Agnostic.com

2 2

Meanwhile, the religious affiliation that has flourished the most during this period is no religion at all. The “no association” group, which comprised 16% of the population in 2007, today comprises 23% of the population — the second largest belief system in the United States. We're growing. [247wallst.com]

IAJO163 8 Mar 10
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

2 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

1

The Barna Group's pollstars, though having an evangelical orientation, are nevertheless honest enough recognize difficulties. Like in [barna.com] - Bible-minded cities - and [barna.com] - post-Christian cities. I once took those numbers and turned them into colored dots on a map of the contiguous United States. Some interesting patterns emerged. The Northeast and the West Coast are the most post-Xian and least Bible-minded, while the southern Appalachians to north Louisiana is the least post-Xian and most Bible-minded. Their post-Xian criteria:

  • Do not believe in God
  • Identify as atheist or agnostic
  • Disagree that faith is important in their lives
  • Have not prayed to God (in the last week)
  • Have never made a commitment to Jesus
  • Disagree the Bible is accurate
  • Have not donated a church (in the last year)
  • Have not attended a Christian church (in the last 6 months)
  • Agree that Jesus committed sins
  • Do not feel a responsibility “share their faith”
  • Have not read the Bible (in the last week)
  • Have not volunteered at church (in the last week)
  • Have not attended Sunday school (in the last week)
  • Have not attended religious small group (in the last week)
  • Bible engagement scale: low (have not read the Bible in the past week and disagree strongly or somewhat that the Bible is accurate)
  • Not Born Again

That would be half my neighborhood, LOL!!!

1

I have seen a lot of these articles lately that single out “evangelicalism” and seem to link that with conservatism and with low-income regions. Some articles go so far as to make correlations with health, longevity, education level, drug addiction, etc.

I don’t understand all this interest in evangelicals. You’d think that Catholics, Mormons, and mainline Protestants would be of equal interest. There is nothing sinister or inherently evil about evangelicals—it’s sort of an ill-defined term. Hillary Clinton, for example, is an evangelical. Could it be because of a few high-profile televangelists?

It’s easy to see why Protestantism is more prominent in the South, and why in general Southern states have a somewhat lower median income. During the last half of the nineteenth century through the early part of the twentieth, Catholic and Lutheran immigrants from Europe flocked into the industrializing manufacturing regions— hence those regions are today predominantly Catholic, and they have more wealth. The South, settled earlier by British Protestants, remained chiefly agricultural. For various reasons agricultural regions tend to be conservative.

I don’t know why all these correlations even need to be made. Correlation is not causation.

I agree though that rising percentages of the unaffiliated is a good trend. It means that more people are thinking for themselves and asserting themselves.

Because evangelicals are the most politically and culturally prominent. Related this is how they often act as if their religion is the US's official state religion.

@lpetrich Only a minor fraction of them are much interested in politics, and almost none advocate a state religion. I think the left wing media is looking for a scapegoat to blame for the election of Trump, and they are spreading this misinformation far and wide.

You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:307609
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.