayer (Welsh: Y Llyfr Gweddi Gyffredin). In 1588 William Morgan completed a translation of the whole Bible. These translations were important to the survival of the Welsh language and had the effect of conferring status on Welsh as a liturgical language and vehicle for worship. This had a significant role in its continued use as a means of everyday communication and as a literary language down to the present day despite the pressure of English.

Nonconformity Edit

 
Howell Harris was one of the main leaders of the Welsh Methodist revival in the 18th century.

Nonconformity was a significant influence in Wales from the 18th to the 20th centuries. The Welsh Methodist revival of the 18th century was one of the most significant religious and social movements in the history of Wales. The revival began within the Church of England in Wales and at the beginning remained as a group within it, but the Welsh revival differed from the Methodist revival in England in that its theology was Calvinist rather than Arminian. Welsh Methodists gradually built up their own networks, structures, and even meeting houses (or chapels), which led eventually to the secession of 1811 and the formal establishment of the Calvinistic Methodist Presbyterian church of Wales in 1823.[83]

The Welsh Methodist revival also had an influence on the older Nonconformist churches, or dissenters — the Baptists and the Congregationalists — who in turn also experienced growth and renewal. As a result, by the middle of the nineteenth century, Wales was predominantly a Nonconformist nation.

The 1904–1905 Welsh revival was the largest full scale Christian revival of Wales of the 20th century. It is believed that at least 100,000 people became Christians during the 1904–1905 revival, but despite this it did not put a stop to the gradual decline of Christianity in Wales, only holding it back slightly.

Secularisation Edit

Historians agree that in the late 1940s Britain was a predominantly Christian nation, with its religiosity reinforced by the wartime experience. Peter Forster found that in answering pollsters the English reported an overwhelming belief in the truth of Christianity, a high respect for it, and a strong association between it and moral behaviour.[84] Peter Hennessy argued that long-held attitudes did not stop change; by midcentury: "Britain was still a Christian country only in a vague attitudinal sense, belief generally being more a residual husk than the kernel of conviction."[85] Kenneth O. Morgan agreed, noting that: "the Protestant churches. Anglican, and more especially non-conformist, all felt the pressure of falling numbers and of secular challenges....Even the drab Sabbath of Wales and Scotland was under some threat, with pressure for opening cinemas in Wales and golf-courses in Scotland."[86]

Harrison reports that the forces of secularisation grew rapidly, and by the 1990s Protestantism cast a thin shadow of its 1945 strength. Compared to Western Europe, Britain stood at the lower end of attendance at religious services, and near the top in people claiming ‘no religion’. While 80 per cent of Britons in 1950 said they were Christians, only 64 per cent did so in 2000. Brian Harrison states:

By every measure (number of churches, number of parish clergy, church attendance, Easter Day communicants, number of church marriages, membership as a proportion of the adult population) the Church of England was in decline after 1970. In 1985 there were only half as many parish clergy as in 1900.[87] Also, while in the 2001 census still 72 per cent of British population identified as Christians, in 2011 only 59 per cent did so.[88][89]

According to the 2018 British Social Attitudes Survey, which asks "Do you have a religion, and if so what is it?", Britain was majority irreligious.[90] The 2021 United Kingdom census, which asks "What is your religion?", recorded lower numbers than the BSA for the non-religious, but also that Christianity had slipped below half the population.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ First attested in William of Malmesbury's On the Antiquity of the Glastonbury Church, which was written during the 1130s, although the passages dealing with Joseph seem to be later additions to the text.[11]
  2. ^ The name is in the halo, in a later hand. The figure is identified as a saint by his clerical tonsure, and is the earliest surviving historiated initial.[15] The view that it represents Gregory is set out by Douglas Dales in a recent article.[16][17]

References Edit

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  2. ^ Parsons, G. (1988). Religion in Victorian Britain: Traditions. Manchester: Manchester University Press. p. 71. ISBN 0-7190-2511-7.
  3. ^ Petts, David (2003). Christianity in Roman Britain. Stroud: Tempus. pp. 9−10. ISBN 0-7524-2540-4.
  4. ^ a b c Watts, Dorothy (1991). Christians and Pagans in Roman Britain. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-05071-5.
  5. ^ Watts 1991, p. 4.
  6. ^ Henig, Martin (1984). Religion in Roman Britain. New York: St Martin's Press. p. 121. ISBN 0-312-67059-1.
  7. ^ Knight, David (2008). "1". King Lucius of Britain. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 9780752474465.
  8. ^ First attested in a 9th-century manuscript of Pope Boniface II's c. 530 "Felician" edition of The Book of Popes[7]
  9. ^ Malmesbiriensis, Willelmi (1847). "Gesta Regum Anglorum 1125 & seq." [Deeds of the Kings of the English 1125 & seq.]. William of Malmesbury's Chronicle of the Kings of England. From the Earliest Period to the Reign of King Stephen. With Notes and Illustrations (in Latin). Translated by Giles, J. A. London: Henry G. Bohn. p. 21.
  10. ^ As permitted by William of Malmesbury.[9]
  11. ^ a b Robinson, Joseph Armitage (1921). "William of Malmesbury 'On the Antiquity of Glastonbury'". Somerset Historical Essays . London: Oxford University Press – via Wikisource.
  12. ^ Gerald of Wales. Translated by W.S. Davies as The Book of Invectives of Giraldus Cambrensis in Y Cymmrodor: The Magazine of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, Vol. XXX, pp. 16 f. George Simpson & Co. (Devizes), 1920.
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  16. ^ Dales "Apostle of the English" L'eredità spirituale di Gregorio Magno tra Occidente e Oriente p. 299
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  22. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lollards". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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  44. ^ P.T. Merricks, "'God and the Gene': E.W. Barnes on Eugenics and Religion," Politics, Religion & Ideology 13#3 (2012): 353-374.
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Further reading Edit

  • Bebbington, David W. Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s (Routledge, 2003)
  • Brown, Callum G. The death of Christian Britain: understanding secularisation (2nd ed. 2009) excerpt
  • Brown, Callum G. "Secularization, the Growth of Militancy and the Spiritual Revolution: Religious Change and Gender Power in Britain, 1901–2001" Historical Research 80#209 (2007), pp. 393–418.
  • Chadwick, Owen, The Victorian Church: Vol 1 1829-1859 (1966); Victorian Church: Part two 1860-1901 (1979); a major scholarly survey
  • Cox, Jeffrey. The British Missionary Enterprise since 1700 (2008).
  • Davie, Grace. Religion in Britain since 1945: Believing without belonging (Blackwell, 1994)
  • Davies, Rupert E. et al. A History of the Methodist Church in Great Britain (3 vol. Wipf & Stock, 2017). online
  • Gilley, Sheridan, and W. J. Sheils. A History of Religion in Britain: Practice and Belief from Pre-Roman Times to the Present (1994) 608pp excerpt and text search
  • Hastings, Adrian. A History of English Christianity: 1920-1985 (1986) 720pp a major scholarly survey
  • Morris, Jeremy. '"Secularization and Religious Experience: Arguments in the Historiography of Modern British Religion" Historical Journal 55#1 (2012), 195–219, online
  • Obelkevich, J. Religion and Rural Society (Oxford University Press, 1976)
  • Shaw, Duncan, edt al. "What is Religious History?" History Today (1985) 35#8 online, commentary by 8 scholars
  • Soloway, Richard Allen. “Church and Society: Recent Trends in Nineteenth Century Religious History.” Journal of British Studies 11.2 1972, pp. 142–159. online

