Religion in the United States

From Wikipedia - Reading time: 88 min

Religious affiliation in the United States, per Gallup, Inc. (2023)[1]

  Protestant (33%)
  Catholic (22%)
  Christian (unspecified) (11%)
  Jewish (2%)
  Mormon (1%)
  Another religion (6%)
  No religion (22%)
  No answer (3%)

Religion in the United States is both widespread and diverse, with higher reported levels of belief than other wealthy Western nations.[2][3][4] Polls indicate that an overwhelming majority of Americans believe in a higher power (2021),[5] engage in spiritual practices (2022),[6] and consider themselves religious or spiritual (2017).[7][8]

Christianity is the most widely professed religion, with the majority of Americans being Evangelicals, Mainline Protestants, or Catholics,[9][10] although its dominance has declined in recent decades, and as of 2012 Protestants no longer formed a majority in the US.[11] The United States has the largest Christian and Protestant population in the world.[12] Judaism is the second-largest religion in the US, practiced by 2% of the population, followed by Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam, each with 1% of the population.[13] States vary in religiousity from Mississippi, where 63% of adults self-describe as very religious, to New Hampshire where only 20% do.[14] The elected legislators of Congress overwhelmingly identify as religious and Christian; with few exceptions, both the Republican and Democratic parties nominate those who are.[15][16] Religious figures (Carrie Nation, William Jennings Bryan, Martin Luther King Jr., Wallace Fard Muhammad, Jimmy Carter, Jerry Falwell), have played a significant role in American politics.

Among the historical and social characteristics of the United States that some scholars of religion credit for the country's high level of religiousness include its Constitutional guarantees of Freedom of religion and legal tradition of separation of church and state;[17][18] the early immigration of religious dissenters from Northwestern Europe (Anglicans, Quakers, Mennonites, and other mainline Protestants); the religious revivalism of the first (1730s and 1740s), and second (1790s and 1840s) Great Awakenings, which led to an enormous growth in Christian congregations -- from 10% of Americans being members before the Awakenings, to 80% belonging after.[19]

The aftermath led to what historian Martin Marty calls the "Evangelical Empire", a period in which evangelicals dominated US cultural institutions.[20] They supported (and opposed) measures to abolish slavery, further women's rights, enact prohibition, and reform education and criminal justice.[21] New Protestant denominations were formed (Adventism, Jehovah's Witnesses, the Latter Day Saint movement (Mormonism), Churches of Christ and Church of Christ, Scientist, Unitarian and Universalist, Pentecostalism).[22] Outside of Protestantism, an unprecedented number of Catholic and Jewish immigrants arrived in the United States during the immigrant waves of the mid to late 19th and 20th century.

Social scientists have noted that beginning in the early 1990s, the percentage of Americans professing no religious affiliation began to rise from 6% in 1991[23] to 29% in 2021[24][25][26] — with younger people having higher rates of unaffiliation.[23] Similarly, polling indicated a decline in church attendance,[27] and the number of people agreeing with the statement that religion is "very important" in their lives.[28] Explanations for this trend include lack of trust,[29] backlash against the religious right in the 1980s,[30] sexual abuse scandals in established religions,[31][32] the end of the Cold War (and its connection of religiosity with patriotism), and the September 11 attacks (by religious Jihadists).[23][33] Nonetheless, the majority of the "Nones", those without a religious affiliation, have belief in a higher power and spiritual forces beyond the natural world.[34][35]

History

[edit]
Pilgrims Going to Church by George Henry Boughton (1867)

Ever since its early colonial days, when some Protestant dissenter English and German settlers moved in search of religious freedom, America has been profoundly influenced by religion.[36] Throughout its history, religious involvement among American citizens has grown since 1776 from 17% of the US population to 62% in 2000.[37] Approximately 35-40 percent of Americans regularly attended religious services from eighteenth-century colonial America up to 1940.[17] That influence continues in American culture, social life, and politics.[38] Several of the original Thirteen Colonies were established by settlers who wished to practice their own religion within a community of like-minded people: the Massachusetts Bay Colony was established by English Puritans (Congregationalists), Pennsylvania by British Quakers, Maryland by English Catholics, and Virginia by English Anglicans. Despite these, and as a result of intervening religious strife and preference in England[39] the Plantation Act 1740 would set official policy for new immigrants coming to British America until the American Revolution. While most settlers and colonists during this time were Protestant, a few early Catholic and Jewish settlers also arrived from Northwestern Europe into the colonies; however, their numbers were very slight compared to the Protestant majority. Even in the "Catholic Proprietary" or colony of Maryland, the vast majority of Maryland colonists were Protestant by 1670.[40]

The text of the First Amendment in the US Constitution states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."[41] It guarantees the free exercise of religion while also preventing the government from establishing a state religion. However, the states were not bound by the provision, and as late as the 1830s Massachusetts provided tax money to local Congregational churches.[42] Since the 1940s, the Supreme Court has interpreted the Fourteenth Amendment as applying the First Amendment to state and local governments.[citation needed]

President John Adams and a unanimous Senate endorsed the Treaty of Tripoli in 1797 that stated: "the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion."[43]

Expert researchers and authors have referred to the United States as a "Protestant nation" or "founded on Protestant principles",[44][45][46][47] specifically emphasizing its Calvinist heritage.[48][49]

The modern official motto of the United States of America, as established in a 1956 law signed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, is "In God We Trust".[50][51][52] The phrase first appeared on US coins in 1864.[51]

According to a 2002 survey by the Pew Research Center, nearly 6 in 10 Americans said that religion plays an important role in their lives, compared to 33% in Great Britain, 27% in Italy, 21% in Germany, 12% in Japan, and 11% in France. The survey report stated that the results showed America having a greater similarity to developing nations (where higher percentages say that religion plays an important role) than to other wealthy nations, where religion plays a minor role.[4]

In 1963, 90% of US adults claimed to be Christians while only 2% professed no religious identity.[citation needed] In 2016, 73.7% identified as Christians while 18.2% claimed no religious affiliation.[53] In 2019, Pew Research Center survey report concluded that "the religiously unaffiliated share of the population, consisting of people who describe their religious identity as atheist, agnostic or 'nothing in particular,' now stands at 26%, up from 17% in 2009" and that "both Protestantism and Catholicism are experiencing losses of population share."[54][55] Many of the unaffiliated retain religious beliefs or practices without affiliating.[35][56][57] There have been variant proposed explanations for secularization including lack of trust in the labor market, with government, in marriage and in other aspects of life,[29] backlash against the religious right in the 1980s,[58] sexual abuse scandals, particularly those within the Southern Baptist Convention[59] and Catholic Church.[60]

Other signs of a decline in religiosity include a decline in the percentage of respondents who say religion is "very important" in their lives compared to those who say it is not (the answer "very important" falling from 70% in 1965 to 45% in 2023, and "not very important" rising from 7 to 28% over the same period in Gallup polls),[28] and a decline in church attendance (those who report attending church monthly or more often having declined from 52% to 45% from 2007 to 2018, according to a PEW poll).[27] Still other sources insist Americans are becoming more religious,[61] and surveys showing otherwise suffer from methodological deficiencies.[62]

Freedom of religion

[edit]
The Maryland Toleration Act secured religious liberty in the English colony of Maryland. Similar laws were passed in the Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Connecticut and Pennsylvania. These laws stood in direct contrast with the Puritan theocratic rule in the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies.[63]

According to Noah Feldman, the United States federal government was the first government to be designed with no established religion at all.[dubiousdiscuss][64] However, some states established religions until the 1830s.

Modeling the provisions concerning religion within the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, the framers of the Constitution rejected any religious test for office, and the First Amendment specifically denied the federal government any power to enact any law respecting either an establishment of religion or prohibiting its free exercise, thus protecting any religious organization, institution, or denomination from government interference. The decision was mainly influenced by European Rationalist and Protestant ideals, but was also a consequence of the pragmatic concerns of minority religious groups and small states that did not want to be under the power or influence of a national religion that did not represent them.[65]

Christianity

[edit]

The most popular religion in the United States is Christianity, comprising the majority of the population (73.7% of adults in 2016), with the majority of American Christians belonging to a Protestant denomination or a Protestant offshoot (such as the Latter Day Saint movement or the Jehovah's Witnesses).[66] According to the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies newsletter published March 2017, based on data from 2010, Christians were the largest religious population in all 3,143 counties in the country.[67] Roughly 48.9% of Americans are Protestants, 23.0% are Catholics, 1.8% are Mormons (members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints).[66] Christianity was introduced during the period of European colonization. The United States has the world's largest Christian population.[68][69]

According to membership statistics from current reports and official web sites, the five largest Christian denominations are:

The Southern Baptist Convention, with over 13 million adherents, is the largest of more than 200[75] distinctly named Protestant denominations.[76] In 2007, members of evangelical churches comprised 26% of the American population, while another 18% belonged to mainline Protestant churches, and 7% belonged to historically black churches.[77]

A 2015 study estimates some 450,000 Christian believers from a Muslim background in the country, most of them belonging to some form of Protestantism.[78] In 2010 there were approximately 180,000 Arab Americans and about 130,000 Iranian Americans who converted from Islam to Christianity. Dudley Woodbury, a Fulbright scholar of Islam, estimates that 20,000 Muslims convert to Christianity annually in the United States.[79]

