A majority of adults still identify with their childhood religion, but 35% don’t. Read about when and why Americans may ...
Americans who had a good experience as children were likely to keep their faith. Those with bad experiences left, according ...
Nationwide, 56% of all Americans still identify with their childhood religion, but Jews cited different reasons than other ...
Find out how adults who were raised as “nones” experienced religion as kids, and why they say they do – or don’t – affiliate ...
This latest study is important because it’s the first time we’ve asked people why they identify with their current religion,’ a senior researcher says ...
The decline of religion among young Americans has slowed, but they remain less religious than their parents or grandparents — ...
After decades of falling religious affiliation and participation, key measures of religiousness in the United States have leveled off in recent years — although no revival has been detected among ...
Baylor University scholar Paul Froese said the findings may reflect a greater interest in magical thinking as people move ...
Last week, Pew Research Center released a report, noting Pew’s polls and no “other high-quality surveys” Pew analyzed show ...
All the focus on declining confidence in organized religion misses the broader backrop where institutional confidence is falling virtually everywhere, and at faster rates than in relation to faith.