According to this there are 3016 UCCan congregations,
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Church_of_Canada
and so, doing the math - Gretta's congregation (which I presume most members and adherents who attend identify as atheist) is only .00033 of the total number of congregations of the whole UCCan anyway. The rest of the 5% are scattered in various congregations across Canada. The majority of atheists in the UCCan are not even attending her congregation. Is their belief system because of her? I doubt it. Does the survey clearly identify what each respondent means when they define themsves as atheist? Or, are they showing solidarity with Gretta by appropriating the word atheist, the way she did when she decided to use the label to side with people who were persecuted for being atheist? She may be closer to an agnostic who feels that actions matter more than labels - and is adopting the label of atheist as a sort of protest - it seems that way to me. But doing that she includes the "spiritual but not religious" as a group within a group. She's not going to convince me that more people think like her than don't. I don't agree with some of her assertions. At the same time, her faith perspective is also valid.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Church_of_Canada
and so, doing the math - Gretta's congregation (which I presume most members and adherents who attend identify as atheist) is only .00033 of the total number of congregations of the whole UCCan anyway. The rest of the 5% are scattered in various congregations across Canada. The majority of atheists in the UCCan are not even attending her congregation. Is their belief system because of her? I doubt it. Does the survey clearly identify what each respondent means when they define themsves as atheist? Or, are they showing solidarity with Gretta by appropriating the word atheist, the way she did when she decided to use the label to side with people who were persecuted for being atheist? She may be closer to an agnostic who feels that actions matter more than labels - and is adopting the label of atheist as a sort of protest - it seems that way to me. But doing that she includes the "spiritual but not religious" as a group within a group. She's not going to convince me that more people think like her than don't. I don't agree with some of her assertions. At the same time, her faith perspective is also valid.