ROME (Realist English). The Roman Catholic Church, long associated with aging congregations and declining attendance in the West, is witnessing an unexpected revival led by Generation Z. According to the Conference of Bishops of France, baptisms among 18- to 25-year-olds have more than quadrupled in the past four years, while adult baptisms overall have risen by more than 160% over the past decade.
This Easter alone, France registered 17,800 adult baptisms, a 45% increase compared with 2024. Analysts note that the growth is particularly striking in a country once called the “eldest daughter of the Church,” where weekly Mass attendance has declined to between 2% and 5% of the population.
One factor behind the renewal is the emergence of Catholic social media influencers. Sister Albertine Debacker, a 29-year-old nun known online as @soeur.albertine, has built an audience of more than 500,000 followers across Instagram and TikTok. Her short videos on prayer, forgiveness and Catholic teaching attract millions of views and have made her a leading figure in what commentators are calling a “Quiet Revival.”
Similar trends are reported elsewhere in Europe. Baptisms have tripled in Belgium in the past decade, while Ireland’s largest diocese, Dublin, saw nearly twice as many adult baptisms this Easter as in 2024. In London, the Archdiocese of Westminster recorded its highest number since 2018. In the United States, surveys by Harvard University and the Pew Research Center indicate that the decline in religious affiliation has slowed, with more young Americans identifying as Catholic.
Church leaders attribute the surge to a search for meaning after the COVID-19 pandemic and to a desire for order amid social and cultural fragmentation. “There is a real desire to know more about God,” said Abbot Hugh Allan of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales.
Pope Leo, the first US-born head of the Catholic Church, has endorsed the rise of “digital missionaries.” In July he met with 1,000 Catholic influencers at the Vatican, telling them that “Jesus asks us to weave other nets: networks of relationships, of love.” The Vatican considers the online presence of clergy and lay figures an important tool to engage younger audiences and expand outreach.
The revival presents both opportunities and challenges for the Church. While digital platforms allow Catholic voices to reach wider audiences, they also operate beyond traditional structures of control. For many young believers, however, this independence is precisely what makes the new wave of online evangelization compelling.