One of your links also posits that the rates are as such because.
Does this mean the statistics are based on recognition of divorce by the religious bodies and not by the state?
And doesn't this contradict your point that Evangelicals are anti-divorce (on a comparative scale)?
Religion may play a role, since some of the lowest divorce rates are in northeastern states with relatively high household incomes and large numbers of Roman Catholics whose church doesn't recognize divorce.
Bible Belt states, in contrast, are dominated by fundamentalist Protestant denominations that proclaim the sanctity of marriage but generally do not want to estrange churchgoers who do divorce.
Bible Belt states, in contrast, are dominated by fundamentalist Protestant denominations that proclaim the sanctity of marriage but generally do not want to estrange churchgoers who do divorce.
Does this mean the statistics are based on recognition of divorce by the religious bodies and not by the state?
And doesn't this contradict your point that Evangelicals are anti-divorce (on a comparative scale)?
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