Religious Outlier

Thanks to SGTURNER59 for the link

With all of the consternation about religion in this country, it’s sometimes easy to lose sight of just how anomalous our religiosity is in the world.

A Gallup report issued on Tuesday underscored just how out of line we are. Gallup surveyed people in more than 100 countries in 2009 and found that religiosity was highly correlated to poverty. Richer countries in general are less religious.

But that doesn’t hold true for the United States.

Sixty-five percent of Americans say that religion is an important part of their daily lives. That is compared with just 30 percent of the French, 27 percent of the British and 24 percent of the Japanese.

I used Gallup’s data to chart religiosity against gross domestic product per capita, and to group countries by their size and dominant religions.

The cliché goes, “a picture is worth a thousand words.”

Assuming that this holds true for charts, here is mine.

continue to site

TAGGED: POLLS, RELIGION


RELATED CONTENT

Off The Record: A Quest For De-Baptism...

Eleanor Beardsley - NPR 57 Comments

"One can't be de-baptized," says Rev. Robert Kaslyn, dean of the School of Canon Law at the Catholic University of America.

Kaslyn says baptism changes one permanently before the church and God.

Q&A, Sean Faircloth on Secular...

Sean Faircloth - RichardDawkins.net 2 Comments


Sean Faircloth in Q&A Discusses Religion
and his Strategy for a Secular America

Indiana Senate passes bill putting...

John Timmer - ARS Technica 61 Comments

Abortion, an anti-Christian student...

Cristina Odone - The Telegraph 67 Comments


Abortion, an anti-Christian student union,
and the closing of the British mind

Why Romney's Religion Matters

Sean Faircloth - RichardDawkins.net 68 Comments


Why Romney's Religion Matters

Atheist clergymen and belief in belief

Helen De Cruz - international... 38 Comments

Atheist clergymen and belief in belief

Could Christian atheism rekindle an interest in religion?

MORE

MORE BY CHARLES M. BLOW

MORE

Comments

Comment RSS Feed

Please sign in or register to comment