Abstract
In presenting this article (which was prepared as a thesis for the social work course at Western Reserve University) the Editor wishes to emphasize the fact that it is based on the study of a limited number of case records selected from a single district. The author has recognized that the conclusions based on her inquiry point the way to further study rather than to any wholesale generalizations as to present case work practice. It is hoped that her discoveries will turn the attention of the case worker toward more careful recording of her actual findings regarding the religious life of her clients and to a more thoughtful articulation of her relationship to the churches.
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