Lutyen's Stone of Remembrance

Lutyen's Stone of Remembrance
Lutyens' Stone of Remembrance. Found at the larger Commonwealth War Graves and in front of Edinburgh and Glasgow City Chambers

Tuesday 31 December 2013

Who are the nones? People with no religion tend to be pretty average folk

I recently examined data about the characteristics of people with no religion compared to those who have religions of various types.

There is need to do this because official studies frequently focus more on the different religious denominations rather than thinking systematically about the growing proportion of the population that has no religion - 37 per cent in the 2011 Scottish census. For instance, the informative source I consulted (see below) summarises its findings for well known religious groups but not for those with no religion. So here I offer a quick summary.

Those who report to surveys and censuses that they have no religion tend to be not that much different from the average citizen,

They have about average employment rates and are spread around a typical selection of occupations.
They have less wealth than average but this may be because they tend to be younger. They live across all types of neighbourhoods in the same way as the general population.

Slightly healthier and slightly more inclined to drink

Some statistically significant but small differences emerge with respect to health. The non-religious are slightly less likely than average to be obese, to have cardio-vascular disease or diabetes and are more likely to meet the daily recommended levels of exercise.

However, like Roman Catholics, 28 per cent of them smoked, compared to the national average of 25.

The non-religious are also more likely to exceed daily recommended alcoholic intake limits at 41 per cent compared to the national Scottish average of 39.

One thing the biggest differences that mark out the non-religious is that they are much more likely to go to the cinema. 60% of them do compared to 54% overall and 44% for Church of Scotland adherents.

For more information visit http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/0042/00420970.pdf
The summary of the report is available at p37-8 with no mention of the near 40% with no religion.

Tuesday 17 December 2013

Religion and the Scottish independence referendum

Abstract of article in the December 2013 issue of the
Political Quarterly

The Scottish independence referendum debate, like the Act of Union of 1707, has significant religious dimensions. The Act gave special recognition through the monarch to the Presbyterian Church of Scotland. The Church, a national church, has not yet declared a position on independence, but is seeking to protect its existing privileges, whatever the result. The Roman Catholic Church, recognised by the Scottish Parliament, unlike its formal rejection by the UK Parliament and monarchy, symbolically associates itself with the case for independence. Paradoxically, Scottish Catholics supporting independence subject themselves, in their religious lives, to an authoritarian foreign power. The SNP Scottish Government attempts to draw Roman Catholic support for independence from its traditional support base in the Labour Party of the central belt by cultivating a sense of religious grievance that is not justified by the evidence. Old religious divisions are still relevant but non-religion is growing fast and resulting in new perspectives on the independence debate.

Thursday 12 December 2013

New book - essential reading on the monarchy in constitutional and religious debates


Can the Christian and Protestant monarchy of the UK and 15 other realms endure in the increasingly secular and religiously diverse societies of the twenty-first century?

The monarch has to be a Protestant and swear to reject Roman Catholicism but in Canada Catholics are now 40 per cent of the population and outnumber Protestants by almost two to one. Will this situation endure?

The monarch swears to uphold 'the True Protestant Religion and the Presbyterian form of church government in Scotland' but Muslim, Hindu, Sikh and Buddhist prayers are now heard in the monarch's Scottish Parliament.

If Scotland becomes independent it will be the 17th state with the monarch as head of state like Australia and Papua New Guinea but could it hold its own individual national coronation for a new monarch?

Can Prince Charles, as likely next monarch, be 'Defender of Faith?'

Explore these and related questions in Monarchy, religion and the state

More details at http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9780719089879

Publishers UK- Manchester University Press; USA - Palgrave Macmillan; Canada - University of British Columbia Press; Australia; Footprint.

For more on the author's work visit http://www.normanbonneypublications.blogspot.co.uk





Tuesday 10 December 2013

A secular response to the Scottish Government's Independence White Paper: Remove the religious aspects of the monarchy.

The Scottish Government White Paper arguing for a 'yes' vote in the independence referendum on 14 September 2014 does little to advance the cause of secularism.

The proposed continuance of the UK monarchy means that the head of state of an independent Scotland would be a Christian and Protestant monarch confirmed in office by religious rituals.The Scottish Government does not plan to change the rules of succession. Roman Catholics and others not in communion with the Church of England would continue to be excluded from succession to the throne (Answer to Question 581).

