This book charts the profound changes in British Christianity over the last century. It does so through the medium of diverse local case-studies, based on high quality new research. The ethnic diversification of British churches in the last fifty years is a key theme of the volume. Overall, the chapters show how secularization has had different trajectories in different parts of the country. Alongside this, the book charts the surprising desecularisation of parts of Britain in recent decades.
Part I: Introductory Questions.- 1. David Goodhew and Mark Smith;
Christianity in Britain Since 1914.- Part II: British Christianity, c. 1914
to 1970.- 2. Alistair Beecher Alresford; The Collapse of Anglican Hegemony in
Rural Hampshire, c. 1914 - 1939.- 3. Mark Smith; The Great War and the Church
of England in Oxfordshire.- 4. Grant Masom; The Longest Battle? Engaging with
Secular Culture in a Southern Industrial Town, 1919 onwards.- 5. Matthew
Houston; Interpreting the Good Fight: Denominational perspectives on the
Second World War in Northern Ireland, 1933-1945.- 6. Ian Jones; Foundations
of Community? Church, Family and Neighbourhood in Birmingham, 1945-1980.-
7. Andrew Atherstone; Faith and the University: Oxford Student Evangelism
since the Second World War.- Part III: British Christianity, c. 1970 to the
Present.- 8. Mark Dorsett; Sneering or celebration? Some responses to
secularization in Cambridge Anglicanism in the 1980s.- 9. Sam Jeffery;
Globalisation and British Neo-Charismatic Christianity: the Transnational
Community of the Newfrontiers Network of Churches, c. 1979-2011.- 10. David
Ceri Jones; Secession, stagnation and survival: Evangelical Congregations in
Wales, 1990-2022.- 11. Richard Burgess; The Redeemed Christian Church of God
in Britain: the 1980s to the Present.- 12. Sheila Akomiah Conteh; The
Changing Landscape of Christianity in Scotland: New Churches in Glasgow
2000-2016.- 13. Susan Longhurst; Who Joins the Catholic Church and Why? A
Case study of contemporary Britons seeking to become Catholic in the
Archdiocese of Southwark.
David Goodhew is a Visiting Fellow of St Johns College at Durham University, UK and Vicar of St Barnabas Church, Middlesbrough, UK.
Mark Smith is Associate Professor at the University of Oxford, UK.