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Poll: Protestants decline, more have no religion in a sharply shifting religious landscape
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:25 am
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:25 am
quote:
The nation’s religious makeup has shifted dramatically in the past 15 years, with a sharp drop in the number of Americans who say they’re members of a Protestant denomination – still the nation’s most prevalent religious group – and a rise in the number who profess no religion.
On average last year, 36 percent of Americans in ABC News/Washington Post polls identified themselves as members of a Protestant faith, extending a gradual trend down from 50 percent in 2003. That includes an 8-point drop in the number of evangelical white Protestants, an important political group.
Reflecting the change among Protestants, the share of Christians overall has declined from 83 percent of the adult population in 2003 to 72 percent on average last year. In the same time, the number of Americans who say they have no religion has nearly doubled, to 21 percent.
Catholic self-identification (22 percent) has held steady during this time. The share of adults who identify with another form of Christianity – including Jehovah Witnesses, Mormons and Greek or Russian Orthodox, for example – has risen modestly, from 11 to 14 percent.
This analysis, produced for ABC by Langer Research Associates, is based on a very large dataset – 174,485 random-sample telephone interviews in ABC News and ABC News/Washington Post polls conducted from 2003 to 2017. We focus mainly on 2003 and 2017 data, including 7,185 and 5,017 interviews, respectively.
As the share of Protestants has declined, the number of adults expressing no religious affiliation has risen from 12 percent in 2003 to 21 percent of all adults in 2017. That includes 3 percent who say they’re atheists, 3 percent agnostic and 15 percent who say they have no religion. The proportions were similar 15 years ago.
The largest shifts during this 15-year period include 16-point increases among young adults (age 18 to 29) and political liberals. The smallest changes have occurred among Republicans, conservatives and blacks (+4 points in each group) as well as older Americans, +5 points.
Having no religious affiliation is most prevalent among 18- to 29-year-olds, at 35 percent, vs. 13 percent among those age 50 and older. It’s also higher among men than women (25 vs. 17 percent), among college graduates vs. those without a degree (25 vs. 20 percent), and among whites and Hispanics than among blacks (22 and 20 percent vs. 15 percent).
It differs among political and ideological groups as well. Thirty-five percent of liberals report no religious affiliation, compared with 21 percent of moderates and 12 percent of conservatives. Twenty-three and 25 percent of Democrats and independents, respectively, don’t report a religion, dropping to 10 percent of Republicans. Indeed the non-religious are something of a political counterpoint to evangelical white Protestants; 67 percent of those with no religious affiliation supported Hillary Clinton in 2016.
LINK
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:27 am to Bench McElroy
I’m sure at least some of this is tied to the subversion of a number of Protestant denominations.
Anyone want to guess the number of people claiming Methodist, Unitarian, or Episcopalian lately?
Anyone want to guess the number of people claiming Methodist, Unitarian, or Episcopalian lately?
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:29 am to Bench McElroy
As I suspected. Liberals are a Godless people wandering in sin. Sad! I will pray for them
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:31 am to Bench McElroy
quote:liberalism is their religion
Thirty-five percent of liberals report no religious affiliation
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:32 am to joeyb147
It truly is. They worship the state and victimhood.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:33 am to NIH
quote:burn any heretic that doesn't follow their ideology
It truly is. They worship the state and victimhood.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:34 am to Bench McElroy
Lots of churches turned their services into a pop/rock concert followed by a pep rally.
If religion doesn’t provide some moral direction it’s useless. And sometimes that means delivering sermons that don’t leave people feeling good about themselves.
If religion doesn’t provide some moral direction it’s useless. And sometimes that means delivering sermons that don’t leave people feeling good about themselves.
This post was edited on 5/11/18 at 9:36 am
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:35 am to Bench McElroy
quote:
The largest shifts during this 15-year period include 16-point increases among young adults (age 18 to 29) and political liberals.
The former will continue to seek faith and forgiveness as they age—particularly once they have children.
The latter are, unfortunately, a lost cause (I wish that wasn’t the case).
This post was edited on 5/11/18 at 11:13 am
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:36 am to Bench McElroy
Trump is God’s second son, those numbers will pick up.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:39 am to Lakeboy7
quote:
Trump is God’s second son
I honestly don’t doubt some of you believe this
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:39 am to Bench McElroy
Protestants don’t have a clear message and are constantly changing their doctrine. Catholics are firm in their beliefs & doctrine so they haven’t seen any decline
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:40 am to olddawg26
quote:
Trump is God’s second son
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I honestly don’t doubt some of you believe this
It was sarcasm. He's a lefty.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:42 am to TheHarahanian
quote:
Lots of churches turned their services into a pop/rock concert followed by a pep rally.
Yep and even more stopped going out to the people.
In all honesty, church leaders and pastors stopped going out to their own people. They stopped visiting the neighborhood.
Seminaries changed what they teach and in a lot of cases kill the faith of would be pastors.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:45 am to Man4others
quote:
Protestants don’t have a clear message
Not universally true.
quote:
constantly changing their doctrine
There are a few cases where this is true, like the awful health & wealth churches, acceptance of homosexuality, etc.
quote:
Catholics are firm in their beliefs & doctrine
The Catholic church was in the business of selling bogus indulgences for a very very long time. The inquisitions were also not a high point.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:46 am to Jjdoc
quote:
Seminaries changed what they teach
Seminaries went liberal starting, I think, in the 60s. There’s been an effort to turn that around - at least with one denomination.
This post was edited on 5/11/18 at 9:54 am
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:48 am to Bench McElroy
quote:
evangelical white Protestants, an important political group.
This is what's wrong with America and is killing religion for many. I remember when politics in the church was anathema. Now preachers are indistinguishable from politicians, the single most despised group in our country.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:48 am to Lakeboy7
quote:This place needs a good sarcasm emoji.
Trump is God’s second son, those numbers will pick up.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:52 am to Man4others
The Catholic Church has never changed their doctrine. Right.....
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:53 am to TheHarahanian
quote:
If religion doesn’t provide some moral direction it’s useless
A lot of young folks feel the church needs to clean up its own house before preaching morals to anyone.
And that's not directed at any one denomination, but a statement on organized religion overall.
Posted on 5/11/18 at 9:53 am to Bench McElroy
i've done some research on this topic. for decades, mainstream denominations (catholic, episcopalian, methodist, presbyterian) had no small number of nominal members. they stuck with the church for mostly social reasons. younger generations aren't doing that. consequently, those denominations are seeing drastic declines including catholics. latinos are propping up the catholic numbers. otherwise, the catholic church demographics would look just like the other mainstream denominations.
evangelical churches are holding steady. over the last few years, sbc churches have planted a large number of new congregations and tithing has never stopped increasing. in contrast, the liberal cbf is waning and probably just shot themselves in the foot with the illumination project. expect an exodus of churches from the cbf who aren't on board. the new policies will likely extend to the mission field in the near future by which time the cbf will be essentially irrelevant on the religious landscape.
non denoms are growing. many people are tired of the old regimes and dichotomies.
in summary, churches built up nominal members for almost 200 years and they are now being culled out due to the changing cultural landscape.
evangelical churches are holding steady. over the last few years, sbc churches have planted a large number of new congregations and tithing has never stopped increasing. in contrast, the liberal cbf is waning and probably just shot themselves in the foot with the illumination project. expect an exodus of churches from the cbf who aren't on board. the new policies will likely extend to the mission field in the near future by which time the cbf will be essentially irrelevant on the religious landscape.
non denoms are growing. many people are tired of the old regimes and dichotomies.
in summary, churches built up nominal members for almost 200 years and they are now being culled out due to the changing cultural landscape.
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