However this statement is in conflict with a the summary of the White Paper in the section headed 'The monarchy and the crown', which states that an independent Scottish Government would promote and support, among the states of the Commonwealth that have the monarch as head of state, a measure to exclude religious discrimination from the succession rules.(Such a change would have to be agreed by all 16 other relevant states).

In answer to Question 590 the Scottish Government says that it proposes no change to the legal status of any religion or of Scotland's churches.(This would presumably mean that churches would retain their allocated places on local authority education committees).But the answer conflicts with the White Paper statement that the Acts of Union would be repealed as part of the transition to independence. This would remove the obligation on a new monarch immediately on coming to the throne to take the oath to  'maintain and preserve the True Protestant Religion and the Presbyterian form of church government in Scotland'.

The repeal of the Acts of Union would thus remove the special position of the Church of Scotland but the current monarch could not assent to this change because of the oath sworn upon accession on 8 February 1952 (although this oath could be overridden by UK Parliamentary legislation). No wonder the Moderator of the Church of Scotland met with UK Scotland Office ministers shortly after the White Paper was published since the historic position of the Church is in jeopardy if Scotland becomes independent.

There is very little to advance the cause of secularism in the White Paper proposals. The monarch's institutional favouritism towards the Church of Scotland is threatened and there are possible steps that would remove the discriminatory rules of succession to the throne but the Scottish Government emphasises, somewhat mistakenly, that there will be no change to the legal status of any religion or Scotland's churches.

Some secularists argue that their agenda can be pursued at the proposed constitutional convention that will be established after the achievement of independence in order to design a new constitution for the new Scottish state but if it cannot be achieved within the context of current constitutional arrangements or in the proposals for independence why should it be expected under that scenario? And what confidence can people have in voting for independence if the proposed initial arrangements for independence can so readily be overturned?

The most effective steps that secularists might take are to press for the removal of all religious tests for the monarchy and the removal of  all its religious roles. The secular monarchy should be campaigned for as part the independence package or as part of the continuing United Kingdom whether or not Scotland achieves independence.

Please send any comments on this post to normanbonney2010@gmail.com 






Saturday 7 December 2013

Over 1500 petitioners kept waiting by Education Secretary Mike Russell

Over 1500 petitioners to the Scottish Parliament who are wanting to change the way prayers are conducted in Scottish schools will have to wait until next year to hear the views of Cabinet Education Secretary Mike Russell.

The petition was lodged on 20 June 2013. On 12 November the Public Petitions Committee agreed to obtain the views of Scottish Government on the public comments that had been received on the petition. The Minister's response is not on the agenda of the Committee for the meeting of 10 December.

The 1500 petitioners and many others will be keen to hear the Scottish Government's views on submissions such some of the following;

  • The Scottish Council of Jewish Communities which argues that current practices are insufficiently inclusive
  • The Scottish Parent Teacher Council which urges an end to compulsory school prayers
  • The Scottish Secular Society which documents extensive inadequacies in current opt-out provision 
  • Dundee and Tayside Humanists who argue current practices breach the UN Convention on the rights of children
  • Edinburgh Secular Society which argues for the ending of prayers in schools




Tuesday 3 December 2013

Gender segregation advice in UK universities and male-only priest church involvement in Scottsh education

Your correspondent Veronica Wikman is right to condemn Universities UK advice that gender segregation in audiences would be acceptable to meet the religious requirements of external speakers.

But should not that organisation seek to change the law rather than issue such objectionable advice?

And, in a closely related issue, why do the Scottish Government and the Scottish Parliament, both of which are ostensibly pledged to gender equality, facilitate a church that does not allow women priests, to play such a large role in our state education system?

Letter in the Scotsman 3.12.13

Thursday 28 November 2013

Protestant/Catholic divisions emerging over Scottish independence referendum

There are apparent signs of an emerging and widening Protestant/Catholic religious divide in Scotland in the independence debate.

Two days after the publication of the SNP Scottish Government’s ‘White Paper’ on its independence plans the Moderator of the Church of Scotland prominently dined with UK Government Scotland Office ministers in London.


The Church of Scotland is seeking to retain its current religious privileges in a possibly independent Scotland but in its White Paper the Scottish Government stated that it planned initially to retain the Protestant monarchy but that it would seek to remove the current discriminatory religious rules which have been the basis of the Scottish and UK monarchy for over three centuries.

As previously reported the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland signalled its support for the SNP Scottish Government’s independence agenda by holding the inauguration ceremony of the newly Vatican appointed Archbishop of Edinburgh and St Andrews on the morning of Saturday 21 September  2013 on the same day and in the same city of Edinburgh that was later the scene of a major rally in support of Scottish independence. 

