In Greece, Religious Weddings Have Decreased by More than Half in 30 Years

Crowns for an Orthodox wedding. Photo: Orthodoxia News Agency

PIRAEUS — Earlier this month, the Hellenic Statistical Authority published data according to which the share of religious weddings in the total number of marriages decreased from 89.6% in 1994 to 38.5% in 2024.

As recently as the early 1980s, 100% of weddings were religious in nature. Today, the number stands at 38.5%, with 33.2% being civil and 28.3% being "registered partnerships."

The minimum number of religious weddings registered came in 2020 at 29.5%, after which the indicator partially recovered, but did not return to previous levels. At the end of 2024, 36,649 marriages were registered in the country: 19,695 church and 16,954 civil (-9.2% compared to 2023). On top of this, there are 14,486 registered partnerships. In total, there were 51,135 new relationships registered in 2024, with religious weddings accounting for under 40% of them.

The 14,486 cohabitation agreements also account for a 3.9% decrease compared to 2023. The 2024 statistics include 182 same-sex marriage registrations for the first time. Among the cohabitation agreements, 192 male and 96 female same-sex unions are taken into account.

More and more couples are choosing civil registration or living together without a wedding over a religious ceremony. It should be noted that Greece became the first country with an Orthodox majority to allow same-sex civil unions. At the same time, the Church does not crown such unions, which emphasizes the difference between church and state practice.

Experts note that the "erosion" of the church marriage model is superimposed on the general demographic decline and complicates the formation of long-term family policy.

The Hellenic Statistical Authority emphasizes that the trend of a 30-year decline in weddings is stable and reflects a profound transformation of family practices. Against this background, the public debate around the legalization of same-sex marriage and the place of Orthodoxy in the public sphere remains one of the most acute in Greek society.

Previously, UOJ reported that German politicians have pushed for LGBT themes in preschool education.

Read also

ROCOR Priest Reflects on Trip to Capitol Hill

Archpriest Victor Boldewskul participated in the Society of St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco's Day of Action to raise awareness about the persecution of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

Hundreds of Chinese Christians Arrested in Pre-Christmas Crackdown

Hundreds of Chinese Christians face spending Christmas in detention after authorities launched a sweeping pre-holiday crackdown on churches under Beijing’s campaign to control religious life.

Ukraine Adviser: UOC Not Banned, but Offered a 'Choice' of Jurisdictions

A Ukrainian presidential adviser said the UOC is not banned but pressured to choose between joining the OCU, submitting to Constantinople, or remaining unregistered, while dismissing international concerns as propaganda.

Indiana Reports 98% Drop in Abortions Under Stricter Law

Indiana’s latest health report shows a 98% drop in reported abortions under stricter laws, though dozens still occurred under legal exceptions and concerns persist about unreported pill abortions.

Armenian Apostolic Church Pushes Back on Political Encroachment

The Armenian Apostolic Church plans to appeal to international bodies to resist government interference and defend its clergy and sacred relics.

Attempted Takeover at Armenian Etchmiadzin Cathedral Thwarted by Faithful

Supporters of Armenian PM Pashinyan attempted to storm Etchmiadzin Cathedral amid calls for the Catholicos’s resignation but were blocked by parishioners and security.