England and Church of England Edit

  • Gilbert, Alan. Religion and Society in Industrial England. Church, Chapel and Social Change, 1740 – 1914 (Longman, 1976).
  • Glasson, Travis. Mastering Christianity: Missionary Anglicanism and Slavery in the Atlantic World (2011).
  • Hastings, Adrian. A history of English Christianity, 1920-1985 (HarperCollins, 1986).
  • Hylson-Smith, Kenneth. The churches in England from Elizabeth I to Elizabeth II (1996).
  • Marshall, Peter. "(Re)defining the English Reformation," Journal of British Studies, July 2009, Vol. 48#3 pp 564–586
  • Martin, Mary Clare. "Church, school and locality: Revisiting the historiography of 'state' and 'religious' educational infrastructures in England and Wales, 1780–1870." Paedagogica Historica 49.1 (2013): 70-81.
  • Thomas, Keith. Religion and the decline of magic: studies in popular beliefs in sixteenth and seventeenth-century England (1991) highly influential study of popular religious behaviour and beliefs

Scotland and Presbyterianism Edit

  • Brown, Callum G. The social history of religion in Scotland since 1730 (Methuen, 1987)
  • Brown, S. J., "Religion and society to c. 1900", in T. M. Devine and J. Wormald, eds, The Oxford Handbook of Modern Scottish History (Oxford University Press, 2012)
  • Henderson, G. D. Religious Life in Seventeenth-Century Scotland (Cambridge University Press, 2011)
  • Piggott, Charles A. "A geography of religion in Scotland." The Scottish Geographical Magazine 96.3 (1980): 130-140.

Wales Edit

  • Chambers, Paul, and Andrew Thompson. "Coming to terms with the past: religion and identity in Wales." Social compass 52.3 (2005): 337-352.
  • Davies, Ebnezer Thomas. Religion in the Industrial Revolution of South Wales (U. of Wales Press, 1965)
  • Jenkins, Geraint H. Literature, religion and society in Wales, 1660-1730 (University of Wales Press, 1978)
  • Morgan, Derec Llwyd. The Great Awakening in Wales (Epworth Press, 1988)
  • Walker, R. B. "The Growth of Wesleyan Methodism in Victorian England and Wales." The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 24.03 (1973): 267-284.
  • Williams, Glanmor. History of Wales, Vol. 3: Recovery, Reorientation & Reformation: Wales, c. 1415-1642 (1987) 528p.
  • Williams, Glanmor. The Welsh Church from Conquest to Reformation (University of Wales Press, 1976)
  • Williams, Glanmor. The Welsh Church from Reformation to Disestablishment: 1603-1920 (University of Wales Press, 2007)
  • Williams, Glanmor, ed. Welsh reformation essays (University of Wales Press, 1967)
  • Yalden, Peter. "Association, Community and the Origins of Secularisation: English and Welsh Nonconformity, c. 1850–1930." The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 55.02 (2004): 293-324.