Protestant denominations

[edit]
A Congregational church in Cheshire, Connecticut

Beginning around 1600, Northwestern European settlers introduced the Anglican and Puritan religion, as well as Baptist, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Quaker, and Moravian denominations.[80] Historians agree that members of mainline Protestant denominations have played leadership roles in many aspects of American life, including politics, business, science, the arts, and education. They founded most of the country's leading institutes of higher education.[81] According to Harriet Zuckerman, 72% of American Nobel Prize laureates between 1901 and 1972, have identified from Protestant background.[82]

Traditionally Episcopalians[83] and Presbyterians[84] tended to be wealthier and better educated than most other religious groups, and numbers of the most wealthy and affluent American families as the Vanderbilts[83] and Astors,[83] Rockefeller,[85][86] Du Pont,[86] Roosevelt, Forbes, Fords,[86] Whitneys,[83] Morgans[83] and Harrimans were Mainline Protestant families,[83][87] although 2015/2016 (Pew) studies found households affiliated with Judaism and Hinduism to be more likely to have incomes over $100,000 per year than those in the mainline tradition Protestants, with other American religious groups having lower median incomes.[88][89]

Some of the first colleges and universities in America, including Harvard,[90] Yale,[91] Princeton,[92] Columbia,[93] Dartmouth,[94] Pennsylvania,[95][96] Duke,[97] Boston,[98] Williams, Bowdoin, Middlebury,[99] and Amherst, all were founded by mainline Protestant denominations. By the 1920s most had weakened or dropped their formal connection with a denomination. James Hunter argues:

The private schools and colleges established by the mainline Protestant denominations, as a rule, still want to be known as places that foster values, but few will go so far as to identify those values as Christian.... Overall, the distinctiveness of mainline Protestant identity has largely dissolved since the 1960s.[100]

Great Awakenings and other Protestant descendants

[edit]

Several Christian groups were founded in America during the Great Awakenings. Interdenominational evangelicalism and Pentecostalism emerged; new Protestant denominations such as Adventism; non-denominational movements such as the Restoration Movement (which over time separated into the Churches of Christ, the Christian churches and churches of Christ, and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)); Jehovah's Witnesses (called "Bible Students" in the latter part of the 19th century); and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormonism).

Catholicism

[edit]
The Founding of Maryland (1634) depicts Father Andrew White, a Jesuit missionary in the left and colonists meeting the people of the Yaocomico branch of the Piscatawy Indian Nation in St. Mary's City, Maryland, the site of Maryland's first colonial settlement.[101]

While the Puritans were securing their Commonwealth, members of the Catholic Church in England were also planning a refuge, "for they too were being persecuted on account of their religion."[102] Among those interested in providing a refuge for Catholics was the second Lord of Baltimore, George Calvert, who established Maryland, a "Catholic Proprietary", in 1634,[102] more than sixty years after the founding of the Spanish Florida mission of St. Augustine.[103] The first US Catholic university, Georgetown University, was founded in 1789. Though small in number in the beginning, Catholicism grew over the centuries to become the largest single denomination in the United States, primarily through immigration, but also through the acquisition of continental territories under the jurisdiction of French and Spanish Catholic powers.[104] Though the European Catholic and indigenous population of these former territories were small,[105] the material cultures there, the original mission foundations with their canonical Catholic names, are still recognized today (as they were formerly known) in any number of cities in California, New Mexico and Louisiana. (The most recognizable cities of California, for example, are named after Catholic saints.)

The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C., is the largest Catholic church in the United States.

While Catholic Americans were present in small numbers early in United States history, both in Maryland and in the former French and Spanish colonies that were eventually absorbed into the United States, the vast majority of Catholics in the United States today derive from unprecedented waves of immigration from primarily Catholic countries and regions (Ireland was still part of the United Kingdom until 1921 and German unification didn't officially occur until 1871)[106] during the mid-to-late 19th and 20th century. Irish, Hispanic, Italian, Portuguese, French Canadian, Polish, German,[107] and Lebanese (Maronite) immigrants largely contributed to the growth in the number of Catholics in the United States. Irish and German Catholics, by far, provided the greatest number of Catholic immigrants before 1900. From 1815 until the close of the Civil War in 1865, 1,683,791 Irish Catholics immigrated to the US. The German states followed, providing "the second largest immigration of Catholics, clergy and lay, some 606,791 in the period 1815-1865, and another 680,000 between 1865 and 1900, while the Irish immigration in the latter period amounted to only 520,000."[108] Of the four major national groups of clergy (early and mid-19th century)—Irish, German, Anglo-American, and French—"the French emigre priests may be said to have been the outstanding men, intellectually."[109] As the number of Catholics increased in the late 19th and 20th century, they built up a vast system of schools (from primary schools to universities) and hospitals. Since then, the Catholic Church has founded hundreds of other colleges and universities, along with thousands of primary and secondary schools. Schools like the University of Notre Dame is ranked best in its state (Indiana), as Georgetown University is ranked best in the District of Columbia. The following 10 Catholic universities are also ranked among the top 100 universities in the US: University of Notre Dame, Georgetown University, Boston College, Santa Clara University, Villanova University, Marquette University, Fordham University, Gonzaga University, Loyola Marymount University, and the University of San Diego. [110]

Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy

[edit]

Eastern Orthodoxy was present in North America since the Russian colonization of Alaska; however, Alaska would not become a United States territory until 1867, and most Eastern Orthodox Russian settlers in Alaska returned to Russia after the American acquisition of the Alaskan territory. However the native converts and a few priests remained behind, and Alaska still is represented[clarification needed].

Most Eastern Orthodoxes arrived in the contiguous United States as immigrants beginning in the late 19th century and throughout the 20th century. Two major groups brought Eastern Orthodoxy to America, one were Eastern Europeans like Russians, Greeks, Ukrainians, Serbians and others. The second major group were from Levant like Lebanese, Syrians, Palestinians and others.

Armenians, Copts and Syriacs, also brought Oriental Orthodoxy to America.[111][112]

Demographics of various Christian groups

[edit]

The strength of various sects varies greatly in different regions of the country, with rural parts of the South having many evangelicals but very few Catholics (except Louisiana and the Gulf Coast, and from among the Hispanic community, both of which consist mainly of Catholics), while urbanized areas of the north Atlantic states and Great Lakes, as well as many industrial and mining towns, are heavily Catholic, though still quite mixed, especially due to the heavily Protestant African-American communities. In 1990, nearly 72% of the population of Utah was Mormon, as well as 26% of neighboring Idaho.[113] Lutheranism is most prominent in the Upper Midwest, with North Dakota having the highest percentage of Lutherans (35% according to a 2001 survey).[114]

The largest religion, Christianity, has proportionately diminished since 1990. While the absolute number of Christians rose from 1990 to 2008, the percentage of Christians dropped from 86% to 76%.[115] A nationwide telephone interview of 1,002 adults conducted by The Barna Group found that 70% of American adults believe that God is "the all-powerful, all-knowing creator of the universe who still rules it today", and that 9% of all American adults and 0.5% young adults hold to what the survey defined as a "biblical worldview".[116]

Episcopalian, Presbyterian, Eastern Orthodox and United Church of Christ members[117] have the highest number of graduate and post-graduate degrees per capita of all Christian denominations in the United States,[118][119] as well as the most high-income earners.[120][121] However, owing to the sheer size or demographic head count of Catholics, more individual Catholics have graduate degrees and are in the highest income brackets than have or are individuals of any other religious community.[122]

Other Abrahamic religions

[edit]

Judaism

[edit]

After Christianity, Judaism is the next largest religious affiliation in the United States, though this identification is not necessarily indicative of religious beliefs or practices.[115] The Jewish population in the United States is approximately 6 million.[123][124] A significant number of people identify themselves as American Jews on ethnic and cultural grounds, rather than religious ones. For example, 19% of self-identified American Jews do not believe God exists.[125] The 2001 ARIS study projected from its sample that there are about 5.3 million adults in the American Jewish population: 2.83 million adults (1.4% of the US adult population) are estimated to be adherents of Judaism; 1.08 million are estimated to be adherents of no religion; and 1.36 million are estimated to be adherents of a religion other than Judaism.[126] ARIS 2008 estimated about 2.68 million adults (1.2%) in the country identify Judaism as their faith.[115] According to a 2017 study, Judaism is the religion of approximately 2% of the American population.[53] According to a 2020 study by the Pew Research Center, the core American Jewish population is estimated at 7.5 million people, this includes 5.8 million Jewish adults.[127] According to study by Steinhardt Social Research Institute, as of 2020, the core American Jewish population is estimated at 7.6 million people, this includes 4.9 million adults who identify their religion as Jewish, 1.2 million Jewish adults who identify with no religion, and 1.6 million Jewish children.[128]

Touro Synagogue, (built 1759) in Newport, Rhode Island has the oldest still existing synagogue building in the United States.

