When our family did the census (2001, before I was Muslim), we just put down 'C of E', despite being completely atheist.
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Church of England?
When our family did the census (2001, before I was Muslim), we just put down 'C of E', despite being completely atheist.
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No it is not a church it is a procedure aquiring and recording members of a given population which could be any religion, race , belief or even colour. Aqeel![]()
I think that we shouldnt trust those who say that Europe's predescination is atheism.
Most people say this, but I seriously doubt that religion is that strong in the US. The world's biggest porn industry is there after all, that should tell us something, lol..
I would be happy if one of our American friends could clarify this issue. Are most Americans as religious as people in the rest of the world think they are? Then what's up with all this materialism, capitalism and hedonism.. how religious is that??
There is one thing that Ataturk did do for Islam though: he stopped the Saudis from demolishing Masjid-ul-Nabi, allegedly. Can't find any primary sources for this unfortunately.
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Definetly NOT true.
I've learned in pain that Hz Muhammed's grave will be demolished. You can not touch this sacred trust. If I hear even one of its stone is damaged I will send away my army.
Nope. No primary sources doesn't mean no secondary ones. Apparently it was on some kind of TV program recently, but not one in our country.
According to this naff forum, he said this:
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In terms of raw numbers, on any given Sunday you will 141,000,000 American in church
I would never have imagined that so many people attended church in the US, what a contrast with many nations in Europe....
How Many Americans Really Attend Church Each Week?
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How many Americans go to church regularly?
If you listen to the answers provided by major opinion research firms, the answer usually hovers around 40%. (National Opinion Research Center: 38%; Institute for Social Research’s World Values: 44%; Barna: 41%; National Election Studies: 40%; Gallup: 41%.)
But in recent years this consensus has been challenged. It seems that it’s more accurate to say that 40% of Americans claim to attend church regularly.
In 1998, sociologist Stanley Presser at the University of Michigan—whose “research focuses on questionnaire design and testing, the accuracy of survey responses, and ethical issues stemming from the use of human subjects”—co-authored a study entitled: “Data Collection Mode and Social Desirability Bias in Self-Reported Religious Attendance,” American Sociological Review, v. 63 (1998): 137-145 (with L. Stinson). Comparing diaries with actual attendance, they made the estimate that the actual percentage of Americans attending church from the mid-1960’s to the 90’s was about 26%.
One of the problem comes in how the question is asked in a poll. Different questions yield different results. For example, in a survey you might ask, “What did you do last weekend?” listing for the person a number of possible activities, including church-going. This will yield a very different response than if you asked, “Did you attend church last Sunday?”
One factor is that people often answer according to what they think someone like them wants or ought to do. So people tend to overreport on the number of sexual partners they’ve had and how much money they give to charity, and tend to underreport on illegal drug use and the like. Hence, church attendance is often inflated.
In 1998 C. Kirk Hadaway and P.L. Marler published an article in the Christian Century entitled, Did You Really Go To Church This Week? Behind the Poll Data where they examine many of these factors. The authors focused on individual counties in the US and Canada, surveying actual church/synagogue attendance and comparing it with random surveys they were conducting. They found that actual church attendance was about half the rate indicated by national public opinion polls. Their estimate for US actual church attendance is around 20%.
Dave Olson, director of church planting for the Evangelical Covenant Church, surveying only Christian churches (i.e., evangelical, mainline, and Catholic) has come up with a similar number. The percentage of Americans regularly attending church is 18.7%.
Olson has collected his findings in an eye-opening slide-show entitled Twelve Surprising Facts about the US Church. The 12 points cannot be copied and pasted, so I’ve reprinted them below, along with links to his charts and maps.
