O Father Where Art Thou?
God isn't dead: people are defining their own belief systems and mixing in alternative spirituality
Full Circle
Missionaries now come to Europe
Piercing An Ancient Tale
Solving the mystery of a Christian relic

Does Europe need Christianity?

Yes
No
Don't Know



Collection Plate
In the Church, but not in Church

Islam In Europe
Mixing religion and lifestyle
[12/24/2001]
Jesus at 2000
Jesus of Nazareth — An Untold Story [1/14/2002]
Is God Dead?
[04/08/1966 ]
Indicates premium content

E-mail your letter to the editor
     








DEREK HUDSON for TIME NEWS
IN GOD'S HANDS: Faith still brings solace to millions

O Father Where Art Thou?
Christianity is becoming a minority faith in Europe, as church attendance falls, the clergy ages, and scandals and harsh doctrine drive people away. But the faith is reappearing — and thriving — in all sorts of unexpected places. A search for God in Europe, 2003
print article email TIMEeurope Subscribe

Posted Sunday, June 8, 2003; 16.45BST
Follow the ancient pilgrims' trail through the plains of central France and you'll come upon a vision of soaring spires and flying buttresses that sail above the fields like a medieval mother ship. The 13th century Chartres Cathedral is a relic of an era when bishops crowned kings and kings crowned conquests by building monuments to their faith. To Roman Catholics, the cathedral — which has burned down and been rebuilt several times over the centuries — has always been a sacred place. Since the 9th century it has been the home of the Veil of the Virgin Mary, a long piece of silk said to have been worn by Mary when she gave birth to Jesus. It has a famed labyrinth, a 262-m winding stone path that pilgrims used to trace on their knees. Its 172 stained-glass windows use every rainbow color to tell Biblical stories from Adam and Eve to the Revelation of John. Naturally, "there is a tendency to visit the cathedral like one visits a museum," says Marie-Josèphe Deboos, head of the church's welcome center. "But this is not a museum. It is a living place, a religious community."

Tell that to those who treat Chartres Cathedral as if it were a satellite gallery of the Louvre, just another stop on the Grand Tour of Europe. The disembodied voice that announces each hour on the hour that "this is a place of prayer" seems to be talking to himself. And Malcolm Miller, who has guided tourists around the cathedral for more than 40 years, can't help but catalog the "vulgarity" of the visitors: the woman who asked what he meant by the terms Old Testament and New Testament; the one who let her dog drink the holy water; the couple — he shirtless, she in a bikini — who arrived on a feast day, strode up to the altar and took a flash photo of the bishop, mid-Mass. Look around and play your own game of Spot the Vulgarians; how about the folks at the back, pumping euros into the machine that spits out "official" Chartres coins?

Churches have always gone through periods when their influence is greater and periods when it was less. Now we are down. Christianity will be a minority. Nobody should close his eyes to that fact
JOBST SCHÖNE, historian and Lutheran bishop, Germany

In its ancient glory and modern angst, Chartres is strangely emblematic of European Christianity right now. This church mirrors the church — the institutions of the faith, whether Catholic, Anglican, Orthodox or independent. It is caught between history and modernity: filled with the few blazingly faithful and the many who feel a faint, indescribable pull; a huge, almost forbidding presence that is nearly always half-empty inside; a place of shadows and more shadows, with the occasional shaft of bright, brilliant light. In 1966, a TIME cover story pondered the fate of Christianity and asked, is god dead? The magazine wasn't the first to pose the question — theologians have lamented society's secularization for centuries — nor would it be the last. He's still not dead, but these days in Europe, He's not always in the same old places. So it's worth asking: Where has God — and Christian faith — gone?

The institutions of Christianity, of course, have long been in decline, but the consensus is that the pace has been quickening. "Parish life is essentially dead," admits a senior Vatican official. Church attendance has dwindled by more than 30% in Britain since 1980. Over the same period, the percentage of the population claiming membership in a religious denomination has dropped more than 20% in Belgium, 18% in the Netherlands and 16% in France. Christianity remains Europe's main religion, with about 550 million adherents. But the number of Europeans who identify as Catholic — by far the biggest denomination on the Continent — has fallen by more than a third since 1978.

At times, the church has been its own worst enemy — backing Franco's brutal regime in Spain (something it still hasn't apologized for) and stonewalling the Irish pedophilia scandals of recent years. But even before these revelations, the church "was an oppressive force," says Willie Walsh, the Bishop of Killaloe, who went on a millennial pilgrimage of reconciliation in 1999. "It was judgmental and placed too much emphasis on a God who was very much to be feared."

Previous | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Next







Table of Contents
Subscribe to TIME

ADVERTISEMENT

On New Year's Eve, the Miseries of Minsk
As Russia hikes up the cost of gas for Belarus, the mood turns gloomy
Mogadishu at 60 Miles an Hour
Arms merchants are once again doing brisk business after a rapid change of power in this tough town, but so far the peace has held
The Year of The Nuke
A rundown of the world's nuclear powerhouses, and what to expect in the coming months
QUICK LINKS: O Father Where Art Thou? | Full Circle | Piercing An Ancient Tale | Back to TIMEeurope.com Home

FROM THE JUNE 16, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 2003

 © 2003 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Subscribe | Customer Service | FAQ | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us
World Watch e-mail | Try AOL UK for 120 hours FREE | Try FOUR free issues of TIME