MANCHESTER, England (CNS) — An English bishop said Catholics must work harder to evangelize the U.K. after the latest official census showed that Christians were a minority for the first time since records began.
The census, taken every 10 years, revealed that in 2021, 27.5 million people — 46.2% of the population of the U.K. population — described themselves as Christian compared to 33.3 million people (59.3%) in 2011. The decline in the number of people who say they are Christians represents a 13.1 percentage point decrease in the last decade.
A description of “no religion” was the second-most-common response, and was offered by 37.2% of the population, or 22.2 million people. People of “no religion” increased by 14.1 million, rising from 25.2%, according to the data compiled by the Office for National Statistics, a government agency.
Bishop Philip Egan of Portsmouth said “the data is not surprising given the strong secularizing forces at work in Britain.”
“As Catholics, we always have a mission ‘Ad intra’ and ‘Ad extra’: that is, evangelizing ourselves and deepening our relationship with God, as well as reaching out to those around us to offer them the Gospel,” he said in a Nov. 29 text message to Catholic News Service.
“Thirty-seven percent in society say they are ‘nones,'” he continued.
“This should spur us to reach out to them, to serve and accompany them, to help them pray and to help them encounter Jesus Christ. A figure like this is not just a challenge — it’s a great opportunity.”
The results also showed that, while numbers of Christians fell, members of all other major religions increased alongside atheists and agnostics in the same period.
Although they are now in a minority, Christians remain the largest single group in the U.K. population of 67.3 million.
The Muslim population rose from 2.7 million to 3.9 million. Hindus increased by nearly 200,000; the Sikh population increased by 100,000 people; and the numbers of Jews went up by 25,000.
A total of 0.7% of people declared membership in a religion that was unlisted in the survey, with 74,000 saying they were pagans, 13,000 Wicca, 26,000 claiming to be Alevi and 25,000 Jain.
London is the most religiously diverse region of England. More than 25% of residents there reported a religion other than Christianity, representing a 22.6% increase in the last decade.
The U.K. government has monitored trends in its population for about 200 years through the use of a census.