The proportion of Catholics in Poland who attended Sunday mass stood at 29.5% in 2022, according to new figures released by the church’s statistics institute.

That marked a rise from the 28.3% recorded amid the pandemic in 2021 but remains well below the 36.9% figure from 2019. It continues a long-term decline in church attendance among Polish Catholics, whose number as a proportion of the population is itself falling.

Since 1980, the Catholic church in Poland has conducted an annual study of how many people attend mass and take communion. On one Sunday each year, every parish in the country records figures and submits them to the Institute for Catholic Church Statistics (ISKK).

The ISKK then calculates nationally what proportion of Catholics required to attend mass – meaning people aged over seven and excluding the bedridden and elderly with limited mobility – actually did so on that day.

The latest figures show that in 2022, 13.9% of Catholics took communion, reports the Nasz Dziennik newspaper. That was also a rise from 2021 (when the figure stood at 12.9%) but was well below the pre-pandemic figure of 16.7% in 2019.

The ISKK did not collect data in 2020 at the height of pandemic-induced restrictions on church attendance.

As well the proportion of Catholics attending mass being in long-term decline, the proportion of Poles who identify as Catholic has also been falling, though they remain a majority of the population.

Data released this year from the latest national census showed that 71% of people in Poland identified as Roman Catholics in 2021, down from 88% a decade earlier.

Those figures have come as the church in Poland has faced criticism over its response to cases of child sex abuse by priests and for its perceived interference in politics, including support for an unpopular near-total ban on abortion introduced in 2021.

Last year, the Primate of Poland, Archbishop Wojciech Polak, warned that there had been a “devastating” decline in religious practice among young Poles.

When the 2021 church attendance figures were released, the ISKK’s deputy director, Marcin Jewdokimow, said that it was clear they had been “influenced by the pandemic situation” and they expected a “rebound” in 2022.

But he also admitted that the figures reflect “long-term socio-cultural changes” that have seen a “reconfiguration of Catholicism and the place of religion in public space”.


Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support.

Main image credit: Mirek Krajewski / FNS (under CC BY 2.0)

Pin It on Pinterest

Support us!