Are people very religious in your country?

Are people very religious in your country?

Are you religious?

Depends on the region
No.

It depends
Yes

Depends on the region heavily.
Yes.

France has really few actively religious people compared to the rest of the world, and both the government and the media are entirely separated from religions. About a third of the people have no declared religions and even Islam SEEMS to be decreasing.

The non-Swede's aside (refugees etc) the Swede's them self are not religious at all (something like 85% atheist). Even a lot of our priests etc are non believers.
And no I am not.
Religion was never spoken of, never mentioned or forced. I know my grandmother used to make cookies for the church once a month but she wasn't religious either.
It's just not a thing here.

No, Britain is probably one of the most atheistic countries in the world

>Even a lot of our priests etc are non believers.

???

Really depends on the place but in general not this much.
Yes

Yes? It's a job. In 2009/2009 or there about they did a survey and something like 30-40% were atheist/agnostic atheists.
>also here is the most atheist countries in the world, we won

>Even a lot of our priests etc are non believers.
Bullshit, some may, but majority by far does believe in god and the bible.

>Yes? It's a job.

How could there be demand for priests if no one believes? It's not even a very well paying job, and it takes a lot of dedication

How is that allowed, at least our priests as punishment for being leeches are not allowed to fuck

Yes and infidels should be burned

I'm not him but if it's anything like here, most priests are in fact agnostics or so wishy-washy you could push them into atheism.

>How could there be demand for priests if no one believes?
Because people still use churches and priests?
Marriages etc happens in churches.
>It's not even a very well paying job, and it takes a lot of dedication
It is here. The average pay of a priest is like any other salary.
The fact that we still have churches and priests is simple. Culture.

Not the same user but here is an explanation.
There is three events that the church holds, these are christenings, marriages and funerals.
Also holidays like Christmas (even though our Jul is more pagan than Christian) and Easter (also pagan kek) that have activities people visit a church for.
Doesn't change the fact that people still don't believe in a god. It's tradition, nothing else.
I have a cousin who works as a priest, and yes he is indeed agnostic.
People are used to having churches around, so they stay.

1. Depends on the region, in my state, yes.

2. No, but I do like to read religious texts. I hate actually talking to religious people though.

%60 is religious I'd say
No.

French are mostly atheists but the French that are Catholic tend to be very serious about it some wanting a theocracy, other a monarchy
Yes

>Are people very religious in your country?
As already said, it depends. In my state, it's a roughly equal mix of nonreligious and nominally religious
>Are you religious?
No but I used to be

both no
religion is only for idiots

Are you entitled by your wisdom?

Yes
Yes

I think New Zealand is only about half Christian, and Church attendance is quite poor.

Yes, I am religious.

Some are, not that many though.
No but I like tradition even if I don't believe in God

no

no

It's literally 0.0% in my part of the country.

Religion will go extinct with my generation in my city.

no

no

>CANADA
Religiosity varies quite a bit by region.
A majority of people (>50%) are NOT Christian in the westernmost province of British Columbia, but the vast majority (93%) is Christian in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Quebec is kinda weird though, in that most people (82%) say they're "Christian" and do believe in the Abrahamic God, but I'm under the general impression people don't really believe Jesus is the Son of God, etc.

>EL SALVADOR
The vast majority of people (90%) are religious, and practically all of those who are religious are Christian. It isn't too weird to meet an atheist though, especially if they are in their 40s-60s and have sympathies for communism or socialism (and were perhaps even involved in the civil war on the communist side), although there's also the occasional young atheist that wants nothing to do with communism.

>little me
I was raised Catholic and went to a Catholic school, but undramatically abandoned the religion at some point when I was 16-18. I just painlessly slided into agnosticism and the general "civil religion" typical of Canadian cities (if you can call it that).
On the question of the existence of God, I don't know if He's real, or if he's All-Good or All-Powerful, or even if there's only one god (as far as I'm concerned, polytheism might be true).
On matters of "civil religion", I largely agree with "progressivism" except that I wouldn't call it "progress" or necessarily superior to other ideologies. I'm straight but I'm okay with gays being open about being gay and marrying. Sometimes the pendulum does swing too much to the other direction though. Also, for what it's worth, I'm not Canadian enough to be interested in hockey more than soccer (not that I care much about soccer either).

Yes
No

Only 8% of population has read Quran
But a lot more will claim to be religious. They are more like fanatics

Probably the only thing that makes this place barely breathable is the fact they don't read Quran. They will not go out of their way to care as much... about anything...

> Are you religious?
Fuck no

No
No

>> Are you religious?
>Fuck no

reported to the sharia police

Only old people
Yes

I have more knowledge about Islam that if an ISIS faggot hold me at a gun point, I would convince him I was on his side and he would shoot the AKP voter instead

>Are people very religious in your country?
a little bunch of people are very religious, the majority consider themselves as religious just for the sake of tradition but deep in their hearts they aren't
>Are you religious?
Not really much

No, Vietnam is one of the most irreligious country in the world, most people have a positive view on Buddhism through.
No.

No
No

No
Yes

no
I was raised quite religiously, but by my teens it just fizzled

Depends on the part of the country. In my state, Delaware, Christianity makes up more than half the population and Roman Catholicism is the largest denomination. The South and Plains are pretty religious, especially the bible belt. The lowest rates of belief are in the Northeast and Northwest.
I am a Christian, Calvinist specifically

Based

Not so much
Used to be, stopped as a teenager but I think I'm getting back into it now