Jews have been present in what is now the United States since the 17th century, and specifically allowed since the British colonial Plantation Act 1740. Although small Western European communities initially developed and grew, large-scale immigration did not take place until the late 19th century, largely as a result of persecutions in parts of Eastern Europe. The Jewish community in the United States is composed predominantly of Ashkenazi Jews whose ancestors emigrated from Central and Eastern Europe. There are, however, small numbers of older (and some recently arrived) communities of Sephardi Jews with roots tracing back to 15th century Iberia (Spain, Portugal, and North Africa). There are also Mizrahi Jews (from the Middle East, Caucasia and Central Asia), as well as much smaller numbers of Ethiopian Jews, Indian Jews, and others from various smaller Jewish ethnic divisions. Approximately 25% of the Jewish American population lives in New York City.[129]

According to the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies newsletter published March 2017, based on data from 2010, Jews were the largest minority religion in 231 counties out of the 3143 counties in the country.[67] According to a 2014 survey conducted by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public life, 1.7% of adults in the US identify Judaism as their religion. Among those surveyed, 44% said they were Reform Jews, 22% said they were Conservative Jews, and 14% said they were Orthodox Jews.[130][131] According to the 1990 National Jewish Population Survey, 38% of Jews were affiliated with the Reform tradition, 35% were Conservative, 6% were Orthodox, 1% were Reconstructionists, 10% linked themselves to some other tradition, and 10% said they are "just Jewish".[132]

This way, the American Jews' majority continue to identify themselves with Jewish main traditions, such as Conservative, Orthodox and Reform Judaism.[133][134] But, already in the 1980s, 20–30 percent of members of largest Jewish communities, such as of New York City, Chicago, Miami, and others, rejected a denominational label.[133]

According to the 2001 National Jewish Population Survey, 4.3 million American Jewish adults have some sort of strong connection to the Jewish community, whether religious or cultural.[135] Jewishness is generally considered an ethnic identity as well as a religious one. Among the 4.3 million American Jews described as "strongly connected" to Judaism, over 80% have some sort of active engagement with Judaism, ranging from attendance at daily prayer services on one end of the spectrum to attending Passover Seders or lighting Hanukkah candles on the other. The survey also discovered that Jews in the Northeast and Midwest are generally more observant than Jews in the South or West.

The Jewish American community has higher household incomes than average, and is one of the best educated religious communities in the United States.[117]

Islam

[edit]
The Islamic Center of Washington in the nation's capital is a leading American Islamic Center.

Islam is probably the third largest religion in numbers in the United States, after Christianity and Judaism, followed, according to Gallup, by 0.8% of the population in 2016.[66] Hinduism and Buddhism follow it closely in numbers (in 2014 the large scale Religious Life Survey found Islam with 0.9% and the other two with 0.7% each[117]). According to the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies newsletter published in March 2017, based on data from 2010, Muslims were the largest minority religion in 392 counties out of the 3143 counties in the country.[67] According to the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding (ISPU) in 2018, there are approximately 3.45 million Muslims living in the United States, with 2.05 million adults, and the rest being children.[136] Across faith groups, ISPU found in 2017 that Muslims were most likely to be born outside of the US (50%), with 36% having undergone naturalization. American Muslims are also America's most diverse religious community with 25% identifying as black or African American, 24% identifying as white, 18% identifying as Asian/Chinese/Japanese, 18% identifying as Arab, and 5% identifying as Hispanic.[137] In addition to diversity, Americans Muslims are most likely to report being low income, and among those who identify as middle class, the majority are Muslim women, not men. Although American Muslim education levels are similar to other religious communities, namely Christians, within the Muslim American population, Muslim women surpass Muslim men in education, with 31% of Muslim women having graduated from a four-year university. 90% of Muslim Americans identify as straight.[137]

Islam in America effectively began with the arrival of African slaves. It is estimated that about 10% of African slaves transported to the United States were Muslim.[138] Most, however, became Christians, and the United States did not have a significant Muslim population until the arrival of immigrants from Arab and East Asian Muslim areas.[139] According to some experts,[140] Islam later gained a higher profile through the Nation of Islam, a religious group that appealed to black Americans after the 1940s; its prominent converts included Malcolm X and Muhammad Ali.[141][142] The first Muslim elected to Congress was Keith Ellison in 2006,[143] followed by André Carson in 2008.[144]

Out of all religious groups surveyed by ISPU, Muslims were found to be the most likely to report experiences of religious discrimination (61%). That can also be broken down when looking at gender (with Muslim women more likely than Muslim men to experience racial discrimination), age (with young people more likely to report experiencing racial discrimination than older people), and race, (with Arab Muslims the most likely to report experiencing religious discrimination). Muslims born in the United States are more likely to experience all three forms of discrimination, gender, religious, and racial.[137]

Research indicates that Muslims in the United States are generally more assimilated and prosperous than their counterparts in Europe.[145][146][147] Like other subcultural and religious communities, the Islamic community has generated its own political organizations and charity organizations.

Bahá'í Faith

[edit]
Bahá'í House of Worship (built 1953) in Wilmette, Illinois, is the oldest extant Bahá'í house of worship in the world and the only one in the United States.

The Baháʼí Faith was first mentioned in the United States in 1893 at the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago.[148] Soon after, early American converts began embracing the new religion. Thornton Chase was the first American Baháʼí, dating from 1894.[149] One of the first Baháʼí institutions in the US was established in Chicago to facilitate the establishment of the first Baháʼí House of Worship in the West, which was eventually built in Wilmette, Illinois and dedicated in 1953.[150]

Worldwide, the religion has grown faster than the rate of population growth over the 20th century,[151] and has been recognized since the 1980s as the most widespread minority religion in the countries of the world.[152] Similarly, by 2020, the religion was the largest minority religion in about half of the counties.[153] Since about 1970 the state with the single largest Baháʼí population was South Carolina.[154] From 2010 data the largest populations of Baháʼís at the county-by-county level are in Los Angeles, CA, Palm Beach, FL, Harris County, TX, and Cook County, IL.[155] However, estimates of the total number of Baháʼís varies widely from around 175,000[156] to 500,000.[157]

Druze Faith

[edit]

Druze began migrating to the United States in the late 1800s from the Levant (Syria and Lebanon).[158] Druze emigration to the Americas increased at the outset of the 20th century due to the famine during World War I that killed an estimated one third to one half of the population, the 1860 Mount Lebanon civil war, and the Lebanese Civil War between 1975 and 1990.[158] The United States is the second largest home of Druze communities outside the Middle East after Venezuela (60,000).[159] According to some estimates there are about 30,000[160] to 50,000[159] Druzes in the United States, with the largest concentration in Southern California.[160] American Druze are mostly of Lebanese and Syrian descent.[160]

Members of the Druze faith face the difficulty of finding a Druze partner and practicing endogamy; marriage outside the Druze faith is strongly discouraged according to the Druze doctrine. They also face the pressure of keeping the religion alive because many Druze immigrants to the United States converted to Protestantism, becoming communicants of the Presbyterian or Methodist churches.[161][162]

Rastafari

[edit]

Rastafarians began migrating to the United States in the 1950s, '60s and '70s from the religion's 1930s birthplace, Jamaica.[163][164]

Marcus Garvey, who is considered a prophet by many Rastafarians, rose to prominence and cultivated many of his ideas in the United States.[165][166]

Eastern religions

[edit]

Hinduism

[edit]
Saiva Siddhanta Temple in Kauai Island in Hawaii is the only Hindu monastery in the United States

Hinduism is the fourth largest faith in the United States, representing approximately 1% of the population in 2010s.[53][167] In 2001, there were an estimated 766,000 Hindus in the US, about 0.2% of the total population.[168][169]

The first time Hinduism entered the United States is not clearly identifiable. However, large groups of Hindus have immigrated from India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, other parts of the Caribbean, southern Africa, eastern Africa, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Mauritius, Fiji, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and other regions and countries since the enactment of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965. During the 1960s and 1970s, Hinduism exercised fascination contributing to the development of New Age thought. During the same decades the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), a Vaishnavite Hindu reform organization, was founded in the US by A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. In 2003, the Hindu American Foundation—a national institution protecting rights of the Hindu community of US—was founded.

According to the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies newsletter published March 2017, based on data from 2010, Hindus were the largest minority religion in 92 counties out of the 3143 counties in the country.[67]

American Hindus have one of the highest rates of educational attainment and household income among all religious communities, and tend to have lower divorce rates.[117] Hindus also have higher acceptance towards homosexuality (71%), which is higher than the general public (62%).[170]

Buddhism

[edit]
Services at the Hompa Hongwanji Buddhist Temple, Los Angeles, around 1925

Buddhism entered the United States during the 19th century with the arrival of the first immigrants from East Asia. The first Buddhist temple was established in San Francisco in 1853 by Chinese Americans. The first prominent US citizen to publicly convert to Buddhism was Colonel Henry Steel Olcott in 1880 who is still honored in Sri Lanka for his Buddhist revival efforts. An event that contributed to the strengthening of Buddhism in the United States was the Parliament of the World's Religions in 1893, which was attended by many Buddhist delegates sent from India, China, Japan, Vietnam, Thailand and Sri Lanka.

During the late 19th century Buddhist missionaries from Japan traveled to the US. During the same time period, US intellectuals started to take interest in Buddhism.

The early 20th century was characterized by a continuation of tendencies that had their roots in the 19th century. The second half, by contrast, saw the emergence of new approaches, and the move of Buddhism into the mainstream and making itself a mass and social religious phenomenon.[171][172]

According to a 2016 study, Buddhists are approximately 1% of the American population.[53] According to the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies newsletter published March 2017, based on data from 2010, Buddhists were the largest minority religion in 186 counties out of the 3143 counties in the country.[67]

Sikhism

[edit]
Front of the Stockton Sikh Temple, circa 1915. This wooden structure was replaced with a new building in 1929.

