When we first moved in [from America] I told my wife not to expect to sleep late on Sunday mornings. "I bet there's a lot of traffic," I said.
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But the first Sunday came, and then the second, and now two months have gone by — and nary a car drove past. All was quiet on Church Lane.
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I found out why from watching a fascinating 90-minute documentary on the BBC this week, called "What the World Thinks of God." The program polled 10,000 people in 10 countries and found Britain to be among the most godless societies in the world.
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The British were near the bottom of the list on church attendance, with only 21 percent saying that they regularly go to church. That compared with 54 percent in the United States and 91 percent in the most church-going country, Nigeria. The only country that had lower church attendance than Britain was Russia, with 7 percent. The Russians, I figured, had a good excuse — 70 years of a godless ideology called Communism. What's with the British?
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I turned to some of the other findings of the survey for answers. The British apparently don't go to church because they don't believe in God. Only 46 percent held theistic beliefs, compared with 79 percent in the United States and 98 percent in Nigeria. The only countries with fewer believers were, not surprisingly, Russia, with 42 percent, and South Korea with 31 percent. (Given that nearly half South Koreans practice Buddhism, a non-theistic religion, belief in God wasn't going to be high on the list there.)
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The survey, conducted in December and January for the BBC by the pollster ICM, also found that the British don't put much stock in religion. Worldwide, 80 percent of respondents said that a belief in God makes people better. Among the British, only 56 percent agreed.
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The BBC put together a panel of experts, some in the studio and some by satellite, to discuss the results. They were hooked into Johannesburg, Jerusalem, Paris and New York among other places. I was mostly interested in the contrast with the United States, since that remains my home. Everyone agreed that despite the fact that it has an official church, the Church of England, Britain is a very secular country.
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America, with no official church, is a far more religious country — another example of the power of a free market. Competition is apparently good, both for business and for faith. People need to have choices. In America, if you don't like one church, go to another — or to a synagogue or mosque for that matter. It's not quite as simple in England, where one church dominates — or at least tries to.
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But there was another lesson in all this, best articulated in the BBC program by Richard Land, a leading Southern Baptist in the United States who has close ties to President George W. Bush. Land said that Americans and British often get lulled into thinking they're the same. After all, we share the same language and, in recent years, similar foreign policy. But, he added, we don't share the same religious commitments.
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In Britain, people don't talk about religion in polite conversation, while Americans, especially the growing body of evangelical Christians, are eager to talk.
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I can't say I mind. We sleep a lot better now on Sunday mornings here on Church Lane.
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