It's the time of the year when the Unitarian Directory comes out. This means I can do some number crunching, and thinking about the health of our community.
There are 172 congregations in the Unitarian General Assembly. This is one down from last year (173). Two congregations have disappeared from the directory, though I can't remembering anything being reported about the congregations closing. One is Pudsey in West Yorkshire, and the other is Loughborough in Leciestershire.
The good news is that one new congregation has been recognised this year, Bangor, in North Wales, accepted as a small congregation.
I'm sure that we going to continue to see about two congregations closing every year, I just hope we can see a few more starting as well.
The Directory also lists 133 Ministers (one down on last year) but this is a pretty meaningless number as it includes retired Ministers, and Ministers living in Ireland, America and other parts of the world.
There are 172 congregations in the Unitarian General Assembly. This is one down from last year (173). Two congregations have disappeared from the directory, though I can't remembering anything being reported about the congregations closing. One is Pudsey in West Yorkshire, and the other is Loughborough in Leciestershire.
The good news is that one new congregation has been recognised this year, Bangor, in North Wales, accepted as a small congregation.
I'm sure that we going to continue to see about two congregations closing every year, I just hope we can see a few more starting as well.
The Directory also lists 133 Ministers (one down on last year) but this is a pretty meaningless number as it includes retired Ministers, and Ministers living in Ireland, America and other parts of the world.
Comments
I'm not a Unitarian, but I'm interested in different forms of church practice, and I hope that the Unitarians can find a renewed purpose in the UK.
You describe yourself in 'About me' as 'evangelical'. What does that mean in a Unitarian context? (Sorry if you've explained that elsewhere.) Why do you think it's helpful to use such a loaded Christian term? Mightn't it scare off the kinds of people that Unitarians would hope to attract?
But that seems to be more precisely 'evangelistic' rather than 'evangelical'. The two terms are sometimes confused, but it does not help to blur the distinction. Methodists, for example, might support the initiative to develop new kinds of church (called 'Fresh Expressions') to appeal to people in our contemporary society, but they wouldn't automatically see themselves as 'evanglical'. Some would, some wouldn't.
The author David Bebbington has come up with some well-known characteristics to define evangelicalism.