Listen to you! Wow! The person who started a thread asking for real evidence, and is now asserting how life goes for hundreds of millions of Christians. Yeah, OK. *eye-rolls*
Pounded. Tortured with love and patience... oh how awful to have that impressed on them, like a hot poker in the groin.
Uh, on their knees? All of them, we've alredy established you don't know what prayer is mentally, and now it doesn't seem you kno what it is physically.
Why would they turn down opportunites? That doesn't make sense. Hundreds of millions of Christians, all of them, not going to College, not getting jobs, not going on vacations, not buying homes, or cars, or writing books, or anything.
Something tells me this is your rear end speaking.
Most Christians I know have reported some sort of answer. Even non-Christians get their prayers answered sometimes. It's just not like a light switch.
No fun? Are you kidding, Christians are lots and lots of fun. You never went to Christian summer camp. Strange but true, I wasn't raised in a very Jewish environment, and yes, I went to Christian summer camp, and it was great. I grew up in a very Christian area, many PKs, preacher-kids, went to my school, and many of them were friends of mine.
Ohhhhhh, you're talking about YOUR life experience and pretending that it's the same for hundreds of millions of other people. I mean it MUST be true for everyone, since it was true for you.
That's how it goes, maybe you were meant to be an atheist. Everyone has their lot in life, maybe this is yours.
What a minute, wait a minute, you just contradicted yourself. All this timw time you were writing a sob-story about being pounded wih Christianity, and skipping opportunities, having no fun, and being sterile. And NOW it was "feel-good" stuff. Make up your mind. Was it torture being a Christian, or was it feel-good stuff? I mean if it felt good, maybe you're just sore because your prayers for stuff werent magically conjured.
Yes, eat drink and be merry ex-Christians. Of course, if your idea of merriment is coming to forums and preaching, it's kind of sad/funny to see that.
OK, this is pretty funny. What am I even looking at here? There's no scale at all on the left. This could be a ripple in a pond. Don't you know that stats can be fudged to look like anything? And the author, who's that? A blog? J. T. Grant is a politicol scientist, this reseach is out of their expertise. They're not a statistician either. If one goes to look at the actual data, and method, of course, you can't. The academic journal is for profit; all you get is an abstract. According to that, the data only goes to 2005. So what is this graph showing data to 2021? That's pretty suspicious. And just because it's "peer-reviewed" doesn't mean anything.
Publication bias resulting from so-called "p-hacking" is pervasive throughout the life sciences; however, its effects on general conclusions made from the literature appear to be weak.
journals.plos.org
This happens all the time, people publish nonsense, and until the research is read to see what methods were used and the sample size a graph like this doesn't say anything. If you go to read the article on the blog that published this, J T Grant wrties the tiniest bit about how th data was collected. It amounts to "we collected data and stuff, and ran it through a computer, and I can't tell you what the scale is because all the data has different scales, but... look at that decline."
The graph was updated for 2013, and look what happens when the scale is adjusted:
View attachment 78198
Hey.... it went from 80, whatever that means, to 70, whatever that means. Compare that to the faux-graph that makes it look like the line is falling off a cliff. And we still don't know what's actually being measured.
Let's see what Pew has to say about it.
Our new report finds that whether U.S. adults are becoming more or less religious depends, in part, on how religious observance is measured.
www.pewresearch.org
View attachment 78199
So, the pros who actually do this sort of thing, are saying the complete opposite of what that faux-graph was describing. Imagine that. And I'm wondering, did you even think to question that graph, even though it had no scale, and came from a blog? Of course not. Because you know what hundreds of millions of Christians are experiencing all over the world. *eye-rolls*