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Leaving Christianity: Changing Allegiances in Canada Since 1945

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1 Leaving Christianity: Changing Allegiances in Canada Since 1945
How Canada has Changed and Why this matters for North American Theological Education A Discussion of Leaving Christianity: Changing Allegiances in Canada Since 1945 Stuart Macdonald December 5, 2018 (slides are © Stuart Macdonald and Brian Clarke - slides may be used in faculty development and other educational purposes with proper attribution. For permission to use in any publication, please contact the authors)

2 What happened to Christian Canada?
Mark Noll, American Society of Church History

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4 Sources of data on Canadians and religion
Census (every ten years) - identity Statistics generated by religious groups (membership, Sunday school attendance, baptisms, etc.) Worship attendance Survey Data - Angus Reid; Statistics Canada (General Social Survey); Reginald Bibby (Project Canada).

5 Sources of data on Canadians and religion
Census (every ten years) - identity Statistics generated by religious groups (membership, Sunday school attendance, baptisms, etc.) Worship attendance Survey Data - Angus Reid; Statistics Canada (General Social Survey); Reginald Bibby (Project Canada).

6 Sources of data on Canadians and religion
Census (every ten years) - identity Statistics generated by religious groups (membership, Sunday school attendance, baptisms, etc.) Worship attendance Survey Data - Angus Reid; Statistics Canada (General Social Survey); Reginald Bibby (Project Canada).

7 Finding one - Canada’s mainstream Protestant denominations are in decline

8 How Did This Happen?

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11 Sunday School enrolment, Presbyterian Church in Canada

12 Baptisms, Presbyterian Church in Canada

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14 Presbyterian baptisms as percentage of Canadian births

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18 Finding two: Other Protestant churches are growing, but not all are, and that growth has slowed down

19 Visual representation - data in Table 2
Visual representation - data in Table % growth/decline in census of other denominations

20 Selection from Table 2.5 - Difference (gain/loss) of selected groups in the census
Catholic 1,199,980 932,650 601,655 -126,200 Mainstream -161,050 -1,189,150 -596,580 -1,394,655 Other Protestant Denominations 387,095 307,150 -173,725 3,825 Protestant nos 63,535 565,410 -79,740 1,760 Christian nie 93,095 182,720 504,635 695,125 No Religion 853,955 1,602,835 1,513,730 2,950,515

21 Third finding: The number of Catholics is now stagnant

22 Selection from Table 2.5 - Difference (gain/loss) of selected groups in the census
Catholic 1,199,980 932,650 601,655 -126,200 Mainstream -161,050 -1,189,150 -596,580 -1,394,655 Other Protestant Denominations 387,095 307,150 -173,725 3,825 Protestant nos 63,535 565,410 -79,740 1,760 Christian nie 93,095 182,720 504,635 695,125 No Religion 853,955 1,602,835 1,513,730 2,950,515

23 Fourth finding: The number of Canadians with no religion is exploding

24 No Religion

25 Two “Soft: Categories Christian - Some 1.3 Million Canadians in 2011
- Not Evangelical Protestant - 550,000 Canadians

26 Summary - main findings
Mainstream denominations declining (but recent) Other Protestant denominations growing - but not all, and less growth than in the past. Roman Catholics - stagnant No religion - explosive growth Taken together - a massive change in the Canadian Religious landscape

27 Charles Taylor, A Secular Age (2007)
Callum Brown, The Death of Christian Britain: Understanding Secularisation (2001)

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