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New research finds dramatic growth in Attending the Church Among young adults in the UK and should challenge the idea that religion is dying in Britain, says its author.
Poll Entitled “Silent Rebirth”, he has established an increase of 12% of 2018 among the 18-24-year-olds who say they attended the Church at least per month.
Among the young men, this number has jumped abruptly from 4% to 21% in the last six years.
According to a poll, more young women also attend the church, according to research, increasing from 3% to 12%.

A new survey from the United Kingdom has revealed that the young men are leading the growth of attending the Church. (East)
Attendance is also among the older members of Gen Z, a millennial generation and those over 65 in the UK.
Among the 25-34 team, attendance increased from 4% to 13%, and among the 35-44-year-olds, attendance increased from 5% to 8%. There was also an increase of 5% among the oldest generation, from 14% to 19%.
Overall, Attending the Church It has increased by 50% in the UK in the last six years, according to a poll, and the church has become ethnically more diverse and one of five people come from an ethnic minority.
The research was ordered by the Bible Society, and was conducted by Yougov.

According to 2018, attending the Church among Gen Z, according to new data. (East)
Dr. Rhiannon McAleer, who automated the report, said the discoveries would challenge the popular term “that the church in England and Wales will decline in the terminal.”
“While some traditional denominations continue to face the challenges, we have seen a significant, widely established growth among most expressions of the Church-in Roman Catholicism and Pentecostalism. Now more than 2 million people are attending the Church than six years ago,” she said.
The research also revealed that there are more men than women go to church, and a total of 13% of men were said to 10% of women.
A survey in the UK mirrors Emerging trend about the religious views of young people in the United States.

More men than women now say they attend the Church in the UK. (AP)
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Survey 2023 American Life Survey Center They found that more women than men said among adult adults that they had left their faith in their childhood.
The study found that 54% of adult genes who left their formative religion were women, while 46% were men.
However, the opposite was among the older Americans. Among the generation of Baby Boomer, 57% of the people who left their religion were men, while 43% were women, the research said.
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