Google – AFP, Katy LEE (AFP), 8 March 2013
A member of
the congregation knits during The Sunday Assembly, an atheist
service in north
London, on March 3, 2013 (AFP/File, Leon Neal)
|
LONDON —
Echoing with joyful song and with a congregation bent on leading better lives,
this London church is like any other -- except there's no mention of God.
Britain's
atheist church is barely three months old but it already has more
"worshippers" than can fit into its services, while more than 200
non-believers worldwide have contacted organisers to ask how they can set up
their own branch.
Comedians
Sanderson Jones and Pippa
Evans co-founders of atheist group, The
Sunday Assembly,
in London on March 3,
2013 (AFP/File, Leon Neal)
|
Officially
named The Sunday Assembly, the church was the brainchild of Pippa Evans and
Sanderson Jones, two comedians who suspected there might be an appetite for
atheist gatherings that borrowed a few aspects of religious worship.
Held in an
airy, ramshackle former church in north London, their quirky monthly meetings
combine music, speeches and moral pondering with large doses of humour.
"There's
so much about Church that has nothing to do with God -- it's about meeting
people, it's about thinking about improving your life," said Jones, a
gregarious 32-year-old with a bushy beard and a laugh like a thunderclap.
The Sunday
Assembly's central tenets are to "help often, live better and wonder
more" -- themes that would not be out of keeping with the teachings of any
major world religion.
At last
Sunday's service, which had a volunteering theme, songs included
"Help" by the Beatles and "Holding Out For A Hero" by
Bonnie Tyler.
The
"sermon" was given by the founder of an education charity, while in a
section called Pippa Is Trying Her Best, Evans had the congregation in stitches
as she reported on her attempts at voluntary work.
The service
ended with big cheers and -- this is Britain, after all -- shouts of "Who
would like a cup of tea?"
Like many
Western countries, Britain is becoming an increasingly faithless nation.
British comedian Sanderson Jones, co-founder of The Sunday Assembly, leads
an atheist service on March 3, 2013 in London (AFP/File, Leon Neal)
|
While a
majority still consider themselves Christians, census data revealed in December
that their numbers plummeted from 72 percent in 2001 to 59 percent in 2011.
The
proportion of Britons with no religion, meanwhile, shot up from 15 percent to
25 percent over the same period.
But the
Sunday Assembly's success -- 400 Londoners packed into last week's two
services, while 60 had to be turned away at the door -- suggests many urban
atheists crave the sense of community that comes with joining a church.
"You
can spend all day in London not talking to anyone," said Evans. "I
think people really want somewhere they can go and meet other people, which
doesn't involve drinking and which you don't have to pay to get into."
It's an
idea that is catching the attention of atheists further field.
Jones reels
off the locations of would-be atheist "vicars" who have asked to set
up new branches.
The
congregation at The Sunday Assembly,
an atheist service held at a converted
church in north London, on March 3, 2013
(AFP/File, Leon Neal)
|
"Colombia,
Bali, Mexico, Houston, Silicon Valley, Philadelphia, Ohio, Calgary, all across
Britain, The Hague, Vienna... It's so ludicrously exciting that my head
occasionally -- literally -- spins round."
The pair
cheerfully admit that they have "ripped off" many elements of their
services from the Christian Church. "You're asking people to do new
things, so it makes sense for it to be familiar," said Jones.
Religious
people have been broadly supportive of the aims of the atheist church.
"The only thing is, they've said they'll have to think about what to do if
it gets bigger," Evans laughed.
"Actually,
the biggest aggression towards us has probably been from atheists saying that
we're ruining atheism and not not believing in God properly. So that's quite
funny."
The
assembly met the approval of local vicar Dave Tomlinson, who came from his
church two miles away to see what his new rivals were up to.
"Being
here, I felt there was as much of what I call 'God' as there was in my own
church this morning," he said. "Everything we've said here would be
completely at home in my church. I hope it grows and sustains."
The second
Sunday Assembly launches in the Scottish city of Glasgow at the end of March,
while Evans will open an Australian branch in April.
She and
Jones say they don't want to exert too much control over any new assemblies --
but they will keep a watchful eye over them.
"We
only need one child sacrifice at a Sunday Assembly to spoil it for
everyone," Jones joked.
As for how
far the idea could eventually spread, the pair are in the dark.
"Who
knows?" said Evans. "We have no idea. We're just enjoying finding out
what it is."
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