Data from a state survey show that the number of evangelicals remain stable, while the Catholics are declining.
In Estonia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Latvia and Finland, just 10% or fewer adults say religion is a priority for them.
According to a recent report, 56% of German Christians donate. They are also more involved in voluntary work than average.
An official study shows that 83% of those aged 16-24 in northeast Spain are in favour of having a subject on general knowledge of religion at school and university.
Ahead of the election of 4 July, a survey conducted by the Evangelical Alliance United Kingdom found that 93% of evangelicals would like to see more Christians engaged in politics.
The survey shows that UK people of faith are “especially sceptical regarding both climate change existence and its man-made causes”.
The UK Evangelical Alliance, the Church of England and Christian charity CARE, release several resources to help Christians engage with the coming election.
A new survey shows that younger Christians are more committed to their faith. Experts are “surprised at high rates of religious practice” as 65% say faith has a role in general society.
Half check the website of their local church on a regular basis and 24% follow Christian influencers, finds a study.
Research looks at how the young in France see secularism. People between 18 and 30 are more tolerant of religious symbols in public.
The official report includes a guide with the most common mistakes and proposals to avoid them.
The ‘Being Black in the EU’ survey shows that the cases of racial discrimination increased from 39% to 45% in 5 years. Only 9% are reported.
The belief in reincarnation grows among Catholics, finds a survey. The young are more anxious about death than the older generations.
In the Southern European country, evangelical churches are the religious minority that grows the most, nearly tripling the presence of Muslim worship places.
A “first of its kind” survey conducted in France shows that evangelicals are more interested in environmental care than the average population.
More than half of those who leave Roman Catholicism in the region turn to evangelical churches, finds a survey.
The latest official figures, published in July, show that only one in five practice Catholicism, while atheism exceeds 16%.
42% of young people do not consider themselves religious, finds the newest official survey. Islam is clearly on the rise.
The highest proportion of multi-faith households are in London and Cardiff. 7.5 million people did not have any religion.
Gen Zers believe more in heaven and hell, a survey shows.
A survey shows that while most Europeans do not believe in God, those born after 1997 in Sweden, Germany, France, Great Britain, the Netherlands and Hungary have more faith.
In Germany, only 1.6% read the Bible every day, although half of the population is a member of one of the historic churches.
Evangelical churches are more practical than reflective on pressing issues such as the energy crisis or the impact on the quality of life due to limited living resources.
A survey of the UK Bible Society points out that “there is little appetite for a secular or multi-faith coronation” among the British population.
In the Paris area, the number of those who identify as believers is significantly higher than elsewhere.
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