Abstract
“There simply are no reliable historical statistics on church membership,” writes a prominent sociologist of religion, Glock (1959: 39), “and it is extremely doubtful that accurate statistics can be produced through manipulating the unreliable ones.” Problems have so regularly hampered the collection of religious statistics in the United States that historians as well normally hold them in disrepute (Landis, 1957). “Nothing is more elusive in church history,” Littell (1971: 36) has written, “than honest statistics.” Commager (1950: 166) goes further: “Church statistics,” he charges, “attain an unreliability that would be a penal offense in a corporation.”
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History
Reference119 articles.
1. Christiano K. J. (1983) Religious Diversity and Social Change in Turn-of-theCentury American Cities. Ph.D. dissertation, Princeton University.