Church of Ireland 'might as well close' if it can't stop decline, says Archbishop

Only 15 per cent of Irish Anglicans attend church on Sundays – and unless the situation improves, "we may as well close the doors now", according to the leader of the Church of Ireland.

Speaking at the General Synod in Armagh last week after a survey showed that only 58,000 out of the claimed membership of 378,000 actually attend services, Archbishop Richard Clarke said: "The statistics present the scale of the missional challenge ahead of us as a Church, but nevertheless it is one that if we cannot embrace it with confidence and hope, we may as well close the doors of our churches now.

"We must relate to reality, and we must relate to the future ahead of us."

The survey counted the numbers attending on each of three Sundays in November 2013, reports the Belfast Telegraph. The Archbishop admitted that the methodology was potentially flawed because it was not clear whether it was the same 58,000 who attended each time.

"This seems unlikely, but we would be unwise in the extreme to assume that there was little or no overlap," he said.

article Related

The survey also shows that only 13 per cent of those attending are between the ages of 12 and 30, with 19 per cent between 46 and 60 and 24 per cent aged from 61-74.

related articles
Next Ireland church head: \'Stephen Fry is spiritually blind\'
Next Ireland church head: 'Stephen Fry is spiritually blind'

Next Ireland church head: 'Stephen Fry is spiritually blind'

News
Christian lawyers who defended nurses over single-sex changing room celebrate court win
Christian lawyers who defended nurses over single-sex changing room celebrate court win

Andrea Williams, chief executive of the Christian Legal Centre, which supported the nurses, said, "Allowing a man into a female-only space because he claims to be a woman violates human dignity, common sense, the law of the land and  biblical truth."

UK abortion figures reach highest level on record as campaigners urge rethink of current law
UK abortion figures reach highest level on record as campaigners urge rethink of current law

The figures mark the highest annual total since the introduction of the Abortion Act in 1967.

Church of South India stages protest against anti-Christian descrimination
Church of South India stages protest against anti-Christian descrimination

India has dropped a spot on the list of worldwide persecutors, but the situation remains much the same.

Church of England ends Living in Love and Faith process
Church of England ends Living in Love and Faith process

The Church of England's House of Bishops has announced it is bringing the Living in Love and Faith (LLF) process to a close.