Sikhism is a religion originating from the Indian subcontinent which was introduced into the United States when, around the turn of the 20th century, Sikhs started emigrating to the United States in significant numbers to work on farms in California. They were the first community to come from India to the US in large numbers.[173] The first Sikh Gurdwara in America was built in Stockton, California, in 1912.[174] In 2007, there were estimated to be between 250,000 and 500,000 Sikhs living in the United States, with the largest populations living on the East and West Coasts, with additional populations in Detroit, Chicago, and Austin.[175][176]

The United States also has a number of non-Punjabi converts to Sikhism.[177]

Jainism

[edit]

Adherents of Jainism first arrived in the United States in the 20th century. The most significant time of Jain immigration was in the early 1970s. The United States has since become a center of the Jain Diaspora. The Federation of Jain Associations in North America is an umbrella organization of local American and Canadian Jain congregations to preserve, practice, and promote Jainism and the Jain way of life.[178]

Taoism

[edit]

Taoism was popularized throughout the world by the writings and teachings of Laozi and other Taoists as well as the practice of qigong, tai chi, and other Chinese martial arts.[179] The first Taoists in the United States were immigrants from China during the mid-nineteenth century. They settled mostly in California where the built the first Taoist temples in the country, including the Tin How Temple in San Francisco's Chinatown and the Joss House in Weaverville. Currently, the Temple of Original Simplicity is located outside of Boston, Massachusetts.

In 2004, there were an estimated 56,000 Taoists in the US.[180]

Native American religions

[edit]
Bear Butte, in South Dakota, is a sacred site for over 30 Plains tribes.
Shoshone Sun Dance at Fort Hall, 1925.

Native American ethnic and indigenous faiths historically exhibited much diversity, and are often characterized by animism or panentheism and shamanism.[181][182] Common concept is the supernatural world of deities, spirits and wonders, such as the Algonquian manitou or the Lakota's wakan.[183][184] In most areas, without Christian influence, was known a suprem Great Spirit or sky deity.[184] Their great creation myths and sacred oral tradition in whole, as anthropologists note, are comparable to the Christian Bible.[185]

The membership of Native American religions in the 21st century comprises about 9,000 people.[186] Since Native Americans practicing traditional ceremonies do not usually have public organizations or membership rolls, these "members" estimates are likely substantially lower than the actual numbers of people who participate in traditional ceremonies.[187]

The following is a list of indigenous American religions those still survive to some degree at the beginning of the 21st century:[188][182] Alaska Native religions, Abenaki, Anishinaabe (Ojibwe, Midewiwin society), Apache, Blackfoot, Californian (Kuksu religion, Miwok, Ohlone and Pomo), Choctaw, Crow, Haida, Ho-Chunk, Iroquois (Cherokee, Mohawk, Muscogee Creek, Seneca and Wyandot), Jivaroan, Kwakwakaʼwakw, Lenape, Mapuche, Navajo, Nuu-chah-nulth, Pawnee, Pueblo (Acoma Pueblo, Hopi and Zuni), Sioux (Assiniboine, Dakota and Lakota), Tsimshian, Ute, and Yaqui beliefs.

There are also numerous indigenist revitalization movements within them that divided to fundamentalist and reform.[189][190]

Generally fundamentalist movements include the Pueblo Revolt (1680s), the Shawnee Prophet movement (1805–1811), the Cherokee Prophet movement (1811–1813), the Red Stick War (1813–1814), White Path's Rebellion (1826), the Winnebago Prophet movement (1830–1832), the first Ghost Dance (1869–1870) and the second Ghost Dance (1889–1890), and the Snake movements among the Cherokee, Choctaw, and Muscogee Creek peoples during the 1890s.[190]

Generally syncretic reform movements include the Yaqui religion (1500–present), the Longhouse religion (1797–present), the Munsee Prophetess movement (1804–1805), the Kickapoo Prophet movement (1815–present), the Cherokee Keetoowah Society (1858–present), the Washat Dreamers religion (1850–present), the Indian Shakers (1881–present), the Native American Church (1800s–present), the Shoshoni Sun Dance (1890–present), the New Tidings religion or Wocekiye of the Canadian Sioux (1900–present), and Ojibwe Drummer movement (contemporary).[190]

Thus, the Longhouse Religion combines and reinterprets elements of traditional Iroquois beliefs with a revised code such as must refrain from drinking, selling of land, intensive animal farming and witchcraft, meant to revive traditional consciousness after a long period of cultural disintegration following colonization. It founded in 1797 by the Seneca prophet Handsome Lake (Sganyodaiyoˀ). The movement had about 5,000 practicing members as of 1969.[191]

Since 1889, in accordance with the millenarian teachings of the Northern Paiute spiritual leader Wovoka, the Ghost Dance ceremony was incorporated into numerous native belief systems.[192][193]

The Sun Dance is a prominent living ceremony and movement, the Shoshone by origin in 1890, practiced by a number of peoples, primarily those of the Plains Nations. Many of the ceremonies have features in common, such as specific dances and songs, the use of drums, the ceremonial pipe, praying, fasting and, in some cases, the piercing of the skin as a sacrifice. At most ceremonies, other participants stay in the surrounding camp and pray in support of the dancers.[190][194]

The Native American Church is a 19th-century origin syncretistic religious tradition involving the ceremonial and sacred use of Lophophora williamsii (peyote).[195][196][197][198]

Other religions

[edit]

Many other religions are represented in the United States, including Shinto, Caodaism, Thelema, Santería, Kemetism, Neopaganism, Zoroastrianism, Vodou, Druze and many forms of New Age spirituality as well as satirical religions such as Pastafarianism.

Neopaganism

[edit]

Neopaganism in the United States is represented by widely different movements and organizations. The largest Neopagan religion is Wicca, followed by Neo-Druidism.[199][200] Other neopagan movements include Germanic Neopaganism, Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism, Hellenic Polytheistic Reconstructionism, and Semitic neopaganism.

Wicca

[edit]

Wicca advanced in North America in the 1960s by Raymond Buckland, an expatriate Briton who visited Gardner's Isle of Man coven to gain initiation.[201] Universal Eclectic Wicca was popularized in 1969 for a diverse membership drawing from both Dianic and British Traditional Wiccan backgrounds.[202]

Druidry

[edit]

According to the American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS), there are approximately 30,000 druids in the United States.[203] Modern Druidism arrived in North America first in the form of fraternal Druidic organizations in the nineteenth century, and orders such as the Ancient Order of Druids in America were founded as distinct American groups as early as 1912. In 1963, the Reformed Druids of North America (RDNA) was founded by students at Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota. They adopted elements of Neopaganism into their practices, for instance celebrating the festivals of the Wheel of the Year.[204]

New Thought Movement

[edit]

A group of churches which started in the 1830s in the United States is known under the banner of "New Thought". These churches share a spiritual, metaphysical and mystical predisposition and understanding of the Bible and were strongly influenced by the Transcendentalist movement, particularly the work of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Another antecedent of this movement was Swedenborgianism, founded on the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg in 1787.[205] The New Thought concept was named by Emma Curtis Hopkins ("teacher of teachers") after Hopkins broke off from Mary Baker Eddy's Church of Christ, Scientist. The movement had been previously known as the Mental Sciences or the Christian Sciences. The three major branches are Religious Science, Unity Church and Divine Science.

Unitarian Universalism

[edit]

Unitarian Universalists (UUs) are among the most liberal of all religious denominations in America.[206] The shared creed includes beliefs in inherent dignity, a common search for truth, respect for beliefs of others, compassion, and social action.[207] They are unified by their shared search for spiritual growth and by the understanding that an individual's theology is a result of that search and not obedience to an authoritarian requirement.[208] UUs have historical ties to anti-war, civil rights, and LGBT rights movements,[209] as well as providing inclusive church services for the broad spectrum of liberal Christians, liberal Jews, secular humanists, LGBT, Jewish-Christian parents and partners, Earth-centered/Wicca, and Buddhist meditation adherents.[210] In fact, many UUs also identify as belonging to another religious group, including atheism and agnosticism.[211]

No religion

[edit]

In 2020, approximately 28% of Americans declared themselves to be not religiously affiliated.[212]

Agnosticism, atheism, and humanism

[edit]

A 2001 survey directed by Dr. Ariela Keysar for the City University of New York indicated that, amongst the more than 100 categories of response, "no religious identification" had the greatest increase in population in both absolute and percentage terms. This category included atheists, agnostics, humanists, and others with no stated religious preferences. Figures are up from 14.3 million in 1990 to 34.2 million in 2008, representing an increase from 8% of the total population in 1990 to 15% in 2008.[115] A nationwide Pew Research study published in 2008 put the figure of unaffiliated persons at 16.1%,[169] while another Pew study published in 2012 was described as placing the proportion at about 20% overall and roughly 33% for the 18–29-year-old demographic.[213] It is unknown why the number of self-identified "nones" is rising, although it may relate to a general decline of trust in institutions,[29] the September 11 attacks,[214] rise of the religious right,[215] and sexual abuse scandals, particularly those within the Southern Baptist Convention[216] and Catholic Church.[217] The majority of "nones" have religion-like beliefs and believe in some conception of a higher power.[35]

In a 2006 nationwide poll, University of Minnesota researchers found that despite an increasing acceptance of religious diversity, atheists were generally distrusted by other Americans, who trusted them less than Muslims, recent immigrants and other minority groups in "sharing their vision of American society". They also associated atheists with undesirable attributes such as amorality, criminal behavior, rampant materialism and cultural elitism.[218][219] However, the same study also reported that "The researchers also found acceptance or rejection of atheists is related not only to personal religiosity, but also to one's exposure to diversity, education and political orientation – with more educated, East and West Coast Americans more accepting of atheists than their Midwestern counterparts."[220] Some surveys have indicated that doubts about the existence of the divine were growing quickly among Americans under 30.[221]

