the numbers are in the book and if you need more you can ask a demographer name nicholas everest-who knows more than i do. island went through the demographic change in one degeneration rather than two and fertility and religious yossi collapsed simultaneously, similarly radical rates suggests once more that the family has been a silent and unacknowledged partner in christianity's feet all along, not just a bystander as conventional sociology as it. so in closing i would like to share a couple brief thoughts about what might make this double helix go-arounds. in the book there's a whole chapter called toward a new religious anthropology that explores this at wind but as i like to focus on a couple things that might explain how having families sometimes drives people to church. lots and lots of data, perfectly circular data confirm that married people with children are far more likely to be found in synagogue or church than single people but as a matter of fisheries this has been almost wholly and explored. here are couple suggested lines of argument about it. one is uncommon but wide