• This topic has 261 replies, 54 voices, and was last updated 9 years ago by grum.
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  • Cameron states "Britain is still a Christian country"
  • miketually
    Free Member

    Indeed – but they’re quite neatly collectively summarised as ‘Christian’

    Or, human. They’re human morals and behaviours which most religions hold in common.

    Claiming them as Christian is divisive.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    If only there was some form of survey, in which they went out and asked not just a representative sample, but actually asked everyone by giving them a form to fill in, perhaps once every ten years?

    Then we could have a chance to see what religion people actually self identified as!

    http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/census/2011-census/key-statistics-for-local-authorities-in-england-and-wales/rpt-religion.html

    In the 2011 Census, Christianity was the largest religion, with 33.2 million people (59.3 per cent of the population). The second largest religious group were Muslims with 2.7 million people (4.8 per cent of the population).

    14.1 million people, around a quarter of the population in England and Wales, reported they have no religion in 2011.

    7.2 per cent of people did not answer the question.

    So, a clear majority of the population identified themselves as being Christian, one has to wonder what more it would take to prove that we’re still a christian country?

    Obviously, we’ll get the usuals on here telling them that these stupid people were wrong about their own belief in god and religion and that despite them actually saying they were christian, it was all conditioning and in reality they’re not…

    miketually
    Free Member

    Obviously, we’ll get the usuals on here telling them that these stupid people were wrong about their own belief in god and religion and that despite them actually saying they were christian, it was all conditioning and in reality they’re not…

    Just to prove you right:

    Most people ticking the Christian box on the census do so because they were christened, not because they’ve accepted Jesus Christ as their saviour.

    Not because they’re stupid, but because the question is badly worded.

    MSP
    Full Member

    And the 390,000 people who reported themselves as Jedi, really are Jedi.

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Or, human. They’re human morals and behaviours which most religions hold in common.

    Claiming them as Christian is divisive.

    Not really – not all of them. If you marry within a christian tradition for instance- either church wedding or a secular registry office one, thats quite a different contract to, for instance, a Mormon one. A british secular marriage is a different legal contract to a jewish one or an islamic one. Even as an unmarried atheist my relationship still has more in common with christian marriage than some other traditions. Even areas where morals choices don’t seem to apply – like finance and lending differ from one religious tradition to another.

    And if ultimately religions had all the same morals and behaviours in common then there’d be a lot less fuss and bother than we seem to experience 🙂

    But I don’t think the Christian tradition ‘claims’ any traditions as its own to the exclusions of all others. Mormons aren’t stuck with polygamy because the pope called bagsey on monogamy. I’m not barred from being charitable because I haven’t been baptised.

    Most people ticking the Christian box on the census do so because they were christened, not because they’ve accepted Jesus Christ as their saviour.

    You’re asking christians to be very black and white in their thinking.

    miketually
    Free Member

    For the record, all four of us in this house are Christian on the 2011 data. Only one actually is.

    Sandwich
    Full Member

    And then, one Thursday, nearly two thousand years after one man had been nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people for a change, a girl sitting on her own in a small cafe in Rickmansworth suddenly realized what it was that had been going wrong all this time, and she finally knew how the world could be made a good and happy place. This time it was right, it would work, and no one would have to get nailed to anything.

    DNA had it right many years ago.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Not because they’re stupid, but because the question is badly worded.

    Q.20 What is your religion?

    Yes, it really could be much clearer, couldn’t it, very ambiguous?

    And what was the first option?

    [] No Religion

    So, the first box you could tick, was no religion, but most people chose to carry on to the next box, and tick Christian – its clearly a terribly designed question!

    miketually
    Free Member

    Not really – not all of them. If you marry within a christian tradition for instance- either church wedding or a secular registry office one, thats quite a different contract to, for instance, a Mormon one. A british secular marriage is a different legal contract to a jewish one or an islamic one. Even as an unmarried atheist my relationship still has more in common with christian marriage than some other traditions. Even areas where morals choices don’t seem to apply – like finance and lending differ from one religious tradition to another.

    And if ultimately religions had all the same morals and behaviours in common then there’d be a lot less fuss and bother than we seem to experience

    But I don’t think the Christian tradition ‘claims’ any traditions as its own to the exclusions of all others. Mormons aren’t stuck with polygamy because the pope called bagsey on monogamy. I’m not barred from being charitable because I haven’t been baptised.