history, christianity, britain, history, christianity, britain, covers, religious, organisations, policies, theology, popular, religiosity, since, ancient, times, church, martin, canterbury, oldest, extant, church, building, britain, still, church, oldest, ang. The history of Christianity in Britain covers the religious organisations policies theology and popular religiosity since ancient times The Church of St Martin in Canterbury is the oldest extant church building in Britain still in use as a church It is the oldest Anglican parish church The Roman Catholic Church was the dominant form of Christianity in Britain from the 6th century through to the Reformation period in the Middle Ages The Anglican Church of England became the independent established church in England and Wales in 1534 as a result of the English Reformation In Wales disestablishment took place in 1920 when the Church in Wales became independent from the Church of England In Scotland the Presbyterian Church of Scotland established in a separate Scottish Reformation in the 16th century is recognized as the national church but not established Following the Reformation adherence to the Catholic Church continued at various levels in different parts of Britain especially among recusants and in the north of England 1 Particularly from the mid 17th century forms of Protestant nonconformity including Congregationalists Baptists Quakers and later Methodists grew outside of the established church 2 Contents 1 Roman Britain 2 England 2 1 Celts 2 2 Anglo Saxons 2 3 Normans 2 4 English Reformation 2 5 1689 1945 2 5 1 Anti Catholicism 2 5 2 The Evangelical Revival 2 5 3 Census of 1851 2 5 4 Missionary activity 2 5 5 1900 1945 2 6 Since 1945 2 6 1 Roman Catholics 3 Scotland 3 1 Early history 3 2 Scottish Reformation 3 3 18th Century 3 4 19th century 3 5 20th and 21st centuries 4 Wales 4 1 Early history 4 2 Welsh Reformation 4 3 Nonconformity 5 Secularisation 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 England and Church of England 9 2 Scotland and Presbyterianism 9 3 WalesRoman Britain EditMain article Christianity in Roman Britain People in Roman Britain typically believed in a wide range of gods and goddesses and worshipped several of them likely selecting some local and tribal deities as well as some of the major divinities venerated across the Empire 3 Both indigenous British deities and introduced Roman counterparts were venerated in the region sometimes syncretising together as in cases like Apollo Cunomaglus and Sulis Minerva 4 5 Romano British temples were sometimes erected at locations that had earlier been cultic sites in pre Roman Iron Age Britain 4 2 3 A new style of Romano Celtic temple developed which was influenced by both Iron Age and imperial Roman architectural styles but also unique from both buildings in this style remained in use until the 4th century 5 The cults of various eastern deities had also been introduced to Roman Britain among them those of the deities Isis Mithras and Cybele Christianity was just one of these eastern cults 4 6 The archaeologist Martin Henig suggested that to sense something of the spiritual environment of Christianity at this time it would be useful to imagine India where Hinduism a major polytheistic system remains dominant and where churches containing images of Christ and the Virgin are in a tiny minority against the many temples of gods and goddesses 6 England EditCelts Edit Main article Celtic Christianity The late Romano British population seem to have been mostly Christian by the Sub Roman period The Great Conspiracy in the 360s and increased raiding around the time of the Roman withdrawal from Britain saw some enslaved Later medieval legends concerning the conversion of the island under King Lucius 8 or from a mission by Philip the Apostle 10 or Joseph of Arimathea note 1 have been discredited they are alleged to be pious forgeries introduced in attempts to establish independence 12 or seniority 11 in the ecclesiastical hierarchy formalised following the Norman conquest of England and Wales The first archaeological evidence and credible records showing a community large enough to maintain churches and bishops date to the 3rd and 4th centuries These more formal organisational structures arose from materially modest beginnings the British delegation to the 353 Council of Rimini had to beg for financial assistance from its fellows in order to return home 13 The Saxon invasions of Britain destroyed most of the formal church structures in the east of Britain as they progressed replacing it with a form of Germanic polytheism There seems to have been a lull in the Saxon westward expansion traditionally attributed to the Battle of Badon but following the arrival of Justinian s Plague around 547 the expansion resumed By the time Cornwall was subjugated by Wessex at Hingston Down in 838 however it was largely left to its native people and practices which remained inherently Christian in character and St Piran s Oratory is dated to the 6th century making it one of the oldest extant Christian sites in Britain 14 Anglo Saxons Edit nbsp Portrait labelled AVGVSTINVS from the mid 8th century Saint Petersburg Bede though perhaps intended as Gregory the Great note 2 Main articles Christianisation of Anglo Saxon England and Christianity in Anglo Saxon England In comparison to its uninterrupted continuity in the culturally Brittonic west Christianity was extinguished in the east with the arrival of the Saxons and was reintroduced to eastern Britain by the Gregorian Mission c 600 Establishing his archdiocese at Canterbury Augustine of Canterbury failed to establish his authority over the Welsh church at Chester but his mission with help from Celtic missionaries such as Aidan and Cuthbert proved successful in Kent and then Northumbria the two provinces of the English Church continue to be led from the cathedrals of Canterbury and York est 735 Owing to the importance of the Scottish missions Northumbria initially followed the native Church in its calculation of Easter and tonsure but then aligned itself with Canterbury and Rome at the 664 Synod of Whitby Early English Christian documents surviving from this time include the 7th century illuminated Lindisfarne Gospels 18 and the historical accounts written by the Venerable Bede Normans Edit nbsp Canterbury Cathedral rebuilt in the Romanesque style in the 1070s in the Gothic style following a fire in 1174 and in the Perpendicular style following an earthquake in 1382 Christianity in post conquest England was generally separatist in character with the right to appoint bishops belonging to the king despite papal objections 19 By the 11th century the Normans had overrun England and begun the invasion of Wales Osmund bishop of Salisbury codified the Sarum Rite and by the time of his successor Roger a system of endowed prebends had been developed that left ecclesiastical positions independent of the bishop During the reign of Henry II the rising popularity of the Grail myth stories coincided with the increasingly central role of communion in Church rituals 19 Tolerance of commendatory benefices permitted the well connected to hold multiple offices simply for their spiritual and temporal revenues subcontracting the position s duties to lower clerics or simply treating them as sinecures The importance of such revenues prompted the Investiture Crisis which erupted in Britain over the fight occasioned by King John s refusal to accept Pope Innocent III s nominee as archbishop of Canterbury England was placed under interdict in 1208 and John excommunicated the following year he enjoyed the seizure of the Church s revenues but finally relented owing to domestic and foreign rivals strengthened by papal opposition 20 Although John quickly reneged on his payments 20 Innocent thereafter took his side and roundly condemned the Magna Carta calling it not only shameful and demeaning but illegal and unjust 21 A major reform movement or heresy of the 14th century was Lollardy led by John Wycliffe who translated the Bible into English Posthumously condemned his body was exhumed and burnt and its ashes thrown into the River Swift 22 Even before the Conquest Edward the Confessor had returned from Normandy with masons who constructed Westminster Abbey 1042 in the Romanesque style The cruciform churches of Norman architecture often had deep chancels and a square crossing tower which has remained a feature of English ecclesiastical architecture England has many early cathedrals most notably Winchester Cathedral 1079 York Minster 1080 Durham Cathedral 1093 and New Salisbury Cathedral 1220 After a fire damaged Canterbury Cathedral in 1174 Norman masons introduced the Gothic style which developed into the English Gothic at Wells and Lincoln Cathedrals around 1191 Oxford and Cambridge began as religious schools in the 11th and 13th centuries respectively English Reformation Edit Main articles English Reformation and History of the Church of England nbsp Thomas Cranmer archbishop of Canterbury and author of the first two books of common prayer being burned at the stake during the Marian Persecutions from John Foxe s Book of Martyrs Henry VIII was named Defender of the Faith Fidei Defensor for his opposition to Luther s Reformation The fact he had no living son and the pope s inability to permit him a divorce from his wife while her nephew s armies held Rome however prompted Henry to summon the Reformation Parliament and to invoke the statute of praemunire against the English Church ultimately leading to the 1532 Submission of the Clergy and the 1534 Acts of Supremacy that made the Church of England an independent national church no longer under the governance of the Pope but with the King as Supreme Governor It is sometimes incorrectly stated