Cap'n Cat wrote:But, what was the population 34 years ago, Jose'????????? It's expanded dramatically.
Also, for the first time, the Church chooses to count all the Hispanics running around.
VERY LITTLE of it is organic growth, Joe, the most important kind - it's all proportional to the population.
We'll just have to see in 34 years when Commander Cat and JoltinJunior are dukin' it out on here about it!!!!

It's funny when the issue is how many Catholics have left the Church, the most important number is the "gross" and is never stated as a percentage. But according to the Pew Report, Catholicism retains 67% of its native-born members, making it the fifth best denomination in retaining its native-born members. If the total number of lapsed Catholics in the US (about 30,000,000 or about 10% of the population) is so many, it is because 1 out of every 3 Americans is born Catholic, and 1 out of every 3 native born Catholics leave the Church (while 2/3 stay).
So when we talk about the
growth of Catholicism, why isn't the gross the most important?
In any event, in 1976, Catholics were about 25% of the total US population. And that figure holds today. Catholicism may have its problems, but the reports of people leaving the Church in droves are not really accurate.
In gross terms, there about 27,000,000 more Catholics in the US today than in 1976. Perhaps Catholicism, in percentage terms, isn't growing, but it is not decreasing either.