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City dwellers abandon the Swedish church

The Local Sweden
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City dwellers abandon the Swedish church

The former state Church of Sweden lost more than 50,000 members in 2012, continuing a trend in declining membership, seen most acutely in the towns, since Sweden became secular in the year 2000.

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The church, which defines itself as Evangelical Lutheran, still has 7 million members.

Last year, however, 54,000 people decided to drop out. During the same time frame, the national church also attracted more than 7,500 new members.

There are differences in the drop-off rate between the towns and smaller communities.

Stockholm and Gothenburg saw thousands of members decide not to renew their memberships, while in the tiny town Bjurholm in Ångermandland County there was only one person who decided to leave.

"That community has a high attendance at church services," the local pastor Michael Brodin told the TT news agency, before underlining that the congregation was small.

"They have a tradition of piety."

The church itself has noted the urban rural divide.

"Most people in Stockholm have moved here, which means they don't have their childhood church nearby," Jonas Bromander, head of analysis at the Church of Sweden's national office.

"It means the relationship is weakened."

Half of Stockholm and Gothenburg residents are now members, while less than half of Malmö's residents are members.

TT/The Local/at

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