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Return to Religion?Date: 2015-10-07; view: 380. While 58 percent of Americans feel that religion is "very important" in their own lives, it is hard to say to what extend religious beliefs affect their daily lives.
Membership in the less conservative, so-called "mainline" Protestant churches in the U.S. has actually fallen in the last ten years by about 8 percent. Furthermore, church attendance by (Roman) Catholics has dropped by about a third during the same period. By contrast, membership in the fundamentalist Christian churches has gone up by 35 percent, and orthodox Jewish congregations have increased by as much as 100 percent. The increase in the fundamentalist Christian groups has attracted much public attention. One reason is that many of these groups actively publicize their beliefs and try to influence public life and political processes. Many have their own radio or television stations, which they and their members finance. Yet overall fundamentalist churches still represent a minority, even if a very active one, of all American church groups and members.
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