that the Church of England was established at this time The Church of England was a province of the Catholic Church at least since c 600 AD when Augustine became the first Archbishop of Canterbury Therefore the Church of England could not have been established at a time when it had existed for over 900 years A law passed the same year made it an act of treason to publicly oppose these measures John Fisher and Thomas More and many others were martyred for their continued Catholicism Fear of foreign invasion was a concern until the 1588 rout of the Spanish Armada but land sales after the Dissolution of the lesser and greater monasteries united most of the aristocracy behind the change Religious rebellions in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire in 1536 in Cumberland in 1537 and in Devon and Cornwall in 1549 were quickly dealt with The doctrine of the English Reformation differed little at first except with regard to royal authority over canon law Lutheranism remained condemned and John Frith Robert Barnes and other Protestants were also martyred including William Tyndale whose Obedience of a Christian Man inspired Henry s break with Rome and whose translation of the Bible formed the basis of Henry s own authorised Great Bible Meanwhile laws in 1535 and 1542 fully merged Wales with England For the next 150 years religious policy varied with the ruler Edward VI and his regents favored greater Protestantism including new books of Common Prayer and Common Order His sister Mary restored Catholicism after negotiations with the pope ended Rome s claims to the former Church lands 23 but two false pregnancies left her sister Elizabeth I as her heir Upon Elizabeth s ascension the 1558 Act of Uniformity 1559 Act and Oath of Supremacy and the Thirty Nine Articles of 1563 formed the Religious Settlement which restored the Protestant Church of England The vicissitudes of the clergy during the period were satirised in The Vicar of Bray The papal bull Regnans in Excelsis supporting the Rising of the North and the Irish Desmond Rebellions against Elizabeth proved ineffective but similarly ineffective were the Marian exiles who returned from Calvin s Geneva as Puritans James I supported the bishops of Anglicanism and the production of an authoritative English Bible while easing persecution against Catholics several attempts against his person including the Bye amp Gunpowder Plots finally led to harsher measures Charles I provoked the Bishops Wars in Scotland and ultimately the Civil War in England The victorious Long Parliament restructured the Church at the 1643 Westminster Assembly and issued a new confession of faith The English Baptists drew up their own in 1689 Following the Restoration onerous Penal Laws were enacted against Dissenters including the Clarendon Code Charles II and James II tried to declare royal indulgences of other faiths in 1672 and in 1687 the former was withdrawn in favour of the first Test Act which along with the Popish Plot led to the Exclusion Crisis and the latter contributed to the Glorious Revolution of 1688 1689 1945 Edit nbsp A stained glass window in Rochester Cathedral in Kent incorporating the Flag of EnglandThe religious settlement of 1689 shaped policy down to the 1830s 24 25 The Church of England was not only dominant in religious affairs but it blocked outsiders from responsible positions in national and local government business professions and academia In practice the doctrine of the divine right of kings persisted 26 old animosities had diminished and a new spirit of toleration was abroad Restrictions on Nonconformists were mostly either ignored or slowly lifted The Protestants including the Quakers who worked to overthrow King James II were rewarded The Toleration Act of 1689 allowed Nonconformists who have their own chapels teachers and preachers and censorship was relaxed 27 Anti Catholicism Edit Main article Anti Catholicism in the United Kingdom Harsh penalties on Catholicism remained until the threat of a French restoration of the Catholic Stuart kings ended but they were seldom enforced and afterwards were slowly lifted until Catholic emancipation was achieved in 1829 The failure of the pro Catholic Jacobite rebellions and papal recognition of George III after the death of J F E Stuart in 1766 permitted the gradual removal of anti Catholic laws a process known as the Catholic Emancipation which included the Restoration of the English hierarchy 28 29 The Evangelical Revival Edit Main articles First Great Awakening Evangelical Revival in Britain and Methodism nbsp Statue of Methodism s founder John Wesley in St Paul s ChurchyardThe evangelical movement inside and outside the Church of England gained strength in the late 18th and early 19th century The movement challenged the traditional religious sensibility that emphasised a code of honor for the upper class and suitable behaviour for everyone else together with faithful observances of rituals John Wesley 1703 1791 and his followers preached revivalist religion trying to convert individuals to a personal relationship with Christ through Bible reading regular prayer and especially the revival experience Wesley himself preached 52 000 times calling on men and women to redeem the time and save their souls Wesley always operated inside the Church of England but at his death it set up outside institutions that became the Methodist Church 30 It stood alongside the traditional nonconformism of Presbyterians Congregationalist Baptists Unitarians and Quakers The earlier Nonconformists however were less influenced by revivalism 31 The Church of England remained dominant but it had a growing evangelical revivalist faction the Low Church Its leaders included William Wilberforce and Hannah More It reached the upper class through the Clapham Sect It did not seek political reform but rather the opportunity to save souls through political action by freeing slaves abolishing the duel prohibiting cruelty to children and animals stopping gambling and avoiding frivolity on the Sabbath They read the Bible every day All souls were equal in God s view but not all bodies so evangelicals did not challenge the hierarchical structure of English society 32 Census of 1851 Edit As part of the regular census in 1851 the Government conducted a census in England and Wales of attendance at religious services on 30 March 1851 Reports were collected from local ministers who reported attendance at their services on 30 March 1851 The effect of individuals attending multiple services morning afternoon evening could not be fully accounted for but the estimated number of individuals attending a service at some point in the day was 7 261 032 people The number of individuals attending morning services was 4 647 482 and the total number of attendees including duplicates was 10 896 066 33 34 The total population at the time was 17 9 million Missionary activity Edit During the 18th century heyday of the First British Empire Anglican and Methodist missionaries were active in the 13 American Colonies The Methodists led by George Whitefield were the most successful and after the revolution and entirely distinct American Methodist denomination emerged that became the largest Protestant denomination in the new United States 35 A major problem for colonial officials was the demand of the Church of England to set up an American bishop this was strongly opposed by most of the Americans and never happened Increasingly colonial officials took a neutral position on religious matters even in those colonies such as Virginia where the Church of England was officially established but in practice controlled by laymen in the local vestries After the Americans broke free British officials decided to enhance the power and wealth of the Church of England in all the settler colonies especially British North America Canada 36 During the New Imperialism of the 19th century the London Missionary Society and others like it were active In the British Empire around the world notably including the work of the Scotsman David Livingstone in Africa New religious orders were also established within the Anglican fold All the main denominations were involved in 19th century missions including the Church of England the Presbyterians of Scotland and the Nonconformists Much of the enthusiasm emerged from the Evangelical revival Within the Church of England the Church Mission Society CMS originated in 1799 37 and went on to undertake activity all around the world including in what became known as the Middle East 38 39 Missionary societies funded their own operations that were not supervised or directed by the Colonial Office Tensions emerged between the missionaries and the colonial officials The latter feared that missionaries might stir up trouble or encourage the natives to challenge colonial authority In general colonial officials were much more comfortable with working with the established local leadership including the native religions rather than introducing the divisive force of Christianity This proved especially troublesome in India were very few local elites were attracted to Christianity In Africa especially the missionaries made many converts By the 21st century there were more Anglicans in Nigeria than in England and they were culturally and theologically much more conservative 40 41 Missionaries increasingly came to focus on education medical help and long term modernisation of the native personality to inculcate European middle class values They established schools and medical clinics Christian missionaries played a public role especially in promoting sanitation and public health Many were trained as physicians or took special courses in public health and tropical medicine at Livingstone College London 42 1900 1945 Edit nbsp