1. The percentage of people that attend a Christian church each weekend is far below what pollsters report. (US percentage of population in worship on any given weekend in 2000)
2. The percentage of people attending a Christian church each weekend decreased significantly from 1990-2000. (US worship attendance in 1990 and 2000 by percentage of population)
3. Christian church attendance is between 1 ½ and 2 times higher in the South and the Midwest than it is in the West and the Northeast. (Percentage of population attending a Christian church on any given weekend in 2000)
4. Only one state [Hawaii] saw an increase in the percentage attending church from 1990-2000. [California, Connecticut, Georgia, and Washington were close to keeping up with population growth.] (Increase or decline in percentage of population attending a Christian church on any given weekend 1990–2000)
5. The percentage that attends church on any given weekend is declining in over two thirds of the counties in the United States. [Among the states with the highest percentages of declining counties were Minnesota, Wisconsin, and South Carolina.] (US counties: Increase or decline in percentage of population attending a Christian church on any given weekend 1990–2000)
6. Evangelicals, mainliners, and Catholics are strongest in very different regions of the country. (maps for Evangelicals, mainliners, and Catholics)
7. Churches with 50–299 people in attendance are shrinking, while the smallest churches and larger churches are growing. (Decadal growth rate of churches by size category)
8. Established churches, from 40–180 years old, on average decline in attendance. (Yearly attendance growth of existing churches by decade started)
9. The increase in the number of churches is about one eighth of what is needed to keep up with population growth. (Net increase in number of churches in the US between 1990 and 2000)
10. The church-planting rate has been declining throughout the history of our country. (Churches started per 1 million residents)
11. Existing churches are plateauing and new church growth provides less than half of the growth necessary to keep up with population growth. (Attendance growth percentage of Protestant churches 1990–2000)
12. If the present trends continue, the percentage of the population that attends church in 2050 will be almost half of what it is today. (Projected percentage of population attending church on any given weekend)
I really do attend church (a very progressive Presbyterian congregation) every Sunday...or nearly every Sunday and I'd agree with these findings based on my limited view of the situation and our churches' empty pews.
The press blew this one way out of proportion with the whole "moral values" kerfluffle after the election. Fer instance in my workgroup of 20 people in the Norther Virginia area, I am the only regular churchgoer.
The evangelicals may have a little power right now, but they ain't a majority, no matter how loudly James Dobson brays. Lets pray that the midterms in 2006 reflect this.
Church attendance studies by Presser and Stinson:
It gets worse.
Sociologist Stanley Presser of the University of Maryland and research assistant Linda Stinson of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics completed a study of notes in personal diaries. These time-use diaries were maintained for social scientific research projects in the mid-1960s, 1970s and 1990s. Those participating in the projects were asked to keep track of their activities. The 1992-1994 diaries, for example, were used by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to determine exposure of the participants to harmful substances in the environment.
Presser and Stinson found that many Americans were not at church when they claimed to be. Their best estimates are that the percentage of adults who actually attended religious services during the previous weekend dropped from 42% in 1965 to 26% in 1994.
Presser said:
"We asked people, tell us everything you did in the last 24 hours so we can know what chemicals you might have been exposed to. If somebody went to church, they ought to tell us, but if they didn't go, they shouldn't manufacture it. We didn't do what most polls of religious belief do, and ask, 'Did you go to church in the last seven days?,' which some might interpret as being asked whether they were good people and good Christians." 13
The Washington Post reported that the analysis
"reveals a discrepancy between the diaries and the polls, and suggests that many Americans have been misreporting how they spend their Sunday mornings, inflating estimates of church attendance by perhaps as much as a third." 14
American Atheists commented:
"The researchers also found that the percentage of Americans who lie about their attendance is increasing. Presser and Stinson described the 16-point drop off in church attendance 'really very striking'..." 14
If this study by Presser and Stinson is accurate, it would indicate a substantial drop in actual church attendance from the mid 1960s to the mid 1990s. Since the reported attendance has remained stuck at the magical 40% figure for decades, one might conclude that the rate of exaggeration of church attendance is increasing. Also, it would appear that polls are to be mistrusted. Nobody really knows what the percentage attendance is. To obtain accurate data, pollsters will have to abandon the comfortable task of polling opinion by phone and camp out in church, synagogue, and mosque parking lots so that they can count noses.
Hadaway, Marler, and Chaves repeated their Ohio study in Oxford Country in southern Ontario, Canada. Most polls show that 20% of the adult population say that they go to church weekly. Again, half were lying, as only about 10% actually attend church weekly.
The percentage of Americans regularly attending church is 18.7%.
The percentage of Christians regularly attending church is 18.7%.
There is also a 2005 article which only Scott Thumma and Randy Travis and David Olson seem to have noticed: it strengthens the argument of the 1993 article that church attendance may be below 22% of the population.
Peace be upon those who follow the guidance,
this statement:
CANNOT BE CORRECT!
the current popluation of the US is estimated at:
303,824,640 (July 2008 est.)
according to:
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/print/us.html
so the unfounded claim is that ON ANY SUNDAY 46.41% of the US is in church!
With regard to US church attedance vs. European church attendance, though the rate is going down in the USA, I understand it is still higher than the abismally low rates that are present in most European countries. Christianity is actually on the increase in parts of Latin America and Asia and exploding in Africa.your imagination WAS correct!
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