What would be truly enlightening would be to run the same question on a set of churchgoing Catholics, Orthodox, Lutherans and Episcopalian/Anglicans. You'd expect the first two to come out similarly, but if the latter two answered in the same proportions then you know the respondents are not all meaning the same thing when they give the same answer.
What would be truly enlightening would be to run the same question on a set of churchgoing Catholics, Orthodox, Lutherans and Episcopalian/Anglicans. You'd expect the first two to come out similarly, but if the latter two answered in the same proportions then you know the respondents are not all meaning the same thing when they give the same answer.
What would be truly enlightening would be to run the same question on a set of churchgoing Catholics, Orthodox, Lutherans and Episcopalian/Anglicans. You'd expect the first two to come out similarly, but if the latter two answered in the same proportions then you know the respondents are not all meaning the same thing when they give the same answer.