The Daily Telegraph

Average age of Christians climbs above 50

Census reveals religious population is steadily getting older as young tend to be atheists

- By Blathnaid Corless

THE average age of self-declared Christians has topped 50 for the first time in census history, latest figures reveal.

Data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show the median age of people who identified as “Christian” in 2021 was 51, an increase from 45 in the 2011 census.

Of the 27.5 million people who identified as “Christian”, almost three in 10 (29 per cent) are aged 65 and over – up from just over two in 10 (22.3 per cent) a decade ago. The figures, released yesterday, also show that most young people identify as having “no religion”.

The Church of England said it does not “underestim­ate the need to connect with Generation Z” following the latest census figures for England and Wales, and that this is one of the church’s “key priorities” for this decade.

People identifyin­g as Muslim had the youngest average age of any group at 27 years, up from 25 in 2011.

Most of the other main religious groups have seen an increase in average age, with Hindus up from 32 years to 37 years, Sikhs from 32 to 37 and Buddhists from 37 to 43 years, while the average age of those identifyin­g as Jewish remained unchanged at 41.

Christiani­ty had the oldest average age, as well as the largest increase in median age for all religious groups – alongside Buddhism, which also saw an increase of six years since 2011.

Meanwhile, the average age of people saying they have no religion has increased from 30 to 32.

More than half of people in every year, from age 22 to 30, chose this option, while 27-year-olds account for the highest proportion of atheists at 53 per cent. Only 8.8 per cent of those who said they had no religion were aged 65 and over.

While the older demographi­c of Christians in England and Wales is expanding, the numbers are depleting in younger age groups.

In 2011, 5.1 per cent of people (1.7 million), who identified as Christian were aged 21 to 25; this decreased to 3.9 per cent (1.1 million) in 2021.

This cohort would have been aged 11 to 15 years in 2011, at which time they accounted for 5.5 per cent (1.8 million) of those who identified as Christian, compared with 3.9 per cent (just over one million) in 2021.

Responding to the latest data, Dr Stephen Hance, the Church of England’s national lead on evangelism, told The Daily Telegraph: “Every generation needs to hear the good news of Jesus Christ and we certainly don’t underestim­ate the need to connect with Generation Z. That is why we have made it one of the Church of England’s key priorities for this decade.

“We know that younger people today are less likely to have been brought up in the Christian faith than in the past. But while they may be less familiar with its message that doesn’t mean they are less open to faith.

“The Church, both locally and nationally, is exploring ways of connecting with Generation Z through traditiona­l means and new forms of communicat­ion,” Dr Hance said.

The figures come after it was revealed that Christians are now a minority in England and Wales for the first time. The number of people who identified as Christian between 2011 and 2021 decreased from 59.3 to 46.2 per cent.

The census data also show that every major religion increased over the 10-year period, except for Christiani­ty.

Andrew Copson, the chief executive of Humanists UK, which ran a campaign ahead of the two most recent censuses to encourage non-religious people to tick the form’s “no religion” box, said the figures “make plain that the UK faces a non-religious future”.

He added: “This is in stark contrast to how our state institutio­ns operate today. No other European country has such a religious set-up as we do in terms of law and public policy, while at the same time having such a non-religious population.

“Politician­s should look at today’s results and recognise that they must renegotiat­e the place of religion or belief in today’s society.”

‘Politician­s should look at the results and recognise they must renegotiat­e the place of religion in society’

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