Randall Davidson Archbishop of Canterbury 1903 1928In the 20th century the Liturgical and Ecumenical Movements were important developments Randall Davidson Archbishop of Canterbury from 1903 to 1928 was perhaps the most influential of the churchmen 43 A curious case was Ernest Barnes 1874 1953 Anglican Bishop of Birmingham who was a highly visible modernist opposed to Anglo Catholic practices and rituals He preached Darwinism and ridiculed many Christian beliefs especially the sacrament of Holy Communion and the bodily Resurrection of Christ This led to calls that he should resign as a bishop he refused but Davidson made a gentle attack on Barnes in an open letter 44 45 Although the overall population was growing steadily and the Catholic membership was keeping pace the Protestants were slipping behind Out of 30 50 million adults they dropped slowly from 5 7 million members in 1920 and 5 4 million in 1940 to 4 3 million in 1970 46 273 65 The Church of England decline was parallel Methodism the largest of the Nonconformists reached a peak of 841 000 members in Great Britain in 1910 slipped to 802 000 in 1920 792 000 in 1940 729 000 in 1960 and 488 000 in 1980 47 The Nonconformists had built a strong base in industrial districts that specialised in mining textiles agriculture and fishing those were declining industries whose share of the total male workforce was in steady decline from 21 per cent in 1921 to 13 per cent in 1951 As families migrated to southern England or to the suburbs they often lost contact with their childhood religion 46 282 Political reverberations were most serious for the Liberal Party which was largely based in the Nonconformist community and which rapidly lost membership in the 1920s as its leadership quarrelled the Irish Catholics and many from the working class moved to the Labour Party and part of the middle class moved to the Conservative party 48 Hoping to stem the membership decline the three major Methodist groups united in 1932 49 In Scotland the two major Presbyterian groups the Church of Scotland and the United Free Church merged in 1929 for the same reason Nonetheless the steady declension continued 46 284 85 The Nonconformists showed not just a decline in membership but a dramatic fall in enthusiasm Sunday school attendance plummeted there were far fewer new ministers Antagonism toward Anglicanism sharply declined and many prominent Nonconformists became Anglicans including some leading ministers There was a falling away in the size and fervour of congregations less interest in funding missionaries a decline in intellectualism and persistent complaints about the lack of money 50 Commentator D W Brogan reported in 1943 In the generation that has passed since the great Liberal landslide of 1906 one of the greatest changes in the English religious and social landscape has been the decline of Nonconformity Partly that decline has been due to the general weakening of the hold of Christianity on the English people partly it has been due to the comparative irrelevance of the peculiarly Nonconformist as a part from Christian view of the contemporary world and its problems 51 One aspect of the long term decline in religiosity was that Protestants showed increasingly less interest in sending their children to faith schools In localities across England fierce battles were fought between the Nonconformists Anglicans and Catholics each with their own school systems supported by taxes and secular schools and taxpayers The Nonconformists had long taken the lead in fighting the Anglicans who a century before had practically monopolised education The Anglican share of the elementary school population fell from 57 per cent in 1918 to 39 per cent in 1939 52 With the sustained decline in Nonconformist enthusiasm their schools closed one after another In 1902 the Methodist Churches operated 738 schools only 28 remained in 1996 53 Britain continued to think of itself as a Christian country there were a few atheists or nonbelievers and unlike the continent there was no anti clericalism worthy of note A third or more prayed every day Large majorities used formal Church services to mark birth marriage and death 46 280 90 The great majority believed in God and heaven although belief in hell fell off after all the deaths of the World War 54 After 1918 Church of England services stopped practically all discussion of hell 55 As anti Catholicism declined sharply after 1910 the Catholic Church grew in numbers grew rapidly in terms of priests and sisters and expanded their parishes from intercity industrial areas to more suburban locales Although underrepresented in the higher levels of the social structure apart from a few old aristocratic Catholic families Catholic talent was emerging in journalism and diplomacy A striking development was the surge in highly publicised conversion of intellectuals and writers including most famously G K Chesterton as well as Christopher Dawson Maurice Baring Ronald Knox Sheila Kaye Smith William E Orchard Alfred Noyes Rosalind Murray Arnold Lunn Eric Gill David Jones Evelyn Waugh Graham Greene Manya Harari and Frank Pakenham 56 Since 1945 Edit Present debates concern the ordination of women and the acceptance of homosexuality within the Church and clergy The established church continues to count many more baptised members although immigration from other countries means that the restored Catholic Church in England and Wales now has greater attendance at its weekly services 57 58 Whilst identifying significant decline in statistical data of church attendance from the 1950s onwards Paul Backholer author of Britain A Christian Country found notable exceptions to the decline which includes the up to two million people who attended Billy Graham s United Kingdom campaigns from 1954 55 With Wembley Stadium filled to overflowing with 120 000 people Graham s meeting on Sunday 23 May 1954 was called Britain s biggest religious meeting of all time 59 Subsequent renewal movements include the Pentecostal movement the Charismatic Renewal and more recently rapid growth in ethnic minority churches Whilst church attendance continues to decline he concludes Britain remains Historically and culturally Christian in nature something he notes is recognised by significant leaders of minority faiths in Britain as an expression of tolerance 60 Roman Catholics Edit English Catholicism continued to grow throughout the first two thirds of the 20th century when it was associated primarily with elements in the English intellectual class and the ethnic Irish population Rates of attending Mass remained very high in stark contrast with the Anglican church and Nonconformist Protestant churches 61 Clergy numbers which began the 20th century at under 3 000 reached a high of 7 500 in 1971 62 By the latter years of the 20th century low numbers of vocations also affected the church 63 with ordinations to the priesthood dropping from the hundreds in the late 20th century into the teens in 2006 2011 20 men were ordained to the diocesan priesthood in 2011 and 31 in 2012 64 The upward social movement of Irish Catholics out of the working class into the middle class suburban mainstream often meant their assimilation with broader secular English society and loss of a separate Catholic identity The Second Vatican Council has been followed as in other Western countries by divisions between traditional Catholicism and a more liberal form of Catholicism claiming inspiration from the Council This caused difficulties for not a few pre conciliar converts though others have still joined the Church in recent decades for instance Malcolm Muggeridge and Joseph Pearce and public figures often descendants of the recusant families such as Paul Johnson Peter Ackroyd Antonia Fraser Mark Thompson Director General of the BBC Michael Martin first Catholic to hold the office of Speaker of the House of Commons since the Reformation Chris Patten first Catholic to hold the post of Chancellor of Oxford since the Reformation Piers Paul Read Helen Liddel Britain s High Commissioner to Australia and former Prime Minister s wife Cherie Blair have no difficulty making their Catholicism known in public life The former Prime Minister Tony Blair was received into full communion with the Catholic Church in 2007 65 Catherine Pepinster Editor of Tablet notes The impact of Irish immigrants is one There are numerous prominent campaigners academics entertainers like Danny Boyle the most successful Catholic in showbiz owing to his film Slumdog Millionaire politicians and writers But the descendants of the recusant families are still a force in the land 66 67 68 Scotland EditMain article History of Christianity in Scotland Early history Edit Main article Celtic Christianity Scottish Reformation Edit Main articles Scottish Reformation and Scottish religion in the seventeenth century nbsp In 1559 John Knox returned from ministering in Geneva to lead the Calvinist reformation in Scotland During the 16th century Scotland underwent a Protestant Reformation that created a Calvinist national Kirk which became Presbyterian in outlook and severely reduced the powers of bishops Remnants of Catholic and Episcopal religion remained however In the earlier part of the century the teachings of first Martin Luther and then John Calvin began to influence Scotland particularly through Scottish scholars often training for the priesthood who had visited Continental universities 69 The Lutheran preacher Patrick Hamilton was executed for heresy in St Andrews in 1528 70 The execution of others especially the Zwingli influenced George Wishart who was burnt at the stake on the orders of Cardinal Beaton in 1546 angered Protestants Wishart s supporters assassinated Beaton soon after and seized St Andrews Castle which they held for a