
Australia’s Churches: Smaller, Shifting, Still Standing
New National Church Life Survey data shows weekly church attendance at 1.3 million, major denominational reshuffles, and fewer local churches—revealing a landscape changing fast, yet still marked by signs of renewal.
Australia has a population of around 28 million people. Of those, just 1.3 million attend church weekly, or 4.6 per cent of the population. Compare this with American church attendance, with around 20 per cent of its 347 million people attending church weekly.
If you have been a regular churchgoer in Australia, you might recall filling in surveys for the National Church Life Survey (NCLS) over the years. Their newest report was released a few months ago: “Church Pulse Check 2021 to 2024”. It is always interesting to see what sort of figures they have come up with. The 28-page report offers this summary of 12 key findings:
#1 – In 2024, 1.3 million Australians attended church weekly. Attendance has largely recovered since COVID-19.
#2 – NSW & ACT had the largest number of weekly church attenders in 2024.
#3 – The Catholic Church had the highest number of attenders (44% of the weekly total).
#4 – Denominations have recovered to differing degrees since COVID-19.
#5 – Attendance in Protestant churches as a whole has been largely stable since 1991.
#6 – Pentecostal churches have had the greatest percentage growth in attendance since 1991.
#7 – The five biggest denominations have changed order.
#8 – The estimated number of faith commitments rose between 2021 and 2024.
#9 – The Catholic Church had the largest number of faith commitments across denominations.
#10 – There were around 10,600 local churches across Australia in 2024.
#11 – Most local churches were part of Mainstream Protestant denominations.
#12 – The Anglican Church had the highest number of local churches in 2024.
Let me look in a bit more detail at some of these findings. On point 7, they say this:
The five largest denominations accounted for over 80% of all church attenders in 2001 and in 2024. They were the Anglican Church, Australian Christian Churches, the Baptist Church, the Catholic Church, and the Uniting Church. In 2001 each of these denominations had 120,000 or more people attending their churches in an average week. Among Anglican and Protestant denominations, there have been significant shifts in the past few decades.
Australian Christian Churches (ACC, previously Assemblies of God) is the largest Pentecostal movement in Australia. When located in the context of all denominations, they moved from being the fifth largest denomination in 2001 to second largest in 2016 and continued to hold this position in 2024.
The Anglican Church moved from having the second largest weekly attendance in 2001 to being third in 2016 and fourth in 2024. The Baptist Church moved from having the fourth largest attendance in 2001 and 2016 to third largest in 2024, changing ranking with the Anglican Church. The Uniting Church, formed in 1977 from Methodist, Congregational and Presbyterian churches, was the third largest denomination in 2001. By 2016 and 2024 they had moved to fifth place.
As to the number of churches, we find this: “Fewer local churches since 2016: In 2021, the estimated number of local churches was around 10,600. This is 800 fewer than the number estimated across all participating denominations in 2016, which was 11,400.”
Five personal reflections
Let me offer some of my own thoughts on these findings.
One. With record-high immigration rates under the current Labor government, and so many of them being Muslims or those of other non-Christian backgrounds, it is not surprising to see Christians in general and church attendance in particular in decline in terms of the overall population.
Labor is intent on importing voters. Their own primary vote has been quite low in recent elections, with just a third of all votes. Importing so many people into the country who will likely return the favour by voting Labor is one easy way of ensuring that Labor stays in office.
Two. Obviously, assessing Christianity in a nation entails more than just looking at church attendance. And we have things like the national census, which also tries to measure religion in Australia. In recent surveys, they have featured the category “No religion”.
That, of course, can be quite misleading. Atheists, for example, happily claim them all. But many in that camp would be spiritual in various ways, as in those with New Age beliefs. And it can be said that we are ALL religious: we all have something that we put as our highest good, and so on. Even secular humanism has rightly been described as a religion.
Three. As I have discussed before, there is a very large cohort of those who are Christians, who love the Lord, and are most certainly part of the Body of Christ, but for various reasons are not going to church on a regular basis. My most-viewed, shared and commented-on article ever looks at this in more detail.
