One could, but it doesn't match with my experience. I've found WAY more random Americans not know things *I*, a heathen non-believer, thought was common knowledge. In Jamaica, they'll happily chant text at you, and in the UK -- well, they can teach the Bible in the UK without fear of repercussion. Religious Studies wasn't a rare class among the people I knew.
That's what having an "official religion" will do for you. :) But then, Americans can be really dense with "basic knowledge" about anything. Like that survey a few years ago where a percentage of Americans couldn't find Kansas on a map.
dw, where did you get your church attendance statistics? They don't jive with what I've seen, either as statistics or my own personal experience, but both the stats I've seen before and my own personal experience may be skewed and/or incorrect.
These guys have dissected the numbers:
[link]
I say 33% because that's what I heard years ago. If you average the high and low on the stat, 33% seems to be right.
My impression is that the fact that we're not an officially Christian nation scares the shit out of a large portion of the voting population.
I read a lot of "WE NEED MORE GOD IN THIS COUNTRY, RELIGION IS IN IMMANENT DANGER OF BEING FORCED OUT OF PUBLIC DISCOURSE" from even my left-leaning religious relatives.
This is a mentality that's mind-boggling and frightening to me. I don't understand how anyone could conclude that Christianity is in any kind of danger whatsover in this country, let alone use that as an excuse to push us ever closer to a de facto theocracy.
Not to mention the fact that Christianity has weathered far more dangerous threats in the last 2000 years than just a portion of the American electorate wishing people would calm down about the God thing already.
Technically, it was Don Evans who got trumped. He was in the same Bible study group as W.
This is a mentality that's mind-boggling and frightening to me. I don't understand how anyone could conclude that Christianity is in any kind of danger whatsover in this country
I think it's a feeling that popular culture is out of control combined with publicized court cases about taking down religious symbols in public places that causes that.
I don't understand how anyone could conclude that Christianity is in any kind of danger whatsover in this country
Many television characters are okay with the idea of casual sex and very few ever attend church (onscreen). Therefore, everyone in New York/California is going to hell. And we're taking the rest of the country with us.
And then got trumped on biblical knowledge by a jewish comedian. I'd say that's pretending quite a bit.
That wasn't him. That was Don Evans.
I think it's a feeling that popular culture is out of control combined with publicized court cases about taking down religious symbols in public places that causes that.
I suspect as much as well. However, I vehemently disagree with the notion that popular culture is either out of control or inescapable. Hell, I can go days without being exposed to popular culture just by leaving the TV off.
And, while I understand that some people might see forced removal of religious symbols as another sign of the End Times, I don't understand why those same people can't see that those same displays left in place are examples of their religious beliefs getting all up in my business. I don't have to watch TV, but on occasion I do have to go to the courthouse.
I don't have to watch TV, but on occasion I do have to go to the courthouse.
You wouldn't if you just accepted Jesus, Sean.
Hell, I can go days without being exposed to popular culture just by leaving the TV off.
I'm not familiar with this "TV off" notion you speak of.
But you know, Rachel on "Friends" only went to the *toilet* twice in ten seasons too.
There are a lot of things about life TV doesn't show.