Sunday 17 November 2013

An independent Scotland: a religious or a secular state?

Scottish voters still await the details of the latest thinking of the Scottish Government on its plans for an independent Scotland.

All the evidence so far suggests that it will continue to envisage an independent Scotland as a religious state headed by the UK Protestant monarchy that excludes Roman Catholics from succession to the throne.

But in its attempt to get the backing of the Church of Scotland for its independence proposals will the Scottish Government go so far as accept the Church’s demands for the continuation of its existing constitutional privileges which it spelled out in a paper at its General Assembly last May?

The Church of Scotland demands;
  • ·        That an independent Scottish state recognise the authority of God
  • ·        That the monarchy should be retained and should have a continuing special relationship with the Church of Scotland
  • ·        That the monarch should have a Scottish coronation that ‘upholds  Scottish religious life and traditions’
  • ·        That the Church should retain the right to conduct marriage and appoint prison chaplains.
  • ·        And that the churches should retain the right to appoint three members of each local authority education committee.

It will be of great interest to voters to see how the Scottish Government responds in its White Paper of 26 November to these proposals by the Church to maintain its existing privileged position in Scottish society and politics in a proposed independent Scotland.

The Church’s position is spelled out at






Thursday 14 November 2013

The Public Petitions Committee and Prayers in Scottish Schools

In an earlier post I queried whether the petition to change the basis of prayers in schools from 'opt-out' to 'opt-in' would receive a fair hearing, given that a majority of the Scottish Parliament's Public Petitions Committee are declared Christians. However, as suggested by the petitioner in response to my post, the Committee has risen to the task and put aside any such predilections to request that the Scottish Government give its response to the Committee to the numerous points raised in evidence for and against the proposed change.

For the first time since the establishment of the Parliament in 1999 the Scottish Government and the Scottish Parliament are now required to undertake a thorough review of the laws and regulations that govern religious observance in Scottish schools which were inherited from the UK Westminster Parliament.  About time too. What has the Scottish Parliament been doing for the last 14 years?

Tuesday 12 November 2013

Secular Remembrance - the unifying power of silence

Across Scotland and the UK on Monday 11 November people marked their respectful remembrance for the dead of war by participating in two minutes silence. I happened, by chance, to experience it in Heathrow Terminal 5 where it was concluded by 'The Last Post'. The 'Great Silence', introduced at the suggestion of King George V on 11 November 1919, the first anniversary of the Armistice of 1918, is a secular and powerful form of remembrance that does not involve priests or prayers.

The Stone of Remembrance which is to be found in the larger Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemeteries is also to be found in front of Edinburgh City Chambers and as part of the war memorial in front of Glasgow City Chambers. It has no obvious religious inscription upon it although 'Their name liveth for evermore' is taken from the apocrypha - scriptures not approved to be part of the bible.

By design and decision of the UK cabinet in 1919 the London Cenotaph has no cross upon it because the over one million Empire dead of the First World War came from such a wide diversity of religions and beliefs. 

The saying of prayers at ceremonial at these monuments by a representative of any one religion goes against the intention and spirit of these memorials which are meant to be inclusive of all. The silence, however, is inclusive of all, and participatory. The decision of the Northern Ireland Legislature to begin its proceedings with silence rather than prayer is a clear demonstration of the power of silence to promote unity among people divided by religion and belief.  

Letter in the Scotsman 13 November 2013

Monday 11 November 2013

A secular remembrance

By chance I was in Heathrow Terminal 5 this morning at 1100am on 11 November 2013.

There was a two minutes silence followed by 'The Last Post'

A moving secular remembrance

Tuesday 5 November 2013

End, not amend, prayers in Scottish state schools

END NOT AMEND 
RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCE IN SCOTTISH STATE SCHOOLS

Comments on the evidence submitted for petition PEO1487 which aims to amend the practice of religious observance in Scottish schools. 

(to be considered by the Scottish Parliament Public Petitions Committee on 12 November 2013).

