Does Europe have a Faith Vacuum?
Niall Ferguson believes it does.
There was a time when Europe would justly refer to itself as "Christendom." Europeans built the Continent's loveliest edifices to accommodate their acts of worship. They quarreled bitterly over the distinction between transubstantiation and consubstantiation. As pilgrims, missionaries and conquistadors, they sailed to the four corners of the Earth, intent on converting the heathen to the true faith.
Now it is Europeans who are the heathens. According to the Gallup Millennium Survey of religious attitudes, barely 20% of West Europeans attend church services at least once a week, compared with 47% of North Americans and 82% of West Africans. Fewer than half of West Europeans say God is a "very important" part of their lives, as against 83% of Americans and virtually all West Africans. And fully 15% of West Europeans deny that there is any kind of "spirit, God or life force" — seven times the American figure and 15 times the West African.
Unfortunately, Professor Ferguson succumbs to the mistaken belief that Europeans were once religious peoples. In fact, they have always been heathens. Rodney Stark, a prominent sociologist of religion, has written "the average person [European] has always been absent from the pews on Sunday." Another notable sociologist, Andrew Greeley, has come to the same conclusion. He wrote, "There could be no de-Christianization of Europe... because there never was any Christianization in the first place."