The longer-term trend shows an even steeper drop—between 2007 and 2023-24, the share of adults in the Midwest who said they belonged to a religion declined from 83 percent to 69 percent, according to ...
(RNS) — Religion in America might be best described in the words of rap artist LL Cool J: Don’t call it a comeback. At least not yet. Despite claims of a revival of religion in the United States, a ...
After decades of steady decline, new research indicates that the number of Americans identifying as religious may have stabilized, signaling a possible plateau in the nation’s ongoing religious ...
People who live in the American South continue to be more religious, on average, than residents of the Midwest, Northeast and West.
This Pew Research Center analysis looks at reasons why people identify as religiously unaffiliated and why some who were raised religiously unaffiliated become religiously affiliated as adults. It is ...