Wednesday, January 10, 2007

France 'no longer a Catholic country'

Here's something we already know. Sad times for the former Eldest Daughter of the Church.

Shouldn't the rebellious French Bishops be more worried about the decline in Mass attendance and the declining number of professing Catholics than whether or not the Pian Rite is liberalized?
Wouldn't more Church goers boost the Catholic Church?

These Bishops are still arguing about the placement of the chairs in a sinking ship.

Anyway, from the Telegraph:

By Henry Samuel in Paris
Last Updated: 1:47am GMT 10/01/2007

Barely half the French population describe themselves as Catholic, according to a poll released yesterday, sparking a leading religious publication to declare France "no longer a Catholic country".

A poll published in Le Monde des Religions yesterday showed the number of self-declared French Catholics had dropped from 80 per cent in the early 1990s and 67 per cent in 2000 and to 51 per cent today.

The number of atheists has risen sharply to 31 per cent from 23 per cent in 1994.

"In its institutions, but also in its mentalities, France is no longer a Catholic country," wrote Frederic Lenoir, editor in chief of Le Monde des Religions.

French Catholicism, while suffering during the Revolution, did not begin its real decline until 1905, experts say, when pre-war France was declared a secular state, all funding of religious groups was stopped and religious buildings were declared the property of the state.

Yesterday's poll showed that only 10 per cent go to church regularly — mainly to Sunday mass or christenings. Of the 51 per cent who still call themselves Catholics, only half said they believed in God. Many said they were Catholics because it was a family tradition.

Le Monde des Religions cited varied reasons for the decline, including the rural exodus, changing values and the rise of individualism. One devout Catholic said the biggest problem was that younger generations were no longer interested.

"When you go to Sunday mass, it's just old people, except for special occasions like midnight mass," said Marie-France Guillon, a retired school teacher from the fishing village of Crac in Brittany. "When I tried to get my grandson, who took communion in March, to go to Sunday school, he said 'no thanks, I'd rather stay and play monopoly.' "

Despite the drop, however, Catholicism remains by far the country's number one religion. The poll found Muslims accounted for only four per cent of the population (up from two per cent), Protestants three per cent and Jews one per cent.

"Catholicism will remain the most important religion," said Frederic Lenoir, who pointed out that the number of regular churchgoing Catholics still equalled the total sum of French Muslims, Protestants and Jews.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh dear, such a shame. When I visited Paris, the Cathedral of Our Lady was the one redeeming feature I found. How long, I wonder, before it is demolished in acts of tolerance against 'Christian triumphalism'.

In the UK, things aren't much better, if at all:

http://tinyurl.com/y3w3yc

Anonymous said...

Yes it is sad...but I do hope that atheism in my country is only superficial...you have to consider political correctness which is very strong here, and people don't express what they have in their heart...éric from france

Andrew said...

Thanks, éric, for your comments.

I really do hope and pray that the once proud 'Eldest Daughter of the Church' may once again claim her rightful place and that the good people of France will once day come back to the arms of her Mother.

The Church owes a great deal to France, from the Popes she has nurtured and sheltered to the many missionaries she has sent forth to bring the Gospel of Salvation to the whole world.

My own country owes much of its evangelization to the MEP Fathers as well as the La Sallian Brothers whose educational endeavours have brought many to the Faith.

I do pray for France, and her civic and ecclesiastical leaders, that God may grant them wisdom and show them the path of Salvation.