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The Unexpected Rebirth of Catholic Europe
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17 August 2027

The stunning story of how many Europeans are returning to, and renewing, continental Catholicism.
For decades, the prevailing narrative around European Catholicism was one of decline. Sociologists counted empty pews, historians dwelled on the end of Christendom, and secular Europe appeared to have settled, with little regret, into a post-Christian age. By every measurable indicator, the Catholic Church appeared to be dying.
The reality on the ground, however, tells a very different story. In The Unexpected Rebirth of Catholic Europe, journalist Solène Tadié travels across the continent to document a phenomenon few had anticipated: a quiet yet undeniable Catholic revival. Drawing on original reporting, official data, and interviews with religious leaders, thinkers, converts, missionaries, and ordinary believers from Norway to Hungary, Tadié uncovers a movement running against the dominant current of secularization.
Tadié tells the story of small communities forming around a shared pursuit of beauty and radical commitment. She finds a rising generation drawn to demanding discipline rather than comfort. She discovers a surprising number of converts from Islam, often after powerful mystical experiences. And she describes monasteries filling up in countries where parish churches stand half-empty.
This is a genuine renewal, Tadié concludes, but also a fragile one: chosen rather than inherited, dynamic yet still searching for the institutional support it will need to endure. The Catholic Church, its leaders, and its communities are being called to respond to a moment few expected — and whose significance is only now coming into view.