Catholic church attendance beats Anglican

BRITAIN: Catholics have overtaken Anglicans in church attendance in Britain, according to research published yesterday.

BRITAIN:Catholics have overtaken Anglicans in church attendance in Britain, according to research published yesterday.

England officially split from Rome during the reign of Henry VIII more than 400 years ago, making Anglicanism and the Church of England dominant.

But a survey by the Christian Research group published in the Sunday Telegraph newspaper showed that about 862,000 worshippers attended Catholic services each week in 2006 exceeding the 852,000 who went to Church of England services.

The release of the figures followed news that former prime minister Tony Blair, who was raised as an Anglican, had converted to Catholicism, the faith of his wife and four children.

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Attendance at Anglican services has almost halved over the past 40 years as Britain has grown steadily more secular. Only 6 per cent of the population attends church regularly. In the United States, that figure is nearer 40 per cent.

While attendance figures for both Catholic and Anglican services are declining, Catholic numbers are slipping by less as new migrants arrive from eastern Europe and parts of Africa, boosting Catholic congregations.

Catholic leaders were buoyed by the figures and Blair's high-profile conversion, seeing a resurgence of Catholic popularity in a country which once spurned the religion.

"When a former prime minister becomes a Catholic, that must be a sign that Catholicism really has come in from the cold in this country," Catherine Pepinster, editor of Catholic weekly the Tablet, wrote in the Sunday Telegraph. "I would hope that my fellow Catholics will welcome Tony Blair into the Church as they welcome other converts."

Blair, now a Middle East peace envoy, is not the first high-profile Briton to convert to Catholicism. Cardinal John Henry Newman, who converted in 1845, was probably the most influential. The author Evelyn Waugh, the son of an Anglican churchman, converted in the 1930s, and novelist Graham Greene was a noted convert, although his books often explored doubts over faith.

Blair's conversion was long expected, but it has met criticism. While in office, he frequently championed stem-cell research, supported civil partnerships for gay couples and voted in favour of abortion, all issues which the Catholic faithful oppose.

Politicians, including some who have also converted, didn't question the sincerity of the conversion, made in a private ceremony on Friday, but wondered what it said about the stances he had taken on issues while in office.

Mostly though, the reaction was muted. "In the 19th century, when someone 'poped' it caused great scandal," wrote the Right Rev Richard Harries, a former bishop of Oxford, in the Observer newspaper.