ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2003. When did churches start to appear more empty than full - and why? The very physicality of largely empty churches and chapels in Britain plays a powerful role in popular perceptions of 'religion'. Empty churches are frequently cited in the media as evidence of large scale religious decline. The Empty Church Revisited presents a systematic account of British churchgoing patterns over the last two hundred years, uncovering the factors and the statistics behind the considerable process of decline in church attendence. Dispelling as myth the commonly held views that the process of secularization in British culture has led to the decline in churchgoing and resulted in the predominantly empty churches of today, Gill points to physical factors, economics and issues of social space to shed new light on the origins of empty churches. This thoroughly updated edition of Robin Gill's earlier work, The Myth of the Empty Church, presents new data throughout to explore afresh the paradox of church building activity in a context of decline, the patterns of urbanisation followed by sub-urbanisation affecting churches, changes in patterns of worship, and changes within the sociology of religion in the last decade.

chapter 1|15 pages

The Data

chapter 2|12 pages

Rural Churchgoing Decline

chapter 3|15 pages

Glan-llyn: A Rural Case Study

chapter 4|16 pages

Urban Churchgoing Decline

chapter 5|22 pages

General Increase: 1821 to 1851

chapter 7|25 pages

General Decline: 1880s to 1919

chapter 8|34 pages

Continuing Decline: 1920s to 2000

chapter 9|34 pages

The Data

chapter |17 pages

The Future of the Churches