I heard a discussion with two of the Pew researchers last night.
To add to the report here, they said that the reason why Atheists /  
Agnostics
scored as high as they did was because of their need to defend their  views
from Christian critics on a regular basis. Why Evangelicals scored low  was
because many Evangelical churches are actually Pentecostal /  Charismatic
and minimize the place of knowledge in faith to stress emotional  
experience.
 
But both researchers agreed that beyond this, near complete absence  of
education about religion in the schools has a negative effect across the  
board.
Personally I'd add that TV misinforms , when it informs at all, a  situation
which is made worse by juvenile script writers who basically are  clueless
about most things in life that actually matter. But even talented script  
writers,
like those for Law and Order, are such politically correct a**holes  that
you'd think they are going out of their way to deliberately distort
the meaning of religion, especially in their demonization of  Christianity.
 
Billy
 
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Survey: Americans don't know much about  religion
Rachel Zoll (AP, September 28, 2010) 
Washington, USA - A new survey of Americans' knowledge of religion found 
that  atheists, agnostics, Jews and Mormons outperformed Protestants and Roman 
 Catholics in answering questions about major religions, while many 
respondents  could not correctly give the most basic tenets of their own 
faiths. 
Forty-five percent of Roman Catholics who participated in the study didn't  
know that, according to church teaching, the bread and wine used in Holy  
Communion is not just a symbol, but becomes the body and blood of Christ. 
More than half of Protestants could not identify Martin Luther as the 
person  who inspired the Protestant Reformation. And about four in 10 Jews did 
not know  that Maimonides, one of the greatest rabbis and intellectuals in 
history, was  Jewish. 
The survey released Tuesday by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life  
aimed to test a broad range of religious knowledge, including understanding of  
the Bible, core teachings of different faiths and major figures in 
religious  history. The U.S. is one of the most religious countries in the 
developed 
world,  especially compared to largely secular Western Europe, but faith 
leaders and  educators have long lamented that Americans still know relatively 
little about  religion. 
Respondents to the survey were asked 32 questions with a range of 
difficulty,  including whether they could name the Islamic holy book and the 
first 
book of  the Bible, or say what century the Mormon religion was founded. On 
average,  participants in the survey answered correctly overall for half of 
the survey  questions. 
Atheists and agnostics scored highest, with an average of 21 correct 
answers,  while Jews and Mormons followed with about 20 accurate responses. 
Protestants  overall averaged 16 correct answers, while Catholics followed with 
a 
score of  about 15. 
Not surprisingly, those who said they attended worship at least once a week 
 and considered religion important in their lives often performed better on 
the  overall survey. However, level of education was the best predictor of 
religious  knowledge. The top-performing groups on the survey still came out 
ahead even  when controlling for how much schooling they had completed. 
On questions about Christianity, Mormons scored the highest, with an 
average  of about eight correct answers out of 12, followed by white 
evangelicals, 
with  an average of just over seven correct answers. Jews, along with 
atheists and  agnostics, knew the most about other faiths, such as Islam, 
Buddhism, Hinduism  and Judaism. Less than half of Americans know that the 
Dalai 
Lama is Buddhist,  and less than four in 10 know that Vishnu and Shiva are 
part of Hinduism. 
The study also found that many Americans don't understand constitutional  
restrictions on religion in public schools. While a majority know that public 
 school teachers cannot lead classes in prayer, less than a quarter know 
that the  U.S. Supreme Court has clearly stated that teachers can read from 
the Bible as  an example of literature. 
"Many Americans think the constitutional restrictions on religion in public 
 schools are tighter than they really are," Pew researchers wrote. 
The survey of 3,412 people, conducted between May and June of this year, 
had  a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points, while the 
margins of  error for individual religious groups was higher

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