    Firstly, Mormons are Christians 🙂

    I don’t dispute that we’re not a culturally-Christian country, but many of our ‘Christian’ traditions would be unrecognisable to Christ.

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    Well if the question were worded “do you have a religion?” I’d guess that the answers would be different. The one in the census starts with the assumption that the person answering does have a religion.

    miketually
    Free Member

    Not because they’re stupid, but because the question is badly worded.

    Q.20 What is your religion?

    Yes, it really could be much clearer, couldn’t it, very ambiguous?

    And what was the first option?

    [] No Religion

    So, the first box you could tick, was no religion, but most people chose to carry on to the next box, and tick Christian – its clearly a terribly designed question![/quote]

    Thought process:

    What’s my religion? Mmm, dunno really. I was Christened, so I must be a Christian. *tick*

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Thought process: What’s my religion? Mmm, dunno really. I was Christened, so I must be a Christian. *tick*

    Yet, just a few minutes ago you said:

    Not because they’re stupid

    So which is it?

    Because despite the difficulty of the question, at least full quarter of the population managed to work out the nuance and tick the ‘no religion’ box. it can only have been the stupid ones who didn’t manage to work it out I suppose…

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Firstly, Mormons are Christians

    but they’re not C of E

    I was Christened, so I must be a Christian.

    being christened /baptised is a minimum entry requirement for organised formal participation in that religion – its up to you if you think that marks you are indelibly christian for the rest of you life. I’d be surprised if thats how most people approached the question, it seems to be an act of pedantry. I think most people would identify themselves as christian if thats what they think they are.

    Like I said I’m not christened, but I wasn’t even really aware of it until relatively recently – when it came to light when someone libelled my dad and my non-christened status was required to refute an allegation.

    miketually
    Free Member

    Because despite the difficulty of the question, at least full quarter of the population managed to work out the nuance and tick the ‘no religion’ box. it can only have been the stupid ones who didn’t manage to work it out I suppose…

    How much thought and effort do you think people put into filling in the census form?

    Why is there such a disconnect between the census data, church attendance and the results of polls?

    miketually
    Free Member

    Mormons are Christians

    but they’re not C of E[/quote]

    You didn’t specify that. Neither are many (most?) Christians.

    jivehoneyjive
    Free Member

    Where’s the bit about Jesus saying that invading other countries for profit was part of his belief system?

    How about forming churches using his brand to make money and instil fear and control in their subjects?

    And I certainly don’t remember Jesus saying that sexual abuse of youngsters by people in positions of power, so that other people in power could then blackmail and manipulate them was the core of a healthy society…

    That said, there is certainly a lot of good, caring and considerate folk in day to day life, so many of the positive virtues of the biblical accounts of a man who may or may not have existed are still doing good things.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Why is there such a disconnect between the census data, church attendance and the results of polls?

    So, you can only be Christian if you go to church?

    Can you only be Muslim if you never drink alcohol, or Jewish if you never eat ham? Or is it accepted that you can still be ‘of the faith’ without strictly observing every tenet of the rules in your day to day life

    As for the polls, well, isn’t the census just a very intensive, exhaustively conducted poll, asking everyone rather than just a representative sample of about a thousand. Why do you think asking 1000 people ‘what is your religion?’ is going to be magically more accurate than asking everyone the same question?

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Why is there such a disconnect between the census data, church attendance and the results of polls?

    There are various reasons why those figures would vary. Someone might consider themselves a church going christian if they go to church on christmas eve and easter sunday. Someone might consider themselves christian of they grew up in a church going family, someone might just consider themselves christian and see no need to join a club to express that. The question in the census doesn’t ask if you are a little bit christian ore really really christian. My gf’s dad goes to church pretty much every day – he counts as 7 christians on the church attendance figures (or as 365 midnight mass goers), but only as one on the census.

    miketually
    Free Member

    So, you can only be Christian if you go to church?

    Not at all, and I didn’t say otherwise.

    Can you only be Muslim if you never drink alcohol, or Jewish if you never eat ham? Or is it accepted that you can still be ‘of the faith’ without strictly observing every tenet of the rules in your day to day life

    Again, where did I say otherwise?

    As for the polls, well, isn’t the census just a very intensive, exhaustively conducted poll, asking everyone rather than just a representative sample of about a thousand. Why do you think asking 1000 people ‘what is your religion’ is going to be magically more accurate than asking everyone the same question?

