It's a generational thing, the last generation to subscribe to christianity en masse in the UK was the WWII generation who are now reaching life expectancy. As such our churches should be gone in next 20-30 years.
In the US the average age of the congregation is lower but shows the same trend, in effect you'll have to wait for the average age to equal life expectancy. (In the UK the average age of the congregation is about 7 years from life expectancy) I think the average age for US congregations is about 20 years from life expectancy though trying to nail down a figure is like pulling teeth even on the net.
In the US the average age of the congregation is lower but shows the same trend, in effect you'll have to wait for the average age to equal life expectancy. (In the UK the average age of the congregation is about 7 years from life expectancy) I think the average age for US congregations is about 20 years from life expectancy though trying to nail down a figure is like pulling teeth even on the net.
Quote:I don't understand why you'd come to a discussion forum, and then proceed to reap from visibility any voice that disagrees with you. If you're going to do that, why not just sit in front of a mirror and pat yourself on the back continuously?-Esquilax
Evolution - Adapt or be eaten.


