'The Church is not in decline,' says missiologist

 (Photo: Getty/iStock)

Widespread belief in the resurrection of Jesus is an opportunity for the Church, a missiologist has said.

Findings from the Talking Jesus Report published last year revealed that 45 per cent of the UK population believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ and according to the people behind the report, that statistic should be encouraging news for churches as it can serve as a stepping stone for evangelism and conversations about faith within the wider community.

Dr Rachel Jordon-Wolf, Executive Director of HOPE Together, told church leaders gathered for The Briefing in London on Thursday that the resurrection is "key" and "a lot of people have some level of belief in it and we have to help them with that".

The insightful Talking Jesus research project was initiated in 2015 and is the joint initiative of HOPE Together, Christian Vision, Alpha, Kingsgate, Luis Palau and the Evangelical Alliance. The aim of the project is to analyse the nation's views on Jesus, Christians and evangelism, and the findings for the report are drawn from surveys spanning four thousand adults across the UK.

The 2022 report found that 6 per cent of Christians are "active" and "part of a worshipping community", a figure that has been stable since 2015 and, according to Dr Jordan-Wolf, is proof that "the Church is not in decline" and that "there is not a missing generation in the Church".

Results from the Talking Jesus Report have made an impact in churches and their strategies for evangelism and missions.

There is now a Talking Jesus Course to equip people with greater confidence to share Jesus and an 'evangelism healthcheck' for churches to self-audit their members and communities so that they can plan ways to grow stronger in their personal and corporate evangelism and witness.

Rachael Heffer, head of mission at the Evangelical Alliance, encouraged churches to "befriend non-Christians in new spaces and places" and "be brave and intentional to share nuggets of faith in their everyday lives and places they inhabit".

And churchgoers are being prompted not just to talk about church or God, but to use the name of Jesus in their conversations.

"When we share Jesus together, we are modelling what it is for the Church to be one body," said Andy Frost, Director of Share Jesus International. He continued: "When people see the Church working as it should do it's attractive."

According to Heffer, non-Christians have been seeking hope in the midst of Covid, political instability, and the cost of living crisis. And church leaders, she said, are being "further awakened" to the fact that people are asking "big questions of life and purpose" and are "made more aware of their own mortality".

According to Dr Jordan-Wolf, 10 per cent of practising Christians in the UK are to be found in London. She called on churches in the capital to make the most of that.

"Ten per cent of any population is enough to change the culture," she said.

"We need to remember we are a culture-shaping movement. We have more openness than anywhere else in the country.

"We have got to get our act together to do this together. If we do this together we can make an enormous difference."

Newsletter Stay up to date with Christian Today
News
What should Christians make of Tommy Robinson?
What should Christians make of Tommy Robinson?

In demanding that the likes of Robinson be banned from the Oxford Union, the clergy are in effect setting their own limit on freedom of speech and freedom of religion.

Christian woman persecuted by Iranian regime sentenced to 9 years in prison
Christian woman persecuted by Iranian regime sentenced to 9 years in prison

A Christian convert in Iran has been sentenced to nine years and eight months in prison on trumped-up charges linked to state security and anti-government activity.

John Lennox fears AI is making us lazy
John Lennox fears AI is making us lazy

Christian media leaders heard calls for courage, authenticity and discernment at the recent Revive 2026 conference.

Does the Church of England need to re-think its messaging?
Does the Church of England need to re-think its messaging?

If you look at the Church of England’s communications all that it ever seems to highlight is the good works that Christians do to improve the temporal well-being of their neighbours. It is right to highlight these things, but they are not the primary reason for the Church’s existence.