Pup
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2004
- Messages
- 6,679
True, but most are brought up to believe. I was once pointed to a Mormon nursery guide which was a textbook example of how to indoctrinate very young children - among other things they were required to repeat the basic Mormon tenets over and over again. It must be incredibly difficult to extricate yourself from something which permeates everything around you, I have nothing but admiration for people like Randfan who have the strength of mind to manage it.
That's true, but isn't it true of most religions? Christian children are taught prayers, rhymes, songs, and so forth: "Jesus loves me, this I know," "I pray the Lord my soul to take," etc. There are Vacation Bible Schools, picture books, etc.
In fact, that may actually help the LDS church convert them when they get older, since they're already indoctrinated to believe in Jesus, God, heaven, prophets, miracles, etc.
The Pew link I posted earlier does show that converts to the church are of a lower demographic:
The 26% of Mormons who are converts to the faith differ markedly from lifelong Mormons in several ways. First, converts tend to be older than lifelong Mormons. Nearly half of converts (48%) are over age 50, compared with about three-in-ten lifelong members (29%). Converts also tend to be less educated than nonconverts (16% did not graduate from high school, compared with just 6% of lifelong members) and they earn decidedly lower incomes (40% make less than $30,000 a year, compared with 21% among nonconverts).
But when one looks at the full informational chart on the page, comparing converts to members born in the church, there's still a significant number of "non-ignorant hicks." There are more who dropped out of high school and fewer who did graduate work, but the percent of college graduates is the same (18%) and the number making over $100K a year is nearly the same (15% vs. 16%)
In other words, even converts are not exclusively made up of only the most ignorant or poorest.
Complicating the matter is the fact that fewer non-whites joined the church in the days before they could have the priesthood, so there are fewer born into the church (3% non-white non-Hispanics born vs. 17% converted). Those converts would bring with them the overall demographics of non-whites.
Ideally, an apples-to-apples comparison would be best: white US-born members raised in the church vs. white US-born converts, or blacks raised in the church vs. converted, but the Pew folks don't break it down that far.