Four. Of course, the Covid years meant that the churches – like most other institutions – had to look at new ways of doing church – or at least of holding church services. Online services became the norm back then. While Australian church attendance is getting back to where it was before Covid, there would be so many believers still using various online Christian alternatives to actually going to a church building.
Five. As has been known for quite some time now, Christianity in the West is in decline. So many countries that were once majority Christian are now minority Christian. Secularism and the importation of those of other faiths are changing religious demographics in the West.
But the good news is, God is not finished with His church. It is places like Africa, Asia and Latin America where we find the greatest church growth and an increase in the number of believers. And often Christians from these areas are coming back to re-evangelise the West! So God is still at work in this world.
As always, we can thank the NCLS team, including the authors of this report, Ruth Powell, Sam Sterland and Miriam Pepper, for doing all the work in gathering data and putting these results together. You can read the entire report here.
___
Republished with thanks to CultureWatch. Image courtesy of Adobe.
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six
evangelicals have tried to politicise religion for fifty years with mixed success
right now it is under the spotlight as unrepresentative, devisive, more american than australian, willing to flex ignorance and anger in adult forums, out of touch with community standards, a haven for sex pests and a money grift
the proof is in the pudding
no new paritioners, no new money, dwindling power, community disdain and abandonment
hansons stunt yesterday went as well as last time, you look like crackpots and troublemakers, trying to divide and split.
australia isnt having it and you are becoming ghosts before our eyes
angry self important annoying ghosts
we point and shake our heads
Hi Andy,
Thanks for taking the time to comment. A quick reminder that our commenting policy asks all contributors to keep discussion respectful, stay on topic, and present disagreements in a thoughtful and reasoned way rather than through broad assertions or generalisations.
You’re welcome to critique an article or challenge ideas presented on this site. But your comment here makes a number of sweeping claims about Christians, churches, and this publication, and introduces topics unrelated to the article. That kind of approach isn’t in line with the constructive conversation we’re aiming at.
We want our comment section to remain a welcoming place for genuine engagement. Please ensure future contributions follow our policy and focus on the content of the article, offering clear reasons for your views rather than personal or group-based attacks.
You can read our full commenting guidelines here: https://dailydeclaration.org.au/comments/.
If similar comments continue, we’ll need to moderate your contributions or restrict further participation.
Thanks for your understanding.
Kurt Mahlburg
Senior Editor, The Daily Declaration
Kevin , nowhere in the above article did Kurt Mahlburg claim that 800 churches were closed because of Muslim immigration. When you comment for goodness sake get your facts straight.
Great article Bill!!!!
it would be worthwhile to investigate those who left fellowships to establish home fellowships. the Barna Institute research paints a dismal picture of the level of spiritual maturity within churches.
I left protestant tradition based denominations years ago. I could not even fill in the census because the questions ignored the growing number of people who have the testimony of Christ and keep His commandments. Yahweh is not into numbers. Yeshua said the way was narrow and few are on it.
hi kurt
I understand your concerns and I appreciate you hosting my views
honestly im just starting to repeat myself but I stand by everything minus my anger judgement and mean spiritedness
my apologies and try and think about some of my points
I appreciate your reply and consideration Andy.
Thank you Bill for an informative article, and thank you Kurt for a timely redress.
Lately, quite a few responses to Daily Declaration pieces seem to be the venting of personal frustrations, and less than gracious comments directed to contributors, and to the general readership community.
May the enduring mercy of God, and the Holy Spirit’s guiding light cover all people involved in the good work of the Canberra Declaration.
I enjoyed your thoughtful article and surprised by denominational shifts. A few observations I’ve had while being part of Queensland Baptists has been the multicultural development in our State. We have witnessed extensive new growth coming through Burmese, Karen, and Chin people groups. Praise God! These are mono ethnic churches that are largely self starting and subsequently coming under the Queensland Baptist systems of registration. Why I mention this is that christians are also migrating but not necessarily re-evangelising the West as much as establishing churches that identify with their prefered traditions of worship. Baptists are doing well through migration trends.