Originally Posted by
ebaines
jenjeru: I must question the basis of this entire thread. Your hypothesis is that people raised in the Roman Catholic church are more inlcined to leave the church of their upbringing than are people raised in other Christian denominations - meaning Protestants - but you base this solely on personal observation So I would ask you two questions:
1. Is you sample biased by where you happen to live? I would guess that if you live in a neighborhood with a large RC population you'll get different set of results that if you live in an area with few RC's.
2. How do you count Protestants who grew up in one denominaton but are now members of another? In your analysis do they count as having "left"? If not, then your sampling method is invalid. Take me for example: my parents both grew up as Methodists, but moved to a town town that had only one protestant church - it was New England Congregational, so if you weren't Roman Catholic or Jewish that's where you went, and that's the church I was raised in. Then I moved away and married a girl who is Episcopalean, and that's the church we have attended for 25 years and our kids grew up in. Meanwhile my parents moved to Florida and joined the local Presbyterian Church. So I ask - does this mean my family has "left" the church 4 times? That's certainly not how we feel. So how do you count me in your poll?