On March 24, 2012, American atheists sponsored the Reason Rally in Washington, D.C., followed by the American Atheist Convention in Bethesda, Maryland. Organizers called the estimated crowd of 8,000–10,000 the largest-ever US gathering of atheists in one place.[222]

Secular people in the United States, such as atheist and agnostics, have a distinctive secular tradition that can be traced for at least hundreds of years. They sometimes create religion-like institutions and communities, create rituals, and debate aspects of their shared beliefs.[223]

Belief in the existence of a god

[edit]

Various polls have been conducted to determine Americans' actual beliefs regarding a god. (Different wording of the poll question gives significantly different results.):[224]

  • A 2021 Pew Research Center Survey found that 91% of American believe in a higher power.[225]
  • A 2018 Pew Research Center Survey found that 90% of American believe in a higher power.[226]
  • In 2014 the Pew Research Center's Religious Landscape Study showed 63% of Americans believed in God and were "absolutely certain" in their view, while the figure rose to 89% including those who were agnostic.[227]
  • A 2012 WIN-Gallup International poll showed that 5% of Americans considered themselves "convinced" atheists, which was a fivefold increase from the last time the survey was taken in 2005, and 5% said they did not know or else did not respond.[228]
  • A 2012 Pew Research Center survey found that doubts about the existence of a god had grown among younger Americans, with 68% telling Pew they never doubt God's existence, a 15-point drop in five years. In 2007, 83% of American millennials said they never doubted God's existence.[221][229]
  • A 2011 Gallup poll found 92% of Americans said yes to the basic question "Do you believe in God?", while 7% said no and 1% had no opinion.[230]
  • A 2010 Gallup poll found 80% of Americans believe in a god, 12% believe in a universal spirit, 6% don't believe in either, 1% chose "other", and 1% had no opinion. 80% is a decrease from the 1940s, when Gallup first asked this question.
  • A late 2009 online Harris poll of 2,303 US adults (18 and older)[231] found that "82% of adult Americans believe in God", the same number as in two earlier polls in 2005 and 2007. Another 9% said they did not believe in God, and 9% said that they were not sure. It further concluded, "Large majorities also believe in miracles (76%), heaven (75%), that Jesus is God or the Son of God (73%), in angels (72%), the survival of the soul after death (71%), and in the resurrection of Jesus (70%). Less than half (45%) of adults believe in Darwin's theory of evolution but this is more than the 40% who believe in creationism..... Many people consider themselves Christians without necessarily believing in some of the key beliefs of Christianity. However, this is not true of born-again Christians. In addition to their religious beliefs, large minorities of adults, including many Christians, have "pagan" or pre-Christian beliefs such as a belief in ghosts, astrology, witches and reincarnation.... Because the sample is based on those who agreed to participate in the Harris Interactive panel, no estimates of theoretical sampling error can be calculated."
  • A 2008 survey of 1,000 people concluded that, based on their stated beliefs rather than their religious identification, 69.5% of Americans believe in a personal God, roughly 12.3% of Americans are atheist or agnostic, and another 12.1% are deistic (believing in a higher power/non-personal God, but no personal God).[115]
  • Mark Chaves, a Duke University professor of sociology, religion and divinity, found that 92% of Americans believed in God in 2008, but that significantly fewer Americans have great confidence in their religious leaders than a generation ago.[232]
  • According to a 2008 ARIS survey, belief in God varies considerably by region. The lowest rate is in the West with 59% reporting a belief in God, and the highest rate is in the South at 86%.[233]

Spiritual but not religious

[edit]

"Spiritual but not religious" (SBNR) is self-identified stance of spirituality that takes issue with organized religion as the sole or most valuable means of furthering spiritual growth. Spirituality places an emphasis upon the wellbeing of the "mind-body-spirit",[234] so holistic activities such as tai chi, reiki, and yoga are common within the SBNR movement.[235] In contrast to religion, spirituality has often been associated with the interior life of the individual.[236]

One fifth of the US public and a third of adults under the age of 30 are reportedly unaffiliated with any religion, however they identify as being spiritual in some way. Of these religiously unaffiliated Americans, 37% classify themselves as spiritual but not religious.[237]

According to some sociologists, perceptions of religious decline are a popular misconception.[61] They state that surveys showing so suffer from methodological deficiencies, that Americans are becoming more religious, and that Atheists and Agnostics make up a small and stable percentage of the population.[62][238] "Religious belief and interest" has remained relatively stable in recent years; "organizational participation", in contrast, has decreased.[239]

Major US-origin movements

[edit]

Christian

[edit]
The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts

Other

[edit]

Statistics and measuring religion

[edit]

Self-identified religiosity (2023 The Wall Street Journal-NORC poll)[271]

  Very religious (17%)
  Moderately religious (31%)
  Slightly religious (23%)
  Not religious at all (29%)

The US census does not ask about religion. Various groups have conducted surveys to determine approximate percentages of those affiliated with each religious group.

Census and independent polling

[edit]

Since the first American census in 1790, census forms have never asked the religion of participants, with Vincent P. Barabba, former head of the United States Census Bureau, stating in April 1976 that "asking such a question in the decennial census, in which replies are mandatory, would appear to infringe upon the traditional separation of church and state" and "could affect public cooperation in the census". Data on religious affiliation comes from independent pollsters[272] by the Pew Research Center and other agencies or, on membership, from religious associations, such the Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches of the National Council of Churches.

Problems measuring religion

[edit]

Inaccuracies of independent polling

[edit]

Independent polling results on religion are questionable due to numerous factors:[273]

  • polls consistently fail to predict political election outcomes, signifying consistent failure to capture the actual views of the population
  • very low response rates for all polls since the 1990s
  • biases in wording or topic affect how people respond to polls
  • polls categorize people based on limited choices
  • polls often generalize broadly
  • polls have shallow or superficial choices, which complicate capturing complexity of religious beliefs and practices
  • poll interviewer and respondent fatigue is very common

Researchers note that an estimated 20-40% of the population changes their self-reported religious affiliation/identity over time due to numerous factors and that usually it is their answers on surveys that change, not necessarily their religious practices or beliefs.[61]

Researchers advise caution when looking at the "Nones" demographics on surveys because different surveys systematically have discrepancies that amount to 8% and growing of estimates, part of it being that the respondents on surveys are not consistent and also the questions asked are worded differently, generating consistent discrepancies in responses.[274]

According to Gallup there are variations on the responses based on how they ask questions. They routinely ask on complex things like belief in God since the early 2000s in 3 different wordings and they constantly receive 3 different percentages in responses.[275]

The Association of Religion Data Archives (1900-2050)

[edit]
Major Religions[276]
Year All Christians Non-Religious Jewish Muslim Buddhists
1900 97.0 1.3 1.4
1950 93.1 3.3 3.1 0.1
1970 91.3 5.2 2.6 0.4 0.1
2000 82.0 12.0 1.9 1.2 1.2
2020 74.2 19.7 1.7 1.4 1.3
2050(P) 66.3 25.8 1.3 2.6 1.8
Major Christian Denominations[276]
Year Protestant Independents Unaffiliated Christian Catholic Orthodox
1900 48.7 8.8 24.8 14.2 0.5
1950 37.0 15.1 20.1 19.2 1.7
1970 28.8 17.8 19.6 23.1 2.1
2000 21.0 20.2 16.4 22.4 2.0
2020 16.3 19.3 14.1 22.3 2.2
2050(P) 15.8 19.1 8.0 21.1 2.3

Public Religion Research Institute data (2020)

[edit]

The Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) has made annual estimates about religious adherence in the United States every year since 2013, and they most recently updated their data in 2020. Their data can be broken down to the state level, and data has also been made available of several large metro areas. Data is collected from roughly 50,000 telephone interviews conducted every year.[277]

Their most recent data shows that approximately 70% of Americans are Christians (down from 71% in 2013), with about 46% of the population professing belief in Protestant Christianity, and another 22% adhering to Catholicism. About 23% of the population adheres to no religion, and 7% more of the population professes a Non-Christian religion (such as Judaism, Islam, or Hinduism).[277][278]

Religion in the United States according to the American Values Atlas published by the PRRI (2020)[277]
Religious Affiliation National % South % West % Midwest % Northeast %
Christian 69.7 69.7
 
74 65 72 67
Protestant 45.6 45.6
 
53 36 50 39
White Evangelical 14.5 14.5
 
18 10 18 9
White Mainline Protestant 16.4 16.4
 
17 14 21 15
Black Protestant 7.3 7.3
 
10 3 6 8
Hispanic Protestant 3.9 3.9
 
4 5 2 4
Other non-white Protestant 3.5 3.5
 
4 4 3 3
Catholic 21.8 21.8
 
19 24 21 26
White Catholic 11.7 11.7
 
9 9 15 16
Hispanic Catholic 8.2 8.2
 
8 13 4 8
Other non-white Catholic 1.9 1.9
 
2 2 2 2
Mormon 1.3 1.3
 
1 4 1 1
Jehovah's Witness 0.5 0.5
 
1 1 0 0
Orthodox Christian 0.5 0.5
 
0 0 0 1
Unaffiliated 23.3 23.3
 
21 27 22 24
Non-Christian 7.0 7
 
5 8 6 9
Jewish 1.4 1.4
 
1 1 1 3
Muslim 0.8 0.8
 
1 1 1 1
Buddhist 0.8 0.8
 
1 1 1 1
Hindu 0.5 0.5
 
0 1 0 1
Other non-Christian 3.5 3.5
 
2 4 3 3
Total 100 100
 
100 100 100 100

2014 Pew Research Center data

[edit]
The map above shows plurality religious denomination by state as of 2014 according to the Pew Research Center.
Protestantism
  70 - 79%
  60 - 69%
  50 - 59%
  40 - 49%
  30 - 39%
Catholicism
  40 - 49%
  30 - 39%
Mormonism
  50 - 59%
Unaffiliated
  30 - 39%
Religion in the United States according to the Pew Research Center (2014)[130]
Affiliation % of US population
Christian 70.6 70.6
 
