http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/story.jsp?story=594582It will be a bleak midwinter for Manchester churches, according to the first major study of seasonal congregations. The capital of the north will have Britain's emptiest pews on Christmas Day.
The city comes at the bottom of a league table of Yuletide attendance, with barely 2 per cent of the population in church on Christmas Eve and the following morning. In contrast, towns such as Guildford in Surrey can expect a flood of "Christmas tourists" - a breed of worshipper who expects what the authors call a "high-class version of the pantomime".
Dr David Voas, a specialist in religious change at Manchester University, said the Christmas worshippers are "confident enough to go into their parish church although they are not seen the rest of the year". The Government-funded research, published today, is based on Church of England statistics and reveals a marked North-South divide. Christmas congregations in Durham, Sheffield, Liverpool and Birmingham are not significantly bigger than normal. This contrasts with southern towns and rural areas where attendances can treble. The most godly place is Hereford, where more than 10 per cent of the population will be at an Anglican church this Christmas.