CopticChristian
Code:
Obviously, I am not speaking of you, as you appear to be a 'true believing' Catholics. I am speaking of polls carried in nearly every issue in the *US Catholic*, one of the Catholic periodicals I receive. .
Many Catholics don't want to confront the reality that the Church has been badly battered in the US. There are many reasons. Two of them are the powerful influence of secularism and the sex scandals, especially the efforts of the hierarchy to hide them from public view and even, for a long time, its refusal to admit to them or confront them. Perhaps the ban on artificial contraception did as much to lessen the influence of the Church as any one thing. If Catholics feel justified in defying Church policy on one issue, it can lose its authority on other issues, also.
We should remember, too, that we live in a non-Catholic society, with the Catholic population just 25% of Americans and half or more of those attend Mass rarely if ever. But even in such Catholic countries as Spain, Italy and Ireland the Church has lost enormous influence. I am especially well acquainted with the situation in Quebec, once a bulwark of traditional Catholicism. There has been a tremendous backlash there against religion generally, Catholic and Protestant alike.
I sometimes think that millions of people have come to regard religion as a divisive and bigoted tribal force in society. While they may find comfort in faith, the Church as an institution is suspect. Narrow religion, in the opinion of many, has done considerable damage over the years, and there still is a certain parochialism that doesn't appeal to the younger generations.
God bless everybody. Let religion become a bridge that unites and not a barrier that divides.
But those are just some thoughts based on my personal experiences and an analysis. I don't pretend to be an expert in the field.
Well, it would appear that based on your information we should do what?
I am reminded of Augustine of Hippo. Had we had polls in his bishopric of Hippo Arianism would be the majority rule. Hippo is gone. Augustine survives as does the OHCAC. None of this information means much to me or anyone else that has seen the world become more and more Catholic. You seem to harbor on the minors and I see the majors. Examine every country that was in theory once Protestant and now predominantly Catholic. See what has happened to Geneva, Europe, and see that the only country in the world where the reformed belief is a country religion is Scotland. Scotland has one of the highest rates of suicide, addiction and divorce. This does not sound like Hippo.
If you say that the USA is 25%, I say check
www.adherents.com
Catholic, Baptist Methodist/Wesleyan Lutheran, PresbyterianPentecostal/Charismatic Episcopalian/Anglican
Catholics lead the pack in the USA when you break down the denominations for there is no one Protestant anything.
When you consider that in the world combining Roman Catholic, Orthodox and Muslim that is 1/2 the population of the world.
In consideration that the USA was started by 13 colonies and those colonies were primarily Protestant run and you see today what the numbers show, I see this.
13 colonies
Delaware Methodist 20%, Baptist 19%, Catholic 9% Presbyterian 3.0%
Pennsylvania Catholic 53.43.0%, Orthodox 1.06%, Protestant 30%, United Methodist 9.27%, Evangelical Lutheran 8.6%, Presbyterian 4.56%
New Jersey Presbyterian Catholic 37%, Baptist 8%, Methodist 6%, 3.2%, Presbyterian 4.0%
Georgia Catholic 12 %, 70% Protestant, Baptist 24%, Methodist 12%, Presbyterian 3.0%
Connecticut Catholic 32%, Protestant 40%, Baptist 10%, Episcopal 6%, Methodist 4%, Lutheran 4%, Presbyterian 1.0%
Massachusetts Bay Catholic 68%, Protestant 24%, Baptist 4%, Congregational Church of Christ 3%, Episcopal 3%, Presbyterian 0.8%
Maryland Catholic 32%, Protestant 56%, Baptist 18%, Methodist 11 %, Lutheran 6%, Presbyterian 2.0%
South Carolina Presbyterian Catholic 7%, Protestant 84%, Southern Baptist 45%, Methodist 15%, Presbyterian 5.0%
New Hampshire Presbyterian 2.0%
Virginia Presbyterian 3.0%
New York Catholics 40% Protestant 30 %The largest Protestant denominations are the United Methodist Church with 403,362; the American Baptist Churches USA with 203,297; and the Episcopal Church with 201,797 adherents.[36] Presbyterian 2.0%
North Carolina Presbyterian 3.0%
Rhode Island Presbyterian 1.0%
Now this has only been in 200 years. Pretty good progress that beats the polls I say. Another 300 years and I anticipate better numbers based on the first 200 years.
When you consider that for the most part when anything says Protestants predominate it is primarily the Baptists they are talking about and less likely Reformed anything.
I sit like Augustine. It matters not to me what your numbers show. The entire community can become whatever it likes. I remain like Augustine.