Posted on 03/21/2008 1:47:24 PM PDT by Grig
Cuius Regio, Eius Religio - this Latin saying applies to Europe, and to the principle that ended religious warfare: Whose region (it is), whose religion (shall predominate). But it sprang to mind when seeing this map of the US, showing the leading church bodies per county. The map demonstrates the important link between region and religion, or to put it more precisely: where you live is a predictive factor as to where you worship.
The map highlights 8 major Christian denominations, showing where they represent a plurality (and in counties marked with a + at least 50%) of the relevant counties population. This shows that there are quite a few remarkably contiguous religious blocks in the US
The most notable of those contiguous areas is that of the Baptists, a term that is quite rightly almost synonymous with Southern Baptist (a bit like how Orthodox in Europe equals Eastern Orthodox; as western orthodoxy is referred to as Catholicism). Baptists are the biggest congregations in nigh on all counties of nine states (Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee), and are a major presence in West Virginia (where Methodists dominate the northeast), Virginia (where the selfsame Methodists have a foothold in the border area with West Virginia) and Missouri (the area around St Louis being majoritarily Catholic). Florida, Louisiana and Texas are split between a Catholic South and a Baptist North to a large part due to the large, traditionally Catholic communities of Latinos in southern Texas and Florida and of Cajuns (French-Americans) in Louisiana.
Another block, but not nearly as neatly contiguous, is the Lutheran one, present in the northern Midwest and West, best represented in Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa and Wisconsin. Lutheran here often is synonymous with German-American or more broadly speaking Northern European again, Lutheran conjures up certain geographical, not to say climatological images; a form of worship designed to survive the grimmest of winters. It would be very hard to rhyme a Latin culture with the Lutheran religion.
I dont know is theres a similar link thinkable in the Methodist case. The Methodist areas are also much smaller and much more disparate: in West Virginia (as mentioned) and adjacently in areas of Pennsylvania, Virginia and Ohio. Theres a sprinkling of Methodist-dominated counties in Maryland, Delaware, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas. Strangely, most Methodist-dominated counties lie between two parallels of longitude determined by the northern border of Nebraska and Pennsylvania and the southern border of Kansas and Virginia.
The Mormons dominate every county in their state of Utah, and have proceeded from there to become numerically superior in some counties of adjacent states, such as Arizona, Colorado, Idaho and Nevada they are the biggest congregation in the county that holds Las Vegas.
Most of the other counties have Catholics as the most numerous congregation, leading to a somewhat misleading map. Catholicism very often is the biggest denomination by default, owing to the fact that their institutional unity boosts market share but at the same time masks differences between different wings of the Roman church that are as great as between denominations of Protestantism that have separated over theological differences.
On the other side of the bums on pews versus quality of purpose spectrum are the Mennonites (among whom the Amish are the strictest of the strict), dominating in very few counties, but where they do, often in two or three adjacent counties (as in northern Indiana, central Ohio and central Kansas).
Quite puzzling finally is the denomination labelling itself as Christian, dominating in central Illinois and Indiana. I thought they all were. Christian, that is
Interesting. After looking at the map a second time, I realized there are TWO different blues. The blue that covers a large portion of the map is catholic. The reform blue is a very small percentage.
Ping to read & respond later
True and false. For the purposes of surveying affiliations, it would be absurd to do so, -- they have to go by mass attendance, or church registries, or self-identification.
Theologically speaking, the Catholic Creed says in part "we believe in one baptism for the forgiveness of sins". This means that not only those baptized in the Catholic Church, but all validly baptized -- Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, etc -- are Catholics at the time of their baptism. When those people convert to Catholicism, they are not re-baptized. Of course, unless they go on practicing the Catholic faith, they fall off. No one, however would base a census on this.
As regards the Catholics, the map is misleading is a different way. They should have differentiated the Catholics by frequency of mass attendance -- the requirement is to attend Mass each Sunday, and by lifestyle -- contraception, advocacy of decriminalized abortion, gay marriage and euthanasia, remarriage, cohabitation without marriage in the Church are all behaviors that separate one from the Catholic Church whether they count themselves as Catholics or not. Should they surveyed on that basis, they would find very few Catholics anywhere, sadly.
Ping for later reading/reference
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