Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Religion in Europe? It’s complicated
Religion in Europe? It’s complicated
May 1, 2025 11:11 PM

It’s not unusual for Europe—especially Western Europe—to be portrayed as a continent in which religion and, more specifically, religious practice is in decline. No doubt there’s much truth to that. When you start looking at the hard information, however, it soon es apparent that the situation is plicated.

Take, for example, France. It is often portrayed as a highly secularized society. Again, there is considerable truth to that picture. Yet a recent study of the state of religion in France by the Observatoire de la laïcité, an state agency attached to the Prime Minister’s office which charged with assisting the government in ensuring that the principle of laïcité is observed throughout the country, has revealed a plex picture.

In the first place, the study shows that 37 percent of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen believe in God Approximately 31 percent say they are non-believers or atheists. Those numbers represent little change from the last such study, which occurred in 2012. Approximately, 47 percent of the population say that they observe no religious practices whatsoever, which tells us that 53 percent do follow some type of religious practice.

When es to confessional breakdown, 48 percent say they are Roman Catholic, 3 percent identify as Muslim, 3 percent as Protestant, 1 percent as Jewish, and 2 percent as Buddhist. It’s when you get to the numbers about who practices their religion that some interesting facts start to emerge.

About 8 percent of France’s total population describe themselves as practicing Catholics. That number, which will pleasantly surprise some people, translates into 5.4 million people going to Mass once a month and just over 2 million people attending Mass once a week. Another insight into contemporary French Catholicism, noted in the study, is that about 17 percent of primary, middle and high school students in France attend a Catholic school.

Among self-described Evangelical Protestants—a group that has grown in France in recent decades and who are generally not members of the traditional Protestant churches—about 40 percent say they practice their faith regularly. Indeed, the National Council of French Evangelicals claims that a new evangelical place of worship opens every ten days in France.

But the biggest group who practice their religion in France are Muslims. About 1.8 million Muslims (out of a total of somewhere between 3 and 5 million French Muslims) engage in some form of regular religious practice.

Yet perhaps the most consequential part of the study is its claim that there has been a considerable increase in the visibility of religious expression in France’s public square. Interestingly, this is not portrayed in the study as a negative trend. Rather, it is presented simply as a matter of fact.

This development, the study’s authors speculate, may something to do with a weakening of the grip of secular ideologies upon the minds of large portions of the population. This, it appears, has left many people in France looking for meaning and some explanation of their lives and the world. Some appear to be finding answers in religion.

Does this mean that France is on the brink of a religious revival? I don’t think so. When you look closely at the figures, you realize that some people in France identify as Muslim, Protestant, Jewish, Catholic, etc., but also consider themselves to be agnostics or unbelievers. Religion is a question of identity for them rather than a faith. There also remains immense pressure on people in public life to keep their faith out of the limelight, even if the situation in that regard is much better than it was ten or twenty years ago.

The information provided by the Observatoire de la laïcité does, however, indicate that we should be careful before describing modern Western European countries as deeply and uniformly secularist in outlook or as nations in which religion is doomed to disappear. At least in France’s case, neither that portrait nor that trajectory seems to be accurate.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Wisdom & Wonder At Hearts & Minds Books
We are excited about our friend, Byron Borger at Hearts & Minds Books, carrying Wisdom & Wonder, “the long-awaited, freshly-translated, newly-produced, collection of newspaper pieces that Dr. Kuyper wrote so many years ago.” This book is a part of the larger mon grace” work that we are in the process of translating. We hope to have Volume 1 available by Fall 2012. Click herefor more information on the Kuyper Translation Project. Nicholas Woltersdorff, Noah Porter Professor Emeritus of Philosophical Theology...
Safety Nets and Incentives
Over at the Economix blog, University of Chicago economist Casey B. Mullin takes another look at some of the recent poverty numbers. He notes the traditional interpretation, that “the safety net did a great job: For every seven people who would have fallen into poverty, the social safety net caught six.” But another interpretation might have a bit more going for it, actually, and fits in line with my previous analogy between a safety net as a trampoline vs. a...
Samuel Gregg: Eurocracy Run Amuck
At National Review Online, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg observes that “much of Europe’s political class seems willing to go to almost any lengths to save the euro — including, it seems, beyond the bounds permitted by EU treaty law and national constitutions.” Excerpt: “We must re-establish the primacy of politics over the market.” That sentence, spoken a little while ago by Germany’s Angela Merkel, sums up the startlingly unoriginal character of the approach adopted by most EU politicians as...
Check out AU Online!
Last week, the Acton Institute Programs Department launched registration for an exciting project called AU Online. If you haven’t already visited the website, I encourage you to do so! AU Online is an internet-based educational resource for exploring the intellectual foundations of freedom and virtue. It is designed to offer the munity another way to experience the first class content and interaction of an Acton sponsored event while at home, at the office, or at school. We’re currently accepting registrations...
VIDEO: Margaret Thatcher Honored at Annual Dinner
Now up for your viewing pleasure, John O’Sullivan’s acceptance of our Faith & Freedom Award on behalf of Margaret Thatcher, and Rev. Robert Sirico’s remarks at the dinner. Mr. O’Sullivan, Lady Thatcher’s speechwriter and advisor, painted a warm, personal portrait of his former boss — at times he had us in stitches, and when he finished, we were all inspired. The dinner was given at the JW Marriott Hotel in Grand Rapids on October 20; if you couldn’t make it,...
On Blue Laws and Black Friday
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported Author: DustinIn this week’s Acton Commentary, “Blue Laws and Black Friday,” I argue that the increasing encroachment mercial activity into holidays like Thanksgiving are best seen as questions of morality and the limits of the economic sphere of existence. The remedy for such issues is best sought at the level of relationship (between consumer and retailer, for instance, as well as employer and employee) rather than at the level of legal remedy, as in...
A Failure to Govern?
It seems that the mittee (the US Congress Joint Select Committee on Defict Reduction) has failed to agree on $1.5 trillion in cuts over the next decade. In lieu of this “failure,” automatic cuts of $1.2 trillion will kick in. These cuts will be across the board, and will not result from mittee’s picking of winners and losers in the federal budget. In the context about discussions of intergenerational justice earlier this year, Michael Gerson said that such across-the-board cuts...
Occupy Business Careers?
In a recent BBC article, Sean Coughlan reports a novel idea from Oxford academic Will Crouch, He argues that someone ing an investment banker could create sufficient wealth to make philanthropic donations that could make a bigger difference than someone choosing to work in a “moral” career such as an aid charity. Indeed, there seems to be an ever increasing suspicion, even among Christians, that certain career paths are per se more moral than others. However, as Fr. Robert Sirico...
A Person’s a Person, No Matter How Far
Glenn Barkan, retired dean of Aquinas College’s School of Arts and Sciences here in Grand Rapids, had a piece worth reading in the local paper over the weekend related the current trend (fad?) toward buying local. In “What’s the point of buying local?” Barkan cogently addresses three levels of the case for localism in a way that shows that the movement need not have the economic, environmental, or ethical high ground. At the economic level, Barkan asks, “Does the local...
A Thanksgiving for the Harvest
Most gracious God, by whose knowledge the depths are broken up and the clouds drop down the dew: We yield thee hearty thanks and praise for the return of seed time and harvest, for the increase of the ground and the gathering in of its fruits, and for all other blessings of thy merciful providence bestowed upon this nation and people. And, we beseech thee, give us a just sense of these great mercies, such as may appear in our...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved