Religious weddings are a popular choice for Lincolnshire couples

Fewer couples are choosing to tie the knot in a church, synagogue or other religious venue in Lincolnshire, according to the latest figures.
Religious weddings are more popular in Lincolnshire than the rest of the country.Religious weddings are more popular in Lincolnshire than the rest of the country.
Religious weddings are more popular in Lincolnshire than the rest of the country.

In Lincolnshire, there were 977 religious weddings in 2016, compared with 1,118 five years earlier, according to the latest Office for National Statistics data, published by the Press Association.

That’s a drop of 13% since 2011.

Despite the downward trend, religious weddings are more popular in Lincolnshire than the rest of the country.

In England, a quarter of marriages were held in religious venues, while in Lincolnshire the proportion was 30%.

These figures only include opposite-sex marriages.

In 2016, 3,315 couples got married in Lincolnshire a similar number to 2011.

Of the weddings held in Lincolnshire, only 2.2% were between same-sex couples – 30 between men and 42 between women.

That’s a 9% increase compared with 2015, the first year same-sex marriages were recorded.

The Canon Sandra Millar, who heads the Church of England’s work on weddings, says many couples might think they have to be regular parishioners to get married in a church.

She said: “We want to reassure couples that they don’t have to be churchgoers to have a church wedding.

“They don’t need to be christened, and we welcome couples who already have children.

“We’re working hard to encourage couples to ‘just ask’ at a church about getting married and all the creative possibilities that there are for their service.”

Kanak Ghosh, from the ONS, added: “Marriage rates remain at historical lows despite a small increase in the number of people who got married in 2016.

“Most couples are preferring to do so with a civil ceremony and for the first time ever, less than a quarter of everyone who married had a religious ceremony.

“Meanwhile, the age at which people are marrying continues to hit new highs as more and more over 50s get married.”

• The figures published in this article do not include same-sex civil partnerships which were converted into a marriages.