    The census asks just one question on religion, so provides very little insight into what people actually believe. As you show yourself, it is very difficult to define what makes someone a member of a particular religion.

    Ed Milliband is Jewish, and an atheist.
    Dara Ó Briain described him self as an atheist then added “but still a Catholic”.
    I’m baptised Anglican and am on the electoral roll of the local Anglican church, but I’m an atheist and not a Christian.
    According to this Theos report, 11% of atheists described themselves as Christians.

    Many people use a religious label as a basis of their cultural identity, rather than as a religious identity. Most practising members of these religions would not recognise these people as members of that faith. When pushed, most of these people wouldn’t accept the central tenets of the faith.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    When pushed, most of these people wouldn’t accept the central tenets of the faith.

    Who’s to decide which is central?

    Hell, the CofE as we know it was founded on the very basis of rejecting one of the central tenets of the faith.

    Thats why self identification is the only measure that works, because ultimately its a deeply personal question between you and your own gods, not anyone else.

    miketually
    Free Member

    Who’s to decide which is central?

    Hell, the CofE as we know it was founded on the very basis of rejecting one of the central tenets of the faith.

    Thats why self identification is the only measure that works, because ultimately its a deeply personal question between you and your own gods, not anyone else.

    This self identifying question in the census is used as justification for retaining the CofE’s current role as an established church, with its associated positions in the Lords.

    The fact that faith can be so personal and varied is one argument for disestablishment, and a reason why our elected officials shouldn’t make pronouncements of the kinds Cameron has made several times recently.

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    According to this Theos report, 11% of atheists described themselves as Christians.

    I can see why they would – I would describe my self as atheist within a christian tradition, but I wouldn’t go as far as to call myself a christian.

    Many people use a religious label as a basis of their cultural identity,

    totally – which is the whole point of the topic isn’t it

    When pushed, most of these people wouldn’t accept the central tenets of the faith.

    Indeed. The church isn’t a democracy though. The congregation has to take what they want from the sermon and make their own choices about what and how they apply them to their daily life. They can choose to differ in their opinion but its not really up to them to change the message

    If you take the whole of the bible you’d drive yourself insane trying to literally observe and apply every single word and sentence of it to your living, working life. So you have to choose what to take from it. The reason why we have a multitude of christian traditions rather than one church – a ‘catholic’ church in the literal sense of universal – is that in any place and at any time people make different choices as to what elements of the bible to embrace.

    But because churches are top-down authorities rather than bottom up democracies the institutions change much more slowly than the congregations.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    mccruiskeen – you’re misreading the Obama church dilemma. It was not about religion – it was about race and the “community activist” Chicago democratic machine. Obama was asked to choose between his initial political support base and a political path that seemed easier in the short term. Obama joined the church because it gave him local credibility; he had never been particularly religious before and his wife had had some other affiliation iirc.

    It was not a “when did you stop beating your wife?” question either – it was a perfectly reasonable one: if you say you worship at this church and follow this pastor, then does that mean you agree with the pastor of the church when he says X, Y and Z?

    tpbiker
    Free Member

    Think the question was fairly clear on the census…and the majority identified themselves with the christian religion. It would have been just as easy to to tick the no religion box.

    Not saying that makes them religious, but clearly shows that the majority identify themselves in some way with the christian faith, or at least the fact that they live in a christian country. Which ties in with Cameron’s point quite nicely.

    All in my opinion however…I’m sure someone will quickly be along to tell me I’m wrong.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    Even as an unmarried atheist my relationship still has more in common with christian marriage than some other traditions.

    A wolfhound is more like a horse than a cow so…?

    miketually
    Free Member

    Between 2001 and 2011 there has been a decrease in people who identify as Christian (from 71.7 per cent to 59.3 per cent) and an increase in those reporting no religion (from 14.8 per cent to 25.1 per cent).

    ONS, Religion in England and Wales 2011

    It’s a declining majority – heading for more non-Christians than Christians by the 2021 census?

    Considering it’s only 15 generations or so since one type of Christian was burning the ‘wrong’ type of Christian, that’s quite a change.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    im with the aussie

    DrJ
    Full Member

    If Britain is not a Christian country, why is the head of state the head of the C of E ?

