Without reading the article, let me guess: it's the mormons! Otherwise, why would deseret news print it?
If that's the case, it means the mormons go to church more than other religions. It doesn't mean their church is "true," it doesn't mean going to church more makes you a "better person," it doesn't mean anything except they go to church more -- and spend less time together as a family.
The article states: 'Followers of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints attend church services the most, with 75 percent of its followers going to church each week"?????
What a lie!!!! Maybe 75% of the 'actives' (less than 40%(?) that attend church at least once every month.
Maybe this is a trick ------ what does 'followers' mean? Obviously not members of record!
This is so misleading. The funny thing is that the opposite is true. Of the people who responded that they go to services once a week, the majority were mormons.
However, if they had polled random Mormons (on-the-record mormons) and asked how often they go to church, the answer would probably be way toward the bottom. Only 30% are anywhere near active.
The Deseret News is, after all, the official public organ of the Mormon church. They could, would, and do say anything to promote the organization, even fabricate. Just like the old Communist newspapers of the former places like USSR, etc. It doesn't have to be true. Why? Because its readership is very narrow--Mormons. They don't expect the general public to even read it, let along believe it. So they brazenly announce to Mormons anything they damn well please to: "We are the fastest growing church in the world!" "People trust Mormons more than any other religious group!" "We are persecuted as much as the Jews!"
They didn't ask a random sampling of individuals how often they went to church. They asked the people *attending church* how often they showed up.
So yeah, most Mormons that do show up at all, show up every week. The problem with this methodology is that most Mormons (as far as church recordkeeping is concerned) don't show up every week.
75% of those who actually consider themselves Mormons attend church once a week. So there are about 60-70% of the membership that are completely inactive at best. So then you have to consider what percentage of them would actually identify themselves as Mormon if asked. So even if the responses were from a random poll where people in the population were contacted directly by the pollsters, that 75% would likely be only a portion of claimed total. According to this poll (http://commons.trincoll.edu/aris/files/2011/12/Mormons2008.pdf) only 53% of the members that the LDS church claims in the US actually self-identify as LDS (3,158,000 vs. 5,974,041). So 75% of those who claim membership is 2,368,500 or 40% of those on the records attend once a week. Still highly inflated compared to general experience but much more realistic than the claim from the article.
If it is some form of poll that requires a person to respond online without someone verbally asking the questions, then it is a self-selected and highly restricted sample of people who would actually take the time to answer the questions when they are emailed to them or they manage to trip over the questions on the Internet.
Well, mormons going on their mission are taught "don't answer the question they asked, answer the question they should have asked."
They answered "how often do you tell your mormon relatives living across the country you attend church?"
They are also taught to lie for the church, starting with statistics of how many contacts they made while on their mission. They know the statistics will appear somewhere, so they know the CULT wants them to answer "every week" to make the statistics look good.
All the high numbers show is that Mormonism is a CULT and will lie more than anyone else, because they know the answer they are "expected to give" to show support for the CULT.
When I was active, I attended 75% of the time. I didn't go through the temple, but my understanding is that you need to attend 75% of the meetings for a TR.
That exhausted me, emotionally drained me to attend church so frequently. I would miss for a "mental sick" day once in awhile even though physically I was fine.