U.S. Religious Groups & Religious Maps |
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What is the difference between a cult and a religion? 100
years!![]()
Only in 1954 was the phrase "under God" added to the Pledge of Allegiance and in 1955, "In God We Trust" was added to U.S. paper money. According to Gallup polls, only 10% of the
USA population (30 million, which is larger than the total number of Roman Catholics and Baptists
combined) say they hold a secular, scientific evolutionist view of the
world, while 44% believe in strict biblical creationism.
Three times as many people believe in the Virgin
birth than in evolution. In the United States a Gallup poll conducted last
year (2008) found that only 14% of people agreed with the proposition that
“humans developed over millions of years”, up from 9% in 1982. Acceptance of
evolution varies around the world, with the most ardent believers being in
Iceland, Denmark, and Sweden (see chart). Check-out some amazing church signs from across the country. What do they say about the USA? Data for the maps below come from Churches and Church Membership in the United States, 1990. Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, University of Connecticut. Angela Laufenberg, a geography major at UWEC, used these electronic data to make the maps, which were presented at the annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers in Chicago, IL. Here are the general church patterns:
The U.S.
racial and ethnic diversity by
county relates to the distribution of religious denominations. |
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Evolution of Religious
Groups:
(Source: D. B. Barrett, World Christian
Encyclopedia. 1982)
Based on a 2006 opinion poll, the people in the U.S. hold different views of
God or its absence: Optional: |
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Created by Ingolf Vogeler on 1 February 1996; last revised on 25 October 2010.