Protestant 46.5 46.5
 
Evangelical Protestant 25.4 25.4
 
Mainline Protestant 14.7 14.7
 
Black church 6.5 6.5
 
Catholic 20.8 20.8
 
Mormon 1.6 1.6
 
Jehovah's Witnesses 0.8 0.8
 
Eastern Orthodox 0.5 0.5
 
Other Christian 0.4 0.4
 
Unaffiliated 22.8 22.8
 
Nothing in particular 15.8 15.8
 
Agnostic 4.0 4
 
Atheist 3.1 3.1
 
Non-Christian 5.9 5.9
 
Jewish 1.9 1.9
 
Muslim 0.9 0.9
 
Buddhist 0.7 0.7
 
Hindu 0.7 0.7
 
Other non-Christian 1.8 1.8
 
Don't know/refused answer 0.6 0.6
 
Total 100 100
 

2010 ASARB data

[edit]
The map above shows plurality religious denomination by state as of 2010 according to a survey of religious denominations. Protestantism
  60%+
  50 - 59%
  40 - 49%
  30 - 49%
Catholicism
  60%+
  50 - 59%
  40 - 49%
  30 - 39%
Mormonism
  60%+
  30 - 39%

The Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB) surveyed congregations for their memberships. Churches were asked for their membership numbers. Adjustments were made for those congregations that did not respond and for religious groups that reported only adult membership.[279] ASARB estimates that most of the churches not responding were black Protestant congregations. Significant difference in results from other databases include the lower representation of adherents of (1) all kinds (62.7%), (2) Christians (59.9%), (3) Protestants (less than 36%); and the greater number of unaffiliated (37.3%).

Percentage of religion against average, 2001
Major >10% >20%
Catholic
Baptist
Lutheran
Methodist
No religion
Mormonism
Protestant
Pentecostal
Christian (unspecified/other)
Plurality of religious preference by state in 2014.
<20% <30% <40% <50% >50%
Baptist
Catholic
Mormon
Lutheran
Religious groups
Religious group Number
in year
2010
% in
year
2010
Total US pop year 2010 308,745,538 100.0%
Evangelical Protestant 50,013,107 16.2%
Mainline Protestant 22,568,258 7.3%
Black Protestant 4,877,067 1.6%
Protestant total 77,458,432 25.1%
Catholic 58,934,906 19.1%
Orthodox 1,056,535 0.3%
adherents (unadjusted) 150,596,792 48.8%
unclaimed 158,148,746 51.2%
other – including Mormon & Christ Scientist 13,146,919 4.3%
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormon, LDS) 6,144,582 2.0%
other – excluding Mormon 7,002,337 2.3%
Jewish estimate 6,141,325 2.0%
Buddhist estimate 2,000,000 0.7%
Muslim estimate 2,600,082 0.8%
Hindu estimate 400,000 0.4%
Source: ASARB[124][280]

Ethnicity

[edit]

The table below shows the religious affiliations among the ethnicities in the United States, according to the Pew Forum 2014 survey.[130] People of Black ethnicity were most likely to be part of a formal religion, with 80% percent being Christians. Protestant denominations make up the majority of the Christians in the ethnicities.

Religion Non-Hispanic
White (62%)
Black (13%) Hispanic (17%) Other/mixed (8%)
Christian 70% 79% 77% 49%
Protestant 48% 71% 26% 33%
Catholic 19% 5% 48% 13%
Mormon 2% <0.5% 1% 1%
Jehovah's Witness <0.5% 2% 1% 1%
Orthodox 1% <0.5% <0.5% 1%
Other <0.5% 1% <0.5% 1%
Non-Christian faiths 5% 3% 2% 21%
Jewish 3% <0.5% 1% 1%
Muslim <0.5% 2% <0.5% 3%
Buddhist <0.5% <0.5% 1% 4%
Hindu <0.5% <0.5% <0.5% 8%
Other world religions <0.5% <0.5% <0.5% 2%
Other faiths 2% 1% 1% 2%
Unaffiliated (including atheist and agnostic) 24% 18% 20% 29%

ARIS findings regarding self-identification

[edit]

The United States government does not collect religious data in its census. The survey below, the American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) of 2008, was a random digit-dialed telephone survey of 54,461 American residential households in the contiguous United States. The 1990 sample size was 113,723; 2001 sample size was 50,281.

Adult respondents were asked the open-ended question, "What is your religion, if any?" Interviewers did not prompt or offer a suggested list of potential answers. The religion of the spouse or partner was also asked. If the initial answer was "Protestant" or "Christian" further questions were asked to probe which particular denomination. About one third of the sample was asked more detailed demographic questions.

Religious Self-Identification of the US Adult Population: 1990, 2001, 2008[115]
Figures are not adjusted for refusals to reply; investigators suspect refusals are possibly more representative of "no religion" than any other group.

Source: ARIS 2008[115]
Group
1990
adults
x 1,000
2001
adults
x 1,000
2008
adults
x 1,000

Numerical
Change
1990–
2008
as %
of 1990
1990
% of
adults
2001
% of
adults
2008
% of
adults
change
in % of
total
adults
1990–
2008
Adult population, total 175,440 207,983 228,182 30.1%
Adult population, responded 171,409 196,683 216,367 26.2% 97.7% 94.6% 94.8% −2.9%
Total Christian 151,225 159,514 173,402 14.7% 86.2% 76.7% 76.0% −10.2%
Catholic 46,004 50,873 57,199 24.3% 26.2% 24.5% 25.1% −1.2%
non-Catholic Christian 105,221 108,641 116,203 10.4% 60.0% 52.2% 50.9% −9.0%
Baptist 33,964 33,820 36,148 6.4% 19.4% 16.3% 15.8% −3.5%
Mainline Christian 32,784 35,788 29,375 −10.4% 18.7% 17.2% 12.9% −5.8%
Methodist 14,174 14,039 11,366 −19.8% 8.1% 6.8% 5.0% −3.1%
Lutheran 9,110 9,580 8,674 −4.8% 5.2% 4.6% 3.8% −1.4%
Presbyterian 4,985 5,596 4,723 −5.3% 2.8% 2.7% 2.1% −0.8%
Episcopal/Anglican 3,043 3,451 2,405 −21.0% 1.7% 1.7% 1.1% −0.7%
United Church of Christ 438 1,378 736 68.0% 0.2% 0.7% 0.3% 0.1%
Christian Generic 25,980 22,546 32,441 24.9% 14.8% 10.8% 14.2% −0.6%
Christian Unspecified 8,073 14,190 16,384 102.9% 4.6% 6.8% 7.2% 2.6%
Non-denominational Christian 194 2,489 8,032 4040.2% 0.1% 1.2% 3.5% 3.4%
Protestant – Unspecified 17,214 4,647 5,187 −69.9% 9.8% 2.2% 2.3% −7.5%
Evangelical/Born Again 546 1,088 2,154 294.5% 0.3% 0.5% 0.9% 0.6%
Pentecostal/Charismatic 5,647 7,831 7,948 40.7% 3.2% 3.8% 3.5% 0.3%
Pentecostal – Unspecified 3,116 4,407 5,416 73.8% 1.8% 2.1% 2.4% 0.6%
Assemblies of God 617 1,105 810 31.3% 0.4% 0.5% 0.4% 0.0%
Church of God 590 943 663 12.4% 0.3% 0.5% 0.3% 0.0%
Other Protestant Denominations 4,630 5,949 7,131 54.0% 2.6% 2.9% 3.1% 0.5%
Churches of Christ 1,769 2,593 1,921 8.6% 1.0% 1.2% 0.8% −0.2%
Jehovah's Witness 1,381 1,331 1,914 38.6% 0.8% 0.6% 0.8% 0.1%
Seventh-Day Adventist 668 724 938 40.4% 0.4% 0.3% 0.4% 0.0%
Mormon/Latter Day Saints 2,487 2,697 3,158 27.0% 1.4% 1.3% 1.4% 0.0%
Total non-Christian religions 5,853 7,740 8,796 50.3% 3.3% 3.7% 3.9% 0.5%
Jewish 3,137 2,837 2,680 −14.6% 1.8% 1.4% 1.2% −0.6%
Eastern Religions 687 2,020 1,961 185.4% 0.4% 1.0% 0.9% 0.5%
Buddhist 404 1,082 1,189 194.3% 0.2% 0.5% 0.5% 0.3%
Muslim 527 1,104 1,349 156.0% 0.3% 0.5% 0.6% 0.3%
New Religious Movements & Others 1,296 1,770 2,804 116.4% 0.7% 0.9% 1.2% 0.5%
None/No religion, total 14,331 29,481 34,169 138.4% 8.2% 14.2% 15.0% 6.8%
Agnostic+Atheist 1,186 1,893 3,606 204.0% 0.7% 0.9% 1.6% 0.9%
Did Not Know/Refused to reply 4,031 11,300 11,815 193.1% 2.3% 5.4% 5.2% 2.9%

