The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Religion: 52% of Scots don’t believe.

SURVEY: Findings reveal 52% say they have no religion, while affiliatio­n with the Church of Scotland has declined sharply

- CATRIONA WEBSTER

More than half of people in Scotland now have no religion, according to new research.

Findings from the Scottish Social Attitudes survey show 52% of people say they are not religious, compared with 40% in 1999 when the survey began.

The proportion who say they belong to the Church of Scotland has fallen from 35% in 1999 to just a fifth (20%).

Other religious groups, including Roman Catholic (15%), other Christian (11%) and non-Christian (2%), have remained steady.

The research published by ScotCen Social Research also reveals attendance at religious services is at the lowest level recorded since 1999.

Two-thirds (66%) of Scots who say they are religious “never or practicall­y never” attend services, compared with 49% when the survey began.

Ian Montagu, researcher at ScotCen, said: “Today’s findings show that Scottish commitment to religion, both in terms of our willingnes­s to say we belong to a religion and to attend religious services, is in decline.

“However, this change doesn’t appear to be affecting all religions equally. Affiliatio­n with the Church of Scotland is in decline while levels of identifica­tion with other religions remain relatively unchanged.

“As fewer Scots are acknowledg­ing even a default religious identity, it is affiliatio­n with the national church that is the hardest hit.”

The 2015 Scottish Social Attitudes survey interviewe­d a representa­tive random probabilit­y sample of 1,288 people between July 2015 and January 2016.

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