So now that they finally posted a link (and no, when I first read the story this morning, there wasn't a link to the actual survey easily available), we can discuss what they think is important religious knowledge to have.
What religion was Mother Theresa? Anyone want to tell me what possible relevance to the practice of religion that has?
What was Joseph Smith's religion? Same question.
What religion do most people in Pakistan consider themselves? World politics question.
What was the name of the person whose writings and actions inspired the Protestant Reformation? History question.
Which one of these preachers participated in the period of religious activity known as the First Great Awakening? Ditto.
You answered 14 out of 15 questions correctly
for a score of 93%.
If they'd asked me about Jonathan Edwards' most famous sermon, I could tell them THAT. And it still wouldn't be a religious question.
Pretty much what I expected: a bunch of trivia that has nothing to do with practicing whatever religion you espouse, and minor questions about practice that are available in the news and would be more likely to be internalized by people with an axe to grind against religion than by people with a live-and-let-live attitude toward other faiths. Despite the need of sixty different news organizations to lead off the morning chortling about how "atheists know more about religion than religious people", none of it actually required any of those atheists to really learn anything. All they had to do was obsess over every mention of religion in the daily news.