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    Leaving aside the fact that England does not equal Britain, the point about the head if state answers the question in the strictest constitutional sense and doesn’t add anything to the wider point about how the country actually operates.

    jambourgie
    Free Member

    A lot of emphasis on the old census form here. But not everyone takes part; those who’ve fallen through the cracks, those who don’t have time to be filling out lengthy forms for free, and those who simply don’t trust the government to not sell or use the information for nefarious ends.

    I guess ‘God-fearing’ folk are exactly the type of people that willingly give away personal information to the authorities no questions asked. Seems to suggest a bias to me…

    I also agree with the opinion that a lot of people just tick ‘Christian’ out of ignorance. They’re christened, get married in a church and buried in a churchyard etc.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Well, unless some 5 million or so people fell through the cracks, and all of them were none christians, the data still says that they culturally or religiously identified themselves as Christian, so the point still stands.

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    This may just be me but can someone explain what a “cultural” Christian is and how it is different from just being a decent person?

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Thank heavens ( see what i did there) Cameron has the backing of the church of England. Oh, apart from the forty five bishops(that is over half of all of the c of e bishops in post at the present time, fact fans) who signed an open letter about food banks and what they see as a welfare crisis, that is. That loony leftist rag the telegraph even dared to insinuate that this might be one factor in his recent outpourings of christian values….

    Telegraph

    Ninfan, is Cameron not risking votes reminding all those christians how christian they really are, when so many christian leaders are such a thorn in his side?

    miketually
    Free Member

    This may just be me but can someone explain what a “cultural” Christian is and how it is different from just being a decent person?

    A cultural Christian is someone raised in a culture where nominally-Christian festivals are celebrated and nominally-Christian values are the norm. They will have experienced broadly-Christian acts of worship at school, and when family weddings and funerals happen they will probably be in a church.

    It’s got nothing at all to do with behaviour.

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    Hmm well that describes my up bringing but it’s certainly not how I would describe myself and I wouldn’t like to be considered any sort of Christian, cultural or otherwise.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Ninfan, is Cameron not risking votes reminding all those christians how christian they really are, when so many christian leaders are such a thorn in his side?

    Probably no more so than discussing Islam:

    [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UD1KDbMo35E[/video]

    Or Hinduism

    [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47gjOHB6BzI[/video]

    Although I note that he wasn’t accused of politicising religion for these messages

    for balance, I don’t recall anyone criticising Beaker for similar messages

    [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djq204S9OJE[/video]

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    But ninfan you were just reminding us how many of us really are christian according to the last census. Imagine upsetting the compassionate and selfless christian values of even a small proportion of them…. How many hindus and muslims were there on that census you quoted again?
    [edit] saved you the trouble going back one page: if i was cameron identifying that religious leaders were taking umbrage to my policies, i would rather be unsettling the 2.7 million next largest religious group you identified in your link than the 33 million christians we apparently have.

    miketually
    Free Member

    I’ve not watched those three Youtube videos, but presumably Cameron and Milliband are just issuing bland Happy Holidays-style greetings, rather than talking about their experiences of being a Muslim/Hindu, which Muslim/Hindu services they attend, how the leader of their mosque/temple was a great help to them during a difficult time, or how we should be evangelical about being a Muslim/Hindu country?

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Dydno-rod aside (wine plus absence of pre-written spin, i am sure), I also doubt cameron is likening muslim or hindu vales to conservative political ones, or likening welfare reform and the big society to the teachings or actions of mohammad or krishna.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Ooh, a religion thread, has it been a week already?

    Think the question was fairly clear on the census

    The problem with the census question is not that it’s unclear, or vague, or difficult to understand, or any other random description anyone cares to make up and attribute to the godless; the problem with the question is that it is leading. It assumes a default position of some form of theism.

    Why is that an issue? Well, because many people will identify as Christian when pressed, by nature of being what was elegantly explained earlier as “cultural” Christians (to wit, our national holidays are Christmas and Easter rather than Eid and Ramadan), irrespective or whether they actually hold any religious beliefs at all. And that skews the figures.

    By way of example: if I went into town with a clipboard, asked a hundred people “what is your religion?” (as per the census) and noted the results, then did the same the next day asking “do you consider yourself religious?”, I would expect very differing results. Specifically, I would expect a considerably higher percentage of people to tell me they weren’t religious in reply to the second question than to the first.

    If Britain is not a Christian country, why is the head of state the head of the C of E ?

    If I owned a cats’ home and a dogs’ home, would that make all the dogs cats?

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