Highlights:[115]

  1. The ARIS 2008 survey was carried out during February–November 2008 and collected answers from 54,461 respondents who were questioned in English or Spanish.
  2. The American population self-identifies as predominantly Christian, but Americans are slowly becoming less Christian.
    • 86% of American adults identified as Christians in 1990 and 76% in 2008.
    • The historic mainline churches and denominations have experienced the steepest declines, while the non-denominational Christian identity has been trending upward, particularly since 2001.
    • The challenge to Christianity in the US does not come from other religions but rather from a rejection of all forms of organized religion.
  3. 34% of American adults considered themselves "Born Again or Evangelical Christians" in 2008.
  4. The US population continues to show signs of becoming less religious, with one out of every seven Americans failing to indicate a religious identity in 2008.
    • The "Nones" (no stated religious preference, atheist, or agnostic) continue to grow, though at a much slower pace than in the 1990s, from 8.2% in 1990, to 14.1% in 2001, to 15.0% in 2008.
    • Asian Americans are substantially more likely to indicate no religious identity than other racial or ethnic groups.
  5. One sign of the lack of attachment of Americans to religion is that 27% do not expect a religious funeral at their death.
  6. Based on their stated beliefs rather than their religious identification in 2008, 70% of Americans believe in a personal God, roughly 12% of Americans are atheist (no God) or agnostic (unknowable or unsure), and another 12% are deistic (a higher power but no personal God).
  7. America's religious geography has been transformed since 1990. Religious switching along with Hispanic immigration has significantly changed the religious profile of some states and regions. Between 1990 and 2008, the Catholic population proportion of the New England states fell from 50% to 36% and in New York fell from 44% to 37%, while it rose in California from 29% to 37% and in Texas from 23% to 32%.
  8. Overall the 1990–2008 ARIS time series shows that changes in religious self-identification in the first decade of the 21st century have been moderate in comparison to the 1990s, which was a period of significant shifts in the religious composition of the United States.

2024 Barna Group findings

[edit]

Media estimates of the number of adult US citizens consider themselves evangelicals is to high according to 2024 data from the American Worldview Inventory 2024[281] (AWVI 2024, organized by the Cultural Research Center located at Arizona Christian University, under the leadership of researcher George Barna). Rather than the conventional estimate of 25% to 40%, only 10% of adult US citizens consider themselves evangelicals, and of that 10% self-identifying as evangelicals, roughly two thirds do not follow major points of Christian Evangelical doctrine.[282][283][284]

Attendance

[edit]
Church, synagogue, or mosque attendance by state (2014)
  ≥50% attending weekly
  45-49% attending weekly
  40-44% attending weekly
  35-39% attending weekly
  30-34% attending weekly
  25-29% attending weekly
  20-24% attending weekly
  15-19% attending weekly

Gallup survey data found that 73% of Americans were members of a church, synagogue or mosque in 1937, peaking at 76% shortly after World War II, before trending slightly downward to 70% by 2000. The percentage declined steadily during the first two decades of the 21st century, reaching 47% in 2020. Gallup attributed the decline to increasing numbers of Americans expressing no religious preference.[285][286]

A 2013 Public Religion Research Institute survey reported that 31% of Americans attend religious services at least weekly.[287] According to a 2022 Gallup poll, 75% of Americans report praying often or sometimes and religion plays a very (46%) or fairly (26%) important role in their lives.[288]

In a 2009 Gallup survey, 41.6%[289] of American residents stated that they attended a church, synagogue, or mosque once a week or almost every week. This percentage is higher than other surveyed Western countries.[290][291] Church attendance varies considerably by state and region. The figures, updated to 2014, ranged from 51% in Utah to 17% in Vermont.

When it comes to mosque attendance specifically, data collected by a 2017 poll by the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding (ISPU) shows that American Muslim women and men attend the mosque at similar rates (45% for men and 35% for women).[137] Additionally, when compared to the general public looking at the attendance of religious services, young Muslim Americans attend the mosque at closer rates to older Muslim Americans. Muslim Americans who regularly attend mosques are more likely to work with their neighbors to solve community problems (49 vs. 30 percent), be registered to vote (74 vs. 49 percent), and plan to vote (92 vs. 81 percent). Overall, "there is no correlation between Muslim attitudes toward violence and their frequency of mosque attendance".[137]

Religion and politics

[edit]
The US guarantees freedom of religion, and some churches in the US take strong stances on political subjects.

In August 2010, 67% of Americans said religion was losing influence, compared with 59% who said this in 2006. Majorities of white evangelical Protestants (79%), white mainline Protestants (67%), black Protestants (56%), Catholics (71%), and the religiously unaffiliated (62%) all agreed that religion was losing influence on American life; 53% of the total public said this was a bad thing, while just 10% see it as a good thing.[292]

Politicians frequently discuss their religion when campaigning, and fundamentalists and black Protestants are highly politically active. However, to keep their status as tax-exempt organizations they must not officially endorse a candidate. Historically Catholics were heavily Democratic before the 1970s, while mainline Protestants comprised the core of the Republican Party. Those patterns have faded away—Catholics, for example, now split about 50–50. However, white evangelicals since 1980 have made up a solidly Republican group that favors conservative candidates. Secular voters are increasingly Democratic.[293]

Only four presidential candidates for major parties have been Catholics, all for the Democratic party:

  • Alfred E. Smith in presidential election of 1928 was subjected to anti-Catholic rhetoric, which seriously hurt him in the Baptist areas of the South and Lutheran areas of the Midwest, but he did well in the Catholic urban strongholds of the Northeast.
  • John F. Kennedy secured the Democratic presidential nomination in 1960. In the 1960 election, Kennedy faced accusations that as a Catholic president he would do as the Pope would tell him to do, a charge that Kennedy refuted in a famous address to Protestant ministers.
  • John Kerry, a Catholic, won the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004. In the 2004 election religion was hardly an issue, and most Catholics voted for his Protestant opponent George W. Bush.[294]
  • Joe Biden, a Catholic, won the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020, and then won the 2020 presidential election, becoming the second Catholic president, after John F. Kennedy.[295] Biden was also the first Catholic vice president.[296]

Joe Lieberman was the first major presidential candidate that was Jewish, on the Gore–Lieberman campaign of 2000 (although John Kerry and Barry Goldwater both had Jewish ancestry, they were practicing Christians). Bernie Sanders ran against Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primary of 2016. He was the first major Jewish candidate to compete in the presidential primary process. However, Sanders noted during the campaign that he does not actively practice any religion.[297]

In 2006 Keith Ellison of Minnesota became the first Muslim elected to Congress; when re-enacting his swearing-in for photos, he used the copy of the Qur'an once owned by Thomas Jefferson.[298] André Carson is the second Muslim to serve in Congress.

A Gallup poll released in 2007[299] indicated that 53% of Americans would refuse to vote for an atheist as president, up from 48% in 1987 and 1999. But then the number started to drop again and reached record low 43% in 2012 and 40% in 2015.[300][301]

Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential nominee in 2012, is Mormon and a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He is the former governor of the state of Massachusetts, and his father George Romney was the governor of the state of Michigan.

On January 3, 2013, Tulsi Gabbard became the first Hindu member of Congress, using a copy of the Bhagavad Gita while swearing-in.[302]

By age

[edit]

Self-identified religious affiliation among 18-29 year olds (Spring 2023 Harvard Youth Poll)[303]

  Unaffiliated (33%)
  Catholicism (19%)
  Evangelical Christian (14%)
  Mainline Protestant (8%)
  LDS/Mormon (2%)
  Judaism (2%)
  Muslim (2%)
  Other religion (7%)
  Not sure (6%)
  Decline to answer/Refuse (7%)

Theism, religion, morality, and politics

[edit]

Pew Research Center

[edit]

The Pew Research Center has routinely conducted surveys surrounding theism, religion, and morality since 2002, asking:[304]

Which of the following statements comes closest to your opinion?

And whether they feel like:[304]

[Option #1:] It is not necessary to believe in God in order to be moral and have good values.

Or:

[Option #2:] It is necessary to believe in God in order to be moral and have good values.

