



| Information | Where to find us | |
| Media Centre | Home |

| home / media centre / thousands come back to church as bishops take to the road and sky to spread the message |
Tell us what you think about our website
For media inquiries only, contact the Press Office.
Tel: 020 78981326
Fax: 020 78981636
E-mail: cofecomms@c-of-e.org.uk
news EXTRAS
200,000 invitations for ‘Back to Church Sunday’ reach out to the millions who want to go to church
Twenty thousand people are set to return to church with a friend this weekend (Sunday 30th September) as part of a major co-ordinated effort by the Church of England to pack the pews in around 2,000 participating churches.
Today (Monday 24th September), bishops from Exeter to Peterborough and Manchester to Oxford - representing half of the Church of England’s dioceses - will swing into action by taking to the skies in planes, launching podcasts and unveiling advertising campaigns. The unprecedented co-ordinated activity aims to encourage churchgoers to invite a friend, who has stopped going for whatever reason, ‘back to church’.
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has personally backed the initiative, commenting: “Millions of people remember and love church, but perhaps they've just drifted away for a while. Back to Church Sunday is a chance for church people to invite a friend to come back and see what they've been missing, and to help them reconnect with God in special services of welcome across England.”
In anticipation, local churches have ordered Back to Church Sunday boxes, sponsored by Traidcraft, packed with special invitations, posters and T-shirts, and have been preparing special ‘open day’ style services and improving their welcome techniques at summer workshops.
The idea builds on research that recently revealed three million people (six per cent of the adult population) would come back to church if they received a personal invitation. This type of opportunity for churches formed the basis for the idea of Back to Church Sunday, which began in the Diocese of Manchester in 2004 and has been growing steadily ever since - with more dioceses taking part every year. Organisers predict that this year’s event will see 20,000 people return to church this Sunday, based on an average figure of ten people returning to each church that has previously taken part in the event.
Church attendance figures have been relatively stable since 2000, with weekly and monthly attendance falling by one per cent or less between 2004 and 2005. This followed two years in which the numbers increased or held steady. The latest figures suggest that around 1.7 million people attend Church of England church and cathedral worship each month, while around 1.2 million attend services each week – on Sunday or during the week - and just under one million each Sunday.
With just six days to go until Back to Church Sunday:
Canon Paul Bayes, the Church of England’s National Mission and Evangelism Adviser, believes the event is a key opportunity for churches: “The most important thing about Back to Church Sunday is ensuring that those returning to church get a truly warm welcome. Things like the length of services, the hymns and songs we sing and even the way we give out notices can all have an impact on the welcome people feel. It’s also critical that churches think though what they can offer people who have made that brave step to come back. I hope many churches will be setting up an informal course explaining the Christian faith, or perhaps holding special lunches over the next weeks for returning worshippers to meet each other.”
Back to Church Sunday is being run in churches across the dioceses of Bath & Wells, Birmingham, Blackburn, Chelmsford, Chester, Coventry, Derby, Ely, Exeter, Guildford, Lichfield, Manchester, Norwich, Oxford, Peterborough, Ripon and Leeds, Rochester, Southwark, Southwell & Nottingham and Wakefield.