  • Inherited UK Westminster Parliament laws need amendment
  • Lack of consideration by the Scottish Parliament
  • Existing practices out of date
  • Support from Jews, parents and secularists for change of law
  • The Scottish Parliament's Time for Reflection an inadequate model for schools - many MSPs opt out
  • Schools given an impossible task to undertake unified religious observance in an increasingly secular and diverse society

The petition to the Scottish Parliament to change religious observance practices in Scottish schools from a possible ‘opt-out’ to an ‘opt-in’ basis gives the Scottish Parliament an opportunity to do what it has conspicuously failed to do so far in any in-depth way in its recent 14 year old history – to examine systematically the practice and suitability of religious observance in Scottish state funded schools. For too long policy guidance on religion in Scottish schools has been dominated by a small set of religious and educational professionals without any detailed democratic scrutiny by the elected legislature. The main churches and the political leaders of the major political parties have been happy to operate within a legal framework inherited from the UK Westminster Parliament – a legislature that they so vigorously argued they wanted to be liberated from in order to establish the Scottish Parliament in 1999.

It is now the time for the Scottish Parliament to use its powers to subject the existing arrangements for religious practice in Scottish schools to the most fundamental reassessment and democratic re-evaluation and to consider the revocation of the existing Westminster UK Parliament laws that govern it. 

The hearing of the petition to end schools’ religious observance in 2007
The only other time that Holyrood considered the matter in some detail, in the Public Petitions Committee in 2007, it gave the status quo inadequate consideration and endorsed Christian religious practices in the schools. In its evidence at that time the Educational Institute of Scotland noted that religious observance in many schools took the form of Christian worship or ‘something very close to it’ and, when the Committee rejected the petition, Committee member MSP John Scott said ‘Religious observation (sic) is important in young and old alike. I am not concerned that taxpayers' money is being used to promote Christian values; in fact, I am glad about that, because they are vital at this time (20 March 2007 Col 3126). To say the least these comments were clearly in conflict with the multi-faith practice of the Scottish Parliament itself in its ‘Time for Reflection’ and did not reflect the guidance that the Scottish Government actually gave schools on the matter.

Evidence statements in 2013
The evidence presented in relation to the current petition is most revealing and should lead to a fundamental rethink of the practice of religious observance in Scottish state funded schools.

The evidence of the Scottish Council of Jewish Communities (SCJC) strikes a chord with the views of atheist, humanist and other parents who have approached Scottish humanist and secular societies and the National Secular Society about their concerns relating to the nature of collective religious practice in Scottish schools – that despite the ‘nod’ in the official guidelines on religious observance in Scottish schools, and by some major churches, towards an inclusive cross-faith religious pluralism in school religious events, many supposedly ‘non-denominational’ schools actually function as Protestant Christian schools and are not genuinely inclusive of all faiths and of those parents and children with no religion. The SCJC rightly points out that the current guidelines were issued by the Scottish Government in 2004 in such a way as to circumvent the need for new legislation and resultant democratic scrutiny by the Scottish Parliament.

The difficulties in operating the current guidelines have been amply demonstrated in work by the Edinburgh Secular Society and other organisations and are reflected in the current evidence before the Public Petitions Committee, where the Scottish Parent Teacher Council also recommends the ending of current practices.

There clearly is the need for a reconsideration of the laws inherited from the UK Westminster Parliament, and not just the non-statutory guidelines, that govern religious practices in Scottish schools. The law, for instance, requires ‘religious observance’ whereas the guidance from the Scottish Government, which does not have the force of law, invents new language and practices which refer to alternative conceptions of religious observance such as ‘Time for Reflection’ and school ‘community acts’.

The Church of Scotland’s plea for ‘religious observance’ to be ‘Time for Reflection’ also requires a change in the existing laws which use the former and not the latter term.

Existing practices out of date
Society and religion have changed so much in Scotland in recent decades that the current laws and guidelines have become increasingly out of date. Scotland is not now a Christian society. The Scottish Parliament recognised this in 1999 when it rejected by 99 votes to 9 a motion that there should be exclusively Christian prayers in the new Parliament and arranged instead that there should be a weekly Time for Reflection which would take on a multi-faith character where denominations appeared in proportion to the size of their following in the country[i]. The 2011 census emphasised the falling percentage of the population that was Christian. The 54 per cent Christian in 2011 is likely to fall to 50 per cent sometime during 2014 if the same rate of decline that operated in the decade preceding 2011 is projected to continue forward. Census results however, probably overestimate the proportion of Christians in the population since those results include attributions of religious affiliation to children by parents. 

Surveys of adults suggest that Christians are now less than half the population. Firm atheists, who have no belief in any god or higher spiritual power constitute 19 per cent of the population – a higher figure than those who identify as Roman Catholics. Those without religion in the 2011 census in Scotland constituted 37 per cent of the population – higher than the 32 per cent reporting themselves as Church of Scotland adherents. And, of course, in some localities in Scotland the proportion of the population that has no religious affiliation will be even higher – approaching, for instance, half of the population in Edinburgh.