Online survey trends: Is it necessary to believe in God to be a good person?[304]

Polling Date Necessary Not necessary Unsure/Refused/Other
Spring 2022 34 65 1
January 2020 35 65 1
September 2019 36 63 1
December 2017 33 66 >0
July 2014 44 55 1

Telephone trends: Is it necessary to believe in God to be a good person?[304]

Is it necessary to believe in God to be a good person? Necessary Not necessary Don't Know/Unsure/other
Spring 2019 44 54 2
Spring 2011 53 46 2
Spring 2007 57 41 2
Summer 2002 58 40 2

YouGov America

[edit]

Is it necessary to believe in God to be a good person?[305]

[edit]
Survey Polling Date Necessary Not Necessary Don't Know/Unsure/Other
November 17–21, 2022 32 53 15

Effect of churches and religious organizations on morality:[305]

[edit]
Survey Polling Date Strengthen morality in society Don't make much difference to morality in society Don't Know Weaken morality in society
November 17–21, 2022 47 26 14 13

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Staff (June 8, 2007). "In Depth: Topics A to Z (Religion)". Gallup, Inc. Retrieved November 1, 2023. Answering the question of "What is your religious preference -- are you Protestant, Roman Catholic, Mormon, Jewish, Muslim, another religion or no religion?"
  2. ^ Melton 2009.
  3. ^ Pasquier, Michael (2023) [2016]. Religion in America: The Basics (2nd ed.). London; New York: Routledge. pp. 6–7. ISBN 9780367691806.
  4. ^ a b Fahmy, Dalia (July 31, 2018). "Americans are far more religious than adults in other wealthy nations". Pew Research Center. Archived from the original on January 9, 2020. Retrieved January 23, 2020. American adults under the age of 40 are less likely to pray than their elders, less likely to attend church services and less likely to identify with any religion – all of which may portend future declines in levels of religious commitment
  5. ^ Mitchell, Travis (November 23, 2021). "Few Americans Blame God or Say Faith Has Been Shaken Amid Pandemic, Other Tragedies". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. The combined nine-in-ten Americans who believe in God or a higher power (91%) were asked a series of follow-up questions about the relationship between God and human suffering.
  6. ^ Froese, Paul; Uecker, Jeremy E. (September 2022). "Prayer in America: A Detailed Analysis of the Various Dimensions of Prayer". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 61 (3–4): 663–689. doi:10.1111/jssr.12810. ISSN 0021-8294. S2CID 253439298.
  7. ^ Chaves, Mark (2017). American Religion: Contemporary Trends. Princeton, NJ; London: Princeton University Press. pp. 38–39. ISBN 9780691177564. The vast majority of people — approximately 80 percent — describe themselves as both spiritual and religious. Still, a small but growing minority of Americans describe themselves as spiritual but not religious, as figure 3.4 shows. In 1998, 9 percent of Americans described themselves as at least moderately spiritual but not more than slightly religious. That number rose to 16 percent in the 2010s.
  8. ^ Pearce, Lisa D.; Gilliland, Claire C. (2020). Religion in America. Sociology in the Twenty-First Century, 6. Oakland, Ca: University of California Press. p. 5. ISBN 9780520296411. Most people in the United States, however, identify as spiritual and religious.
  9. ^ Melton 2012.
  10. ^ Pearce, Lisa D.; Gilliland, Claire C. (2020). Religion in America. Sociology in the Twenty-First Century, 6. Oakland, Ca: University of California Press. pp. 7–8. ISBN 9780520296411.
  11. ^ "Protestants no longer the majority in U.S." CBS News. October 9, 2012.
  12. ^ "The American Religious Landscape in 2020s". Public Religion Research Institute. July 8, 2021. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  13. ^ "In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace" Archived October 3, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, Pew Research Center, October 17, 2019, Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  14. ^ Newport, Frank (February 4, 2016). "New Hampshire Now Least Religious State in U.S." Gallup. Archived from the original on August 19, 2017. Retrieved August 3, 2016.
  15. ^ Giatti, Ian M.; Reporter, Christian Post (January 6, 2023). "Christians continue to dominate Congress even as fewer Americans identify as religious: survey". The Christian Post. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  16. ^ Contreras, Russell (April 23, 2023). "Our lawmakers are more religious than we are". Axios. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  17. ^ a b Holifield, E. Brooks (2015). Why Are Americans So Religious? The Limitations of Market Explanations. Religion and the Marketplace in the United States. pp. 33–60. ISBN 9780199361809.
  18. ^ Donadio, Rachel (November 22, 2021). "Why Is France So Afraid of God?". The Atlantic. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  19. ^ Sullivan, Andrew (September 14, 2018). "The American Past: A History of Contradictions". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved September 28, 2023.
  20. ^ Marty 1986, Front matter.
  21. ^ Conroy-Krutz, Emily (June 7, 2013). "Religion and Reform". The American Yawp. Retrieved March 19, 2023.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h Backman 1983.
  23. ^ a b c Thompson, Derek (September 26, 2019). "Three Decades Ago, America Lost Its Religion. Why?". The Atlantic Magazine. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  24. ^ "1. How U.S. religious composition has changed in recent decades". Pew Research Center. September 13, 2022. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  25. ^ "America's Changing Religious Landscape". Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. May 12, 2015. Retrieved October 9, 2016.
  26. ^ "In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace". Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. October 17, 2019. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  27. ^ a b "In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace". pewresearch.org. October 17, 2019. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  28. ^ a b "How Religious Are Americans?". Gallup. March 29, 2024. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  29. ^ a b c Masci, David (January 8, 2016). "Q&A: Why Millennials are less religious than older Americans". Pew Research Center.
  30. ^ Hout, Michael; Fischer, Claude (2014). "Explaining Why More Americans Have No Religious Preference: Political Backlash and Generational Succession, 1987-2012". Sociological Science. 1: 423–447. doi:10.15195/v1.a24. ISSN 2330-6696.
  31. ^ Wehner, Peter (May 24, 2022). "No Atheist Has Done This Much Damage to the Christian Faith". The Atlantic. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  32. ^ Smietana, Bob (September 13, 2022). "U.S. Christian majority could fade in coming decades, models find". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  33. ^ "Is Religion on the Decline? Q+A with Sociologist Christian Smith". Chicago Humanities. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  34. ^ "Are all religiously unaffiliated adults in the US nonbelievers?". Pew Research Center. January 24, 2024. Archived from the original on May 7, 2024. Not all 'nones' are nonbelievers. Far from it. While the "nones" include many nonbelievers, 70% of "nones" say they believe in God or another higher power, and 63% say they believe in spiritual forces beyond the natural world.
  35. ^ a b c Burge, Ryan (February 24, 2021). "Most 'Nones' Still Keep the Faith". Research. Christianity Today. What I discovered was that while many people have walked away from a religious affiliation, they haven't left all aspects of religion and spirituality behind. So, while growing numbers of Americans may not readily identify as Christian any longer, they still show up to a worship service a few times a year or maintain their belief in God. The reality is that many of the nones are really "somes."...The center of the Venn diagram indicates that just 15.3 percent of the population that are nones on one dimension are nones on all dimensions. That amounts to just about 6 percent of the general public who don't belong to a religious tradition and don't attend church and hold to an atheist or agnostic worldview.
  36. ^ Sydney Ahlstrom, A Religious History of the American People (Yale UP, 2nd ed. 2004) ISBN 0-300-10012-4
  37. ^ Finke, Roger; Stark, Rodney (2006). The Churching of America, 1776–2005: Winners and Losers in our Religious Economy. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. pp. 22, 23. ISBN 978-0813535531.
  38. ^ Kevin M. Schultz, and Paul Harvey, "Everywhere and Nowhere: Recent Trends in American Religious History and Historiography", Journal of the American Academy of Religion, March 2010, Vol. 78 Issue 1, pp. 129–162
  39. ^ See: English Civil War, Glorious Revolution, Restoration (England), and Nonconformists
  40. ^ Richard Middleton, Colonial America, A History, 1665-1776 (Oxford:Blackwell Publishing, 2002), 166-167.
  41. ^ "U.S. Constitution - First Amendment". constitution.congress.gov. Retrieved June 19, 2022.
  42. ^ David E. Swift (1989). Black Prophets of Justice: Activist Clergy Before the Civil War. LSU Press. p. 180. ISBN 9780807124994. Archived from the original on April 24, 2016. Retrieved October 17, 2015.
  43. ^ The treaty is online Archived April 3, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Tri-Faith America: How Catholics and Jews Held Postwar America to Its Protestant Promise by Kevin M. Schultz, p. 9
  45. ^ Obligations of Citizenship and Demands of Faith: Religious Accommodation in Pluralist Democracies by Nancy L. Rosenblum, Princeton University Press, 2000 – 438, p. 156
  46. ^ Marty, Martin E. (2004). The Protestant Voice in American Pluralism. Aphens, Ga; London: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-2580-5., chapter 1.
  47. ^ "10 facts about religion in America". pewresearch.org. August 27, 2015. Archived from the original on November 25, 2020. Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  48. ^ Barnstone, Aliki; Manson, Michael Tomasek; Singley, Carol J. (August 27, 1997). The Calvinist Roots of the Modern Era. UPNE. ISBN 9780874518085. Archived from the original on October 19, 2017. Retrieved August 27, 2017 – via Google Books.
  49. ^ Holmes, David L. (May 1, 2006). The Faiths of the Founding Fathers. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 13. ISBN 9780195300925. Retrieved August 27, 2017 – via Internet Archive. united states founded on calvinism.
  50. ^ 36 U.S.C. § 302 National motto
  51. ^ a b "U.S. on the History of "In God We Trust"". United States Department of the Treasury. Archived from the original on April 17, 2016. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  52. ^ United States Public Law 84-851 Archived July 5, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, United States Public Law 84-851.
  53. ^ a b c d Cox, Daniel; Jones, Ribert P. (June 9, 2017). America's Changing Religious Identity. 2016 American Values Atlas. Public Religion Research Institute. Archived from the original on January 31, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  54. ^ "America's Changing Religious Landscape". Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. May 12, 2015. Retrieved October 9, 2016.
  55. ^ "In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace". Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. October 17, 2019. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  56. ^ Davis, Jim; Graham, Michael; Burge, Ryan; Hansen, Collin (2023). The Great Dechurching: Who's Leaving, Why Are They Going, and What Will It Take to Bring Them Back?. Zondervan. p. 121. ISBN 9780310147435. What is often overlooked is that when people say they no longer go to church or affiliate with a religious institution, that doesn't mean they leave all vestiges of religion behind...They left the religious label behind but not their belief. In the same way, a lack of church attendance doesn't necessarily mean someone has given up on the idea of God. Among those who report never attