Remarks:
Posted by: Clive D. Field
Type of Data: Confidence in the Church and other institutions; religious and paranormal beliefs, practices and attitudes; religious experience; religious aspects of Christmas; anticipation of Christian-Muslim conflict in the 1990s and of a continuing established Church (1872)
Faith Community: General, Christianity (Church of England), Islam, Alternative
Date: 1989, 6-13 December
Geography: Great Britain
Sample Size: 969
Population: Adults aged 16 and over
Keywords: Abortion, afterlife, Archbishop of Canterbury, astrology, baptism, Bible, black magic, blasphemy, Book of Common Prayer, carols, Christian country, Christianity, Christians, Christian society, Christmas, Church, church and state, church attendance, churchgoing, confidence, confirmation, contraception, cribs, death, deja vu, devil, disestablishment, divorce, Easter, evil, exchanging messages with the dead, extra-marital sex, faith, faith healing, flying saucers, fortune telling, ghosts, God, heaven, hell, homosexuality, horoscopes, hypnotism, importance of God, influence of religion, institutions, Jesus Christ, Latin Mass, life after death, lucky charms, lucky mascots, miracles, morality, Muslims, nature, New Testament, Old Testament, ordination of women, paranormal, patterning, political issues, politics, power, prayer, premonition, presence, priests, reincarnation, religious affiliation, religious education, religious experience, religious festivals, religious rules, sacred, self-assessed religiosity, sex, spirituality, spiritualism, spiritual power, superstition, telepathy, thought transference, women
Collection Method: Face-to-face interview
Collection Agency: Social Surveys (Gallup Poll)
Sponsor: Sunday Telegraph
Published Source:
BRIN ID: 1872
Remarks:
Posted by: Clive D. Field
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Perhaps what I wrote wasn't clear. I suggested that new immigrants are more likely than others to have a religion.…