The changing patterns of religious belief and affiliation are one reason why there are increasing numbers of disputes between schools and parents as to the religious practices to which pupils are subjected to in schools and another indication of the need for change. Younger people and parents of pupils are also much more likely than the population in general to be atheist and non-religious.

The assumption that religion should have a role in school and that it can provide unifying experiences for all members of the school community – the argument of the existing Scottish Government guidelines on religious practice in Scottish state schools - cannot be sustained by this evidence on the pattern of belief, religious affiliation and practice in Scotland.

Time for Reflection: a poor model for collective religious ceremonial
The Scottish Government has aligned itself with the major churches in Scotland in mandating that state schools should practice unifying collective religious ceremonies and in suggesting that the term ‘Time for Reflection’ should be used for these events even when the legislation specifies that what should occur is ‘religious observance’. Scottish Government ministers have specified that ‘Time for Reflection’ (TFR) in the Scottish Parliament is a good model for unifying school religious events. But TFR is hardly an example of a unifying experience. Attendance by MSPs is often low –with many usually opting out - and the most common form that TFR takes is a prayer, talk or reading by an individual member of one of Scotland’s six major faith traditions or 14 Christian denominations. There is an occasional inter-faith representative but there have only been two humanists in the 14 years of the Parliament and one or two atheists – greatly under-representing these two latter groups[ii]. TFR has no opportunity for involvement by the ‘body of the Kirk’ –the MSP’s themselves. It is thus a very poor model for the development of unifying community acts in schools.

The limitations of the inter-faith movement
It is interesting, too, that despite the considerable Scottish Government funding that has gone into the Scottish inter-faith movement to improve understanding, good will and common action between the numerous religious denominations, that the submissions to the Public Petitions Committee from religious organisations, like TFR itself, derive from contributions by the individual churches and denominations and not collectively from the inter-faith movement. There is a submission by Inter-faith Scotland but it collects representations from some of the smaller Scottish denominations rather than embracing the collective view of all faiths and religious organisations just as TFR in the Parliament is mainly delivered by separate denominational representatives and only occasionally by an inter-faith figures.

Inter-faith Scotland states in its evidence that;
There is great potential for well thought out, inclusive, religious observance to create opportunities for pupils to reflect upon the rich diversity of values, beliefs and ideas that make up a pluralist society. Religious observance, again if it is done with sensitivity and thought can help to create a sense of inclusion that enriches a school community’.
This statement (which mentions ‘potential’ and implies that ambitions are not realised in practice) does not take account of the fact that a large section of parents and school pupils have no religion and thus cannot be included in school community acts of a religious nature.

The difficulty of all denominations acting together in making common collective representations to the Public Petitions Committee on the petition is indicative more generally of the difficulties that denominations have in acting in a common and collective way. Each denomination insists that it has its special access to ‘truth’ and its own identity and self-government. If denominations cannot act together in a collective religious way how can schools be expected to produce genuine religious events that are unifying of all religious denominations and the non-religious population?

The impossibility of achieving religious unity in a diverse Scotland
The current Scottish Government guidance asks schools to perform unifying religious rituals involving all denominations in schools when there is scant evidence of such events being regularly performed in a unifying way in any other situation in Scottish life. Denominational separateness is the norm for religious life outside of school.

Even state schools cannot unite in one system because of separate systems of religious belief and practice and are divided between separate Roman Catholic and purportedly ‘non-denominational’, but usually Protestant Christian, schools. If the school system itself cannot be unified what hope is there of religious unity in schools in practices which aim to reflect the extremely diverse system of religious and related belief in contemporary Scotland?
 The writer strains to identify any frequent collective situation where, in contemporary Scotland and outside of school, religious ceremonies unify congregations with diverse religious beliefs and none. Perhaps the nearest equivalents are services at funerals and following disasters but even then many of the participants probably do not share the religious sentiments articulated by the presiding person(s).

Current Scottish Government guidance asks schools to do things that the wider society itself cannot do. Attempts to devise and perform collective unifying religious practices in schools in a diverse and plural society involve the imposition of a limited range of religious beliefs on a diverse group of pupils and cannot do justice to the dignity and development needs of each individual pupil and the requirements of her or his parents.
The revocation existing laws in order to remove the requirement of religious observance in Scottish schools is the only honest and defensible response to the inadequacies of the current laws and guidelines and the Edinburgh Secular Society calls on the Scottish Parliament to enact the necessary legislative changes.