year before they were defeated with the help of French forces The survivors including chaplain John Knox were condemned to be galley slaves in France stoking resentment of the French and creating martyrs for the Protestant cause 71 Limited toleration and the influence of exiled Scots and Protestants in other countries led to the expansion of Protestantism with a group of lairds declaring themselves Lords of the Congregation in 1557 and representing their interests politically The collapse of the French alliance and English intervention in 1560 meant that a relatively small but highly influential group of Protestants were in a position to impose reform on the Scottish Church A confession of faith rejecting papal jurisdiction and the mass was adopted by Parliament in 1560 while the young Mary Queen of Scots was still in France 70 120 1 Knox having escaped the galleys and spent time in Geneva as a follower of Calvin emerged as the most significant figure of the period The Calvinism of the reformers led by Knox resulted in a settlement that adopted a partial Presbyterian polity and rejected most of the elaborate trappings of the medieval Church The reformed Kirk gave considerable power to local lairds who often had control over the appointment of the clergy There were widespread but generally orderly outbreaks of iconoclasm At this point the majority of the population was probably still Catholic in persuasion and the Kirk found it difficult to penetrate the Highlands and Islands but began a gradual process of conversion and consolidation that compared with reformations elsewhere was conducted with relatively little persecution 70 121 33 In the 1690s the Presbyterian establishment purged the land of Episcopalians and heretics and made blasphemy a capital crime Thomas Aitkenhead the son of an Edinburgh surgeon aged 18 was indicted for blasphemy by order of the Privy Council for calling the New Testament The History of the Imposter Christ he was hung in 1696 72 64 65 Their extremism led to a reaction known as the Moderate cause that ultimately prevailed and opened the way for liberal thinking in the cities 18th Century Edit Main article Scottish religion in the eighteenth century nbsp Ebenezer Erskine whose actions led to the establishment of the Secession Church The early 18th century saw the beginnings of a fragmentation of the Church of Scotland which was reconstituted on a fully Presbyterian basis after the Glorious Revolution These fractures were prompted by issues of government and patronage but reflected a wider division between the hard line Evangelicals and the theologically more tolerant Moderate Party The battle was over fears of fanaticism by the former and the promotion of Enlightenment ideas by the latter The Patronage Act of 1712 was a major blow to the evangelicals for it meant that local landlords could choose the minister not the members of the congregation 72 73 75 Schisms erupted as the evangelicals left the main body starting in 1733 with the First Secession headed by figures including Ebenezer Erskine The second schism in 1761 lead to the foundation of the independent Relief Church 73 These churches gained strength in the Evangelical Revival of the later 18th century 74 a key result was the main Presbyterian church was in the hands of the Moderate faction which provided critical support for the Enlightenment in the cities Long after the triumph of the Church of Scotland in the Lowlands Highlanders and Islanders clung to an old fashioned Christianity infused with animistic folk beliefs and practices citation needed The remoteness of the region and the lack of a Gaelic speaking clergy undermined the missionary efforts of the established Church citation needed The later 18th century saw some success owing to the efforts of the SSPCK missionaries and to the disruption of traditional society 75 Catholicism had been reduced to the fringes of the country particularly the Gaelic speaking areas of the Highlands and Islands Conditions also grew worse for Catholics after the Jacobite rebellions and Catholicism was reduced to little more than a poorly run mission Also important was Scottish Episcopalianism which had retained supporters through the civil wars and changes of regime in the 17th century Since most Episcopalians had given their support to the Jacobite rebellions in the early 18th century they also suffered a decline in fortunes 73 19th century Edit Main article Scottish religion in the nineteenth century nbsp Thomas Chalmers statue in George Street EdinburghAfter prolonged years of struggle in 1834 the Evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act which allowed congregations to reject unwanted intrusive presentations to livings by patrons The following Ten Years Conflict of legal and political wrangling ended in defeat for the non intrusionists in the civil courts The result was a schism from the church by some of the non intrusionists led by Dr Thomas Chalmers known as the Great Disruption of 1843 Roughly a third of the clergy mainly from the North and Highlands formed the separate Free Church of Scotland The evangelical Free Churches which were more accepting of Gaelic language and culture grew rapidly in the Highlands and Islands appealing much more strongly than did the established church 75 Chalmers s ideas shaped the breakaway group He stressed a social vision that revived and preserved Scotland s communal traditions at a time of strain on the social fabric of the country Chalmers s idealised small equalitarian kirk based self contained communities that recognised the individuality of their members and the need for cooperation 76 That vision also affected the mainstream Presbyterian churches and by the 1870s it had been assimilated by the established Church of Scotland Chalmers s ideals demonstrated that the Church was concerned with the problems of urban society and they represented a real attempt to overcome the social fragmentation that took place in industrial towns and cities 77 In the late 19th century the major debates were between fundamentalist Calvinists and theological liberals who rejected a literal interpretation of the Bible This resulted in a further split in the Free Church as the rigid Calvinists broke away to form the Free Presbyterian Church in 1893 73 There were however also moves towards reunion beginning with the unification of some secessionist churches into the United Secession Church in 1820 which united with the Relief Church in 1847 to form the United Presbyterian Church which in turn joined with the Free Church in 1900 to form the United Free Church of Scotland The removal of legislation on lay patronage would allow the majority of the Free Church to rejoin Church of Scotland in 1929 The schisms left small denominations including the Free Presbyterians and a remnant that had not merged in 1900 as the Free Church 73 Catholic Emancipation in 1829 and the influx of large numbers of Irish immigrants particularly after the famine years of the late 1840s principally to the growing lowland centres like Glasgow led to a transformation in the fortunes of Catholicism In 1878 despite opposition a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical hierarchy was restored to the country and Catholicism became a significant denomination within Scotland 73 Episcopalianism also revived in the 19th century as the issue of succession receded becoming established as the Episcopal Church in Scotland in 1804 as an autonomous organisation in communion with the Church of England 73 Baptist Congregationalist and Methodist churches had appeared in Scotland in the 18th century but did not begin significant growth until the 19th century 73 partly because more radical and evangelical traditions already existed within the Church of Scotland and the free churches From 1879 they were joined by the evangelical revivalism of the Salvation Army which attempted to make major inroads in the growing urban centres 74 20th and 21st centuries Edit Main article Christianity in ScotlandIn the 20th century existing Christian denominations were joined by other organisations including the Brethren and Pentecostal churches Although some denominations thrived after World War II there was a steady overall decline in church attendance and resulting church closures for most denominations 74 Talks began in the 1950s aiming at a grand merger of the main Presbyterian Episcopal and Methodist bodies in Scotland The talks were ended in 2003 when the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland rejected the proposals 78 The religious situation was also altered by immigration resulting in the growth of non Christian religions In the 2001 census 42 4 per cent of the population identified with the Church of Scotland 15 9 per cent with Catholicism and 6 8 with other forms of Christianity making up roughly 65 per cent of the population compared with 72 per cent for Britain as a whole Of other religions Islam was at 0 8 per cent Buddhism Sikhism Judaism and Hinduism were all at around 0 1 per cent Other religions together accounted for 0 6 per cent of respondents and 5 5 per cent did not state a religion There were 27 5 per cent who stated that they had no religion which compares with 15 5 per cent in Britain overall 79 80 Other more recent studies suggest that those not identifying with a denomination or who see themselves as non religious may be much higher at between 42 and 56 per cent depending on the form of question asked 81 Wales EditMain article Christianity in Wales Early history Edit Main article Celtic Christianity Welsh Reformation Edit Bishop Richard Davies and dissident Protestant cleric John Penry introduced Calvinist theology to Wales They used the model of the Synod of Dort of 1618 1619 Calvinism developed through the Puritan period following the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II and within Wales Methodist movement However few copies of Calvin s works were available before the mid 19th century 82 In 1567 Davies William Salesbury and Thomas Huet completed the first modern translation of the New Testament and the first translation of the Book of Common Prayer Welsh Y Llyfr Gweddi Gyffredin In 1588 William Morgan completed a translation of the whole Bible These translations were important to the survival of the Welsh language and had the effect of conferring status on Welsh as a liturgical language and vehicle for worship This had a significant role in its continued use as a means of everyday communication and as a literary language down to the present day despite the pressure of English Nonconformity Edit Main article Nonconformity in Wales nbsp Howell Harris was one of the main leaders of the Welsh Methodist revival in the 18th century Nonconformity was a significant influence in Wales from the 18th to the 20th centuries The Welsh Methodist revival of the 18th century was one of the most significant religious and social movements in the history of Wales The revival began within the Church of England in Wales and at the beginning remained as a group within it but the Welsh revival differed from the Methodist revival in England in that its theology was Calvinist rather than Arminian Welsh Methodists gradually built up their own networks structures and even meeting houses or chapels which led eventually to the secession of 1811 and the formal establishment of the Calvinistic Methodist Presbyterian church of Wales in 1823 83 The Welsh Methodist revival also had an influence on the older Nonconformist churches or dissenters the Baptists and the Congregationalists who in turn also experienced growth and renewal As a result by the middle of the nineteenth century Wales was predominantly a Nonconformist nation The 1904 1905 Welsh revival was the largest full scale Christian revival of Wales of the 20th century It is believed that at least 100 000 people became Christians during the 1904 1905 revival but despite this it did not put a stop to the gradual decline of Christianity in Wales only holding it back slightly Secularisation EditHistorians agree that in the late 1940s Britain was a predominantly Christian nation with its religiosity reinforced by the wartime experience Peter Forster found that in answering pollsters the English reported an overwhelming belief in the truth of Christianity a high respect for it and a strong association between it and moral behaviour 84 Peter Hennessy argued that long held attitudes did not stop change by midcentury Britain was still a Christian country only in a vague attitudinal sense belief generally being more a residual husk than the kernel of conviction 85 Kenneth O Morgan agreed noting that the Protestant churches Anglican and more especially non conformist all felt the pressure of falling numbers and of secular challenges Even the drab Sabbath of Wales and Scotland was under some threat with pressure for opening cinemas in Wales and golf courses in Scotland 86 Harrison reports that the forces of secularisation grew rapidly and by the 1990s Protestantism cast a thin shadow of its 1945 strength Compared to Western Europe Britain stood at the lower end of attendance at religious services and near the top in people claiming no religion While 80 per cent of Britons in 1950 said they were Christians only 64 per cent did so in 2000 Brian Harrison states By every measure number of churches number of parish clergy church attendance Easter Day communicants number of church marriages membership as a proportion of the adult population the Church of England was in decline after 1970 In 1985 there were only half as many parish clergy as in 1900 87 Also while in the 2001 census still 72 per cent of British population identified as Christians in 2011 only 59 per cent did so 88 89 According to the 2018 British Social Attitudes Survey which asks Do you have a religion and if so what is it Britain was majority irreligious 90 The 2021 United Kingdom census which asks What is your religion recorded lower numbers than the BSA for the non religious but also that Christianity had slipped below half the population See also EditReligion in the United Kingdom Freedom of religion in the United Kingdom Religion in England Scotland amp Wales Anti Catholicism in the United Kingdom Catholic Church in the United Kingdom Catholic schools in the United Kingdom Christianity in Cornwall Disestablishmentarianism English Covenant History of Christianity in Sussex Irreligion in the United KingdomNotes Edit First attested in William of Malmesbury s On the Antiquity of the Glastonbury Church which was written during the 1130s although the passages dealing with Joseph seem to be later additions to the text 11 The name is in the halo in a later hand The figure is identified as a saint by his clerical tonsure and is the earliest surviving historiated initial 15 The view that it represents Gregory is set out by Douglas Dales in a recent article 16 17 References Edit Jolliffe John ed 2008 English Catholic Heroes London Gracewing Publishing ISBN 978 0 85244 604 1 Parsons G 1988 Religion in Victorian Britain Traditions Manchester Manchester University Press p 71 ISBN 0 7190 2511 7 Petts David 2003 Christianity in Roman Britain Stroud Tempus pp 9 10 ISBN 0 7524 2540 4 a b c Watts Dorothy 1991 Christians and Pagans in Roman Britain London and New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 05071 5 Watts 1991 p 4 Henig Martin 1984 Religion in Roman Britain New York St Martin s Press p 121 ISBN 0 312 67059 1 Knight David 2008 1 King Lucius of Britain Stroud The History Press ISBN 9780752474465 First attested in a 9th century manuscript of Pope Boniface II s c 530 Felician edition of The Book of Popes 7 Malmesbiriensis Willelmi 1847 Gesta Regum Anglorum 1125 amp seq Deeds of the Kings of the English 1125 amp seq William of Malmesbury s Chronicle of the Kings of England From the Earliest Period to the Reign of King Stephen With Notes and Illustrations in Latin Translated by Giles J A London Henry G Bohn p 21 As permitted by William of Malmesbury 9 a b Robinson Joseph Armitage 1921 William of Malmesbury On the Antiquity of Glastonbury Somerset Historical Essays London Oxford University Press via Wikisource Gerald of Wales Translated by W S Davies as The Book of Invectives of Giraldus Cambrensis in Y Cymmrodor The Magazine of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion Vol XXX pp 16 f George Simpson amp Co Devizes 1920 The Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorian 1893 p 65 via Google Books St Piran s Oratory Britain Express Retrieved 10 May 2021 Schapiro Meyer Decoration of the Leningrad Manuscript of Bede Selected Papers Vol 3 pp 199 212 214 Dales Apostle of the English L eredita spirituale di Gregorio Magno tra Occidente e Oriente p 299 Wilson Anglo Saxon Art p 63 Lindisfarne Gospels The British Library Retrieved 25 April 2021 a b Jones Prudence A History of Pagan Europe Routledge p 71 a b Harper Bill 2007 John and the Church of Rome King John New Interpretations Woodbridge Boydell Press pp 307 308 ISBN 978 0 85115 947 8 Turner Ralph V 2009 King John England s Evil King Stroud History Press p 190 ISBN 978 0 7524 4850 3 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lollards Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Porter Linda 2007 Mary Tudor The First Queen London Little Brown p 331 ISBN 978 0 7499 0982 6 Hoppit Julian 2002 A land of liberty England 1689 1727 Oxford University Press pp 30 39 Gilley Sheridan Sheils William J eds 1994 A history of religion in Britain practice and belief from pre Roman times to the present pp 168 274 Clark J C D 1985 English Society 1688 1832 ideology social structure and political practice in the ancien regime pp 119 198 Clark George 1956 Later Stuarts 1616 1714 2nd ed pp 153 60 Haydon Colin 1993 Anti Catholicism in Eighteenth Century England C 1714 80 A Political and Social Study Sheils William J 1994 Catholicism in England from the Reformation to the Relief Acts In Gilley Sheridan Sheils William J eds A history of religion in Britain practice and belief from pre Roman times to the present pp 234 51 Armstrong Anthony 1973 The Church of England the Methodists and society 1700 1850 Briggs Asa 1959 The age of improvement 1783 1867 pp 66 73 Rule John 1992 2 6 Albion s People English Society 1714 1815 Chadwick Owen 1966 The Victorian Church Part One 1829 1859 pp 363 69 Mann Horace 1854 Census of Great Britain 1851 Religious Worship in England and Wales Ge Routledge p 87 Noll Mark A 2010 The Rise of Evangelicalism The Age of Edwards Whitefield and the Wesleys Porter Andrew 1999 Religion Missionary Enthusiasm and Empire In Porter Andrew ed Oxford History of the British Empire Vol 3 pp 223 24 Ward Kevin 2006 A History of Global Anglicanism Cambridge University Press p 34 Thorne Susan 1999 1 Congregational Missions and the Making of an Imperial Culture in Nineteenth Century England Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804765442 via Google Books Porter Andrew 2004 Religion versus Empire British Protestant Missionaries and Overseas Expansion 1700 1914 Etherington Norman ed 2008 Missions and Empire Oxford History of the British Empire Companion Series Oxford University Press Porter Andrew 1999 Religion Missionary Enthusiasm and Empire In Porter Andrew ed Oxford History of the British Empire Vol 3 Johnson Ryan 2010 Colonial Mission and Imperial Tropical Medicine Livingstone College London 1893 1914 Social History of Medicine 23 3 549 566 doi 10 1093 shm hkq044 Adrian Hastings A History of English Christianity 1920 1985 1986 pp 60 63 P T Merricks God and the Gene E W Barnes on Eugenics and Religion Politics Religion amp Ideology 13 3 2012 353 374 Sidney Dark Archbishop Davidson and the English Church 1929 pp 214 20 a b c d Ross McKibben Classes and Cultures England 1918 1951 1998 David Hempton Methodism Empire of the Spirit 2005 p 214 Glaser John F 1958 English Nonconformity and the Decline of Liberalism American Historical Review 63 2 352 363 doi 10 2307 1849549 JSTOR 1849549 Vickers John A ed Methodist Union DMBI A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland Retrieved 25 April 2021 Hastings A History of English Christianity 1920 1985 1986 pp 264 72 Quoted in Davies Rupert E et al 2017 A History of the Methodist Church in Great Britain Volume Three pp 309 10 ISBN 9781532630507 via Google Books Parker David 1999 Stand Therefore Bishop Michael Bolton Furse the Diocese of St Albans and the Church Schools Controversy 1919 1939 History of Education Quarterly 39 2 161 192 doi 10 2307 370037 JSTOR 370037 S2CID 147651066 Smith John T 2010 Ecumenism economic necessity and the disappearance of Methodist elementary schools in England in the twentieth century History of Education 39 4 631 657 doi 10 1080 00467601003749406 S2CID 144704648 Wright N T 2008 Surprised by Hope Rethinking Heaven the Resurrection and the Mission of the Church HarperCollins p 8 ISBN 9780061551826 via Google Books Murray Parkes Colin et al 2015 Death and Bereavement Across Cultures 2nd edition p 221 ISBN 9781317520924 via Google Books Hastings A History of English Christianity 1920 1985 1986 p 279 Ben Clements Religion and Public Opinion in Britain Palgrave Macmillan 2015 Grace Davie Religion in Britain since 1945 Believing without belonging Wiley Blackwell 1994 Backholer Paul 2015 Britain A Christian Country A Nation Defined by Christianity and the Bible and the Social Changes that Challenge this Biblical Heritage United Kingdom ByFaith Media p 19 ISBN 978 1 907066 45 0 Backholer Paul 2015 Britain A Christian Country A Nation Defined by Christianity and the Bible and the Social Changes that Challenge this Biblical Heritage United Kingdom ByFaith Media p 19 ISBN 978 1 907066 45 0 Encyclopaedia Britannica Statistics are for full members of certain churches in England and Wales The 1929 edition records 2 294 000 Anglicans 1 939 700 other Protestants Methodists Congregationalists Baptists etc 1 930 000 Catholics and about 300 000 Jews The 1953 edition records 3 186 093 Anglicans 2 528 200 Catholics 1 709 245 other Protestants and about 400 000 Jews See statistics Duffy Eamon 11 September 2010 Pope visit A visit that reflects our changing times The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 14 September 2010 Ordinations in England and Wales an apology Catholic Voices Comment 30 April 2013 Retrieved 10 May 2021 Patricia Lefevere The faith of Tony Blair The Catholic Reporter 6 March 2009 11 Pepinster Catherine 18 March 2006 Britain s Top 100 Lay Catholics The Tablet pp 25 32 John Jolliffe ed English Catholic Heroes London Gracewing Publishing 2008 ISBN 0 85244 604 7 Red Capet Catholic The Tablet 28 February 2009 18 Dawson J E A 2007 Scotland Re Formed 1488 1587 Edinburgh University Press a b c Wormald Jenny 1991 Court Kirk and Community Scotland 1470 1625 Edinburgh University Press pp 102 4 Graham M F 2000 Scotland In Pettegree A ed The Reformation World Routledge p 414 a b Divine T M 1999 The Scottish Nation a b c d e f g Koch J T 2006 Celtic Culture a Historical Encyclopedia Volumes 1 5 ABC CLIO pp 416 7 a b c Ditchfield G M 1998 The Evangelical Revival p 91 a b Robb G 1990 Popular Religion and the Christianization of the Scottish Highlands in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Journal of Religious History 16 1 18 34 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9809 1990 tb00647 x Stewart J Brown 1982 Thomas Chalmers and the godly Commonwealth in Scotland Mechie S 1960 The Church and Scottish social development 1780 1870 Kirk rejects move to form super Church The Scotsman 20 May 2003 Retrieved 2 December 2011 Analysis of Religion in the 2001 Census The Scottish Government 17 May 2006 archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Religious Populations Office for National Statistics 11 October 2004 archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Religion and belief some surveys and statistics British Humanist Association 24 June 2004 archived from the original on 6 August 2011 Morgan D Densil 2009 Calvinism in Wales c 1590 1909 Welsh Journal of Religious History 4 22 36 Vickers John A ed Welsh Calvinistic Methodism or Presbyterian Church of Wales dmbi online DMBI A Dictionary of Methodism in Britain and Ireland Retrieved 9 October 2021 Forster Peter G 1972 Secularization in the English Context Some Conceptual and Empirical Problems Sociological Review 20 2 153 68 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954X 1972 tb00206 x S2CID 144987310 Hennessy Peter 1993 Never Again Britain in 1945 1951 p 436 Morgan Kenneth O 1985 Labour in Power 1945 1951 Oxford University Press p 299 ISBN 9780192851505 via Google Books Harrison Brian 2012 Finding a Role The United Kingdom 1970 1990 pp 371 72 2011 Census Is Christianity shrinking or just changing BBC News 11 December 2012 Retrieved 25 April 2021 2011 Census KS209EW Religion local authorities in England and Wales Excel sheet 270Kb xls Office for National Statistics Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 7 July 2014 Curtice J Clery E Perry J Phillips M Rahim N 2019 Religion Identity behaviour and belief over two decades PDF British Social Attitudes The 36th Report London The National Centre for Social Research Retrieved 25 April 2021 Further reading EditBebbington David W Evangelicalism in Modern Britain A History from the 1730s to the 1980s Routledge 2003 Brown Callum G The death of Christian Britain understanding secularisation 2nd ed 2009 excerpt Brown Callum G Secularization the Growth of Militancy and the Spiritual Revolution Religious Change and Gender Power in Britain 1901 2001 Historical Research 80 209 2007 pp 393 418 Chadwick Owen The Victorian Church Vol 1 1829 1859 1966 Victorian Church Part two 1860 1901 1979 a major scholarly survey Cox Jeffrey The British Missionary Enterprise since 1700 2008 Davie Grace Religion in Britain since 1945 Believing without belonging Blackwell 1994 Davies Rupert E et al A History of the Methodist Church in Great Britain 3 vol Wipf amp Stock 2017 online Gilley Sheridan and W J Sheils A History of Religion in Britain Practice and Belief from Pre Roman Times to the Present 1994 608pp excerpt and text search Hastings Adrian A History of English Christianity 1920 1985 1986 720pp a major scholarly survey Morris Jeremy Secularization and Religious Experience Arguments in the Historiography of Modern British Religion Historical Journal 55 1 2012 195 219 online Obelkevich J Religion and Rural Society Oxford University Press 1976 Shaw Duncan edt al What is Religious History History Today 1985 35 8 online commentary by 8 scholars Soloway Richard Allen Church and Society Recent Trends in Nineteenth Century Religious History Journal of British Studies 11 2 1972 pp 142 159 onlineEngland and Church of England Edit Gilbert Alan Religion and Society in Industrial England Church Chapel and Social Change 1740 1914 Longman 1976 Glasson Travis Mastering Christianity Missionary Anglicanism and Slavery in the Atlantic World 2011 Hastings Adrian A history of English Christianity 1920 1985 HarperCollins 1986 Hylson Smith Kenneth The churches in England from Elizabeth I to Elizabeth II 1996 Marshall Peter Re defining the English Reformation Journal of British Studies July 2009 Vol 48 3 pp 564 586 Martin Mary Clare Church school and locality Revisiting the historiography of state and religious educational infrastructures in England and Wales 1780 1870 Paedagogica Historica 49 1 2013 70 81 Thomas Keith Religion and the decline of magic studies in popular beliefs in sixteenth and seventeenth century England 1991 highly influential study of popular religious behaviour and beliefsScotland and Presbyterianism Edit Brown Callum G The social history of religion in Scotland since 1730 Methuen 1987 Brown S J Religion and society to c 1900 in T M Devine and J Wormald eds The Oxford Handbook of Modern Scottish History Oxford University Press 2012 Henderson G D Religious Life in Seventeenth Century Scotland Cambridge University Press 2011 Piggott Charles A A geography of religion in Scotland The Scottish Geographical Magazine 96 3 1980 130 140 Wales Edit Chambers Paul and Andrew Thompson Coming to terms with the past religion and identity in Wales Social compass 52 3 2005 337 352 Davies Ebnezer Thomas Religion in the Industrial Revolution of South Wales U of Wales Press 1965 Jenkins Geraint H Literature religion and society in Wales 1660 1730 University of Wales Press 1978 Morgan Derec Llwyd The Great Awakening in Wales Epworth Press 1988 Walker R B The Growth of Wesleyan Methodism in Victorian England and Wales The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 24 03 1973 267 284 Williams Glanmor History of Wales Vol 3 Recovery Reorientation amp Reformation Wales c 1415 1642 1987 528p Williams Glanmor The Welsh Church from Conquest to Reformation University of Wales Press 1976 Williams Glanmor The Welsh Church from Reformation to Disestablishment 1603 1920 University of Wales Press 2007 Williams Glanmor ed Welsh reformation essays University of Wales Press 1967 Yalden Peter Association Community and the Origins of Secularisation English and Welsh Nonconformity c 1850 1930 The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 55 02 2004 293 324 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Christianity in Britain amp oldid 1150212097, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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