read / Church Growth
Shortly after Easter week of 2022, churches in four dioceses (Canterbury, Lichfield, Oxford and Rochester) were invited by CPAS to register their Easter Day attendance figures, to help give an early indication of attendance patterns and trends compared with 2019.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, many churches found themselves closed for long periods of time, and when they were able to reopen, they needed to observe Covid-19 guidelines up until February 2022.
The world of church attendance changed considerably over this period, with churches finding new and creative ways to facilitate ‘Church at Home’. Although some churches used printed materials, emails and phones, most offered some form of online service. Many of these began with clergy using mobile phones and laptops in their vicarages to livestream worship and prayers to Facebook. By Easter 2022, however, the dominant format was livestreaming of onsite services via YouTube.
Researchers found that:
This is just one Sunday in the year, and the national picture is still to be fully understood, but this research piece from CPAS could be an encouragement to many churches as they continue to assess their recovery from the pandemic and lockdown ministries.
You can read the full report below, and find more on the CPAS site.