Pupils will still learn about their own and other religions, humanism and atheism in other subjects but they will not, then, be required to be involved in religious ceremonies of a sectarian or contrived and biased character.

Norman Bonney, Honorary President, Edinburgh Secular Society

[i]Bonney N 2013 'Proportional Prayers: Time for Reflection in the Scottish Parliament'Parliamentary Affairs, 66, 4, 816-833, October
online at 2012; doi: 10.1093/pa/gss006  
[ii] Ibid 
A link to this work is available at www.normanbonney.blogspot.com

The evidence on the petition presented by various groups and individuals can be inspected at http://

Monday 4 November 2013

Religious sectarianism needs challenging at the highest levels

In launching a Scottish Government supported website to challenge sectarianism the community safety minister, Roseanna Cunningham, stated that 'we are committed to the creation of a modern sectarian-free Scotland that is not weighed down by the prejudices of the past'. Why then does the Scottish Government not seek to end the divisions between Roman Catholic and 'non-denominational' but Protestant state funded schools or challenge the practice of judges attending separate Roman Catholic and Protestant services at the start of each new legal term - or, indeed, the practice of MSPs attending separate Roman Catholic and Protestant religious services at the start of each new Parliament?
 
Further, why has the SNP Government proposed that an independent Scotland should retain a UK monarchy that excludes Roman Catholics from the throne in opposition to the expressed will of  the Scottish Parliament, on more than one occasion, that this prohibition should end.
 
It seems that the SNP Government, despite its avowal of anti-sectarianism, is prepared to tolerate some forms of sectarianism when it is politically convenient and involves some of the high and mighty. Hardly a good example!

Norman Bonney
Honorary President, Edinburgh Secular Society

Letter in the Edinburgh Evening News, 4 November 20113

Sunday 3 November 2013

Will the petition PE01487 to change religious observance in schools get a fair hearing on 12 November?

Scottish Parliament Public Petitions Committee 
 Membership and religious affiliation

David Stewart      Labour  Highlands & Islands  Church of Scotland
Chic Brodie          SNP       South of Scotland      Church of Scotland
Angus MacDonald  SNP    Falkirk East               Church of Scotland
Anne McTaggart  Labour  Glasgow                     Christian
David Torrance    SNP       Kirkcaldy                   Church of Scotland
Jackson Carlaw    Cons      West Scotland           None declared
John Wilson         SNP       Central Scotland       None declared

Substitute members
Alex Johstone    Cons         North East                 Church of Scotland
Jim Eadie           SNP         Lothians                     None declared
Mark Griffin      Labour     Central                        None declared



Saturday 2 November 2013

The religious affiliation of members of the Scottish Parliament

In this post I present findings from the declaration of religious affiliation made by MSPs as part of personal information recorded on the Scottish Parliament website.

MSP’s appear to be noticeably less religious and less Christian than the general Scottish population – and they are less likely to be in the Church of Scotland.

Almost two in three of them (65%) declared no religious affiliation – compared to just in one of three (37%) of the Scottish population in the 2011 census.
They are half as likely as the general population to declare that they are members of the Church of Scotland. 15% said they were, compared to 32% of the population in the 2011 census.
MSP’s are far less likely to declare themselves as Christians – only 30% of them do so – compared to 54% of the population in the 2011 census.

The low number of declared Roman Catholics

The number of declared Roman Catholics is surprisingly low – with only 3 members out of the 125 for which the information source is available reporting that they are of this denomination. The population proportion is 16%. Perhaps some feel an inhibition in declaring their denomination in public records or choose to register as ‘Christian’.

Conservatives are the most religious and Christian party

11 of 15 Conservatives declare the Christian faith (73%) compared to 54% of the Scottish population - more than double the Parliamentary percentage of 30. 7 of the 15 Conservatives were Church of Scotland members.

Labour the least religious party

Labour is the least religious large party with 27 out of 38 (71%) not declaring a religion – slightly more than the 68% figure for the SNP whose profile mirrored that of the Parliament as a whole.
Four out of the five Liberal Democrats did not declare a religion.

A lone atheist?

One MSP declared himself an atheist but social survey evidence suggests that 19% of the population share this view and some MSPs may not feel the need to reveal similar views in a religious declaration.