Country Life

We must restore local churches to local people

THOUSANDS of England’s most ancient and prominent historic buildings are now standing empty and unused all or almost all of the time. By law, they cannot be demolished, nor do most people want them demolished. Redundant churches are by far the nation’s greatest conservation challenge. They form the visual focus to almost every English village and town, high street and market place. Their towers are the signatures in the surrounding countryside. They are infinitely precious.

Fewer than half of Britons now call themselves Christian of any denomination, with only 12% professing loyalty to the Church of England, a fall from 40% in 1983. More critical is that few even of these members are going to church. Church House statistics show regular church attendance at barely 2% of the community or well under a million people, a decline of some 30% since the turn of the 21st century. Early indications show the pandemic may have led to a further 20% fall—more people in England worship regularly in mosques than in parish churches.

The implication of this decline in church-building use

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Country Life

Country Life2 min read
Kitchen Garden Cook Jersey Royals
Serves 4 200g plain flour2 eggs, lightly beaten200g panko breadcrumbs (or use homemade)2tbspn mixed dried herbs, such as rosemary, parsley, basil2 aubergines2tbspn butter100ml extra-virgin olive oil500g Jersey Royals 1 lemon, juice of2 cloves garlic,
Country Life1 min read
Miss Fenella Kim Shields
bada.org/friends ■
Country Life2 min read
The Legacy Sir John Soane And His Museum
EXASPERATED and despairing at the provocative behaviour of his sons, Sir John Soane (1753–1837) decided towards the end of his life to make the British public his heir. His eldest son, John—whom he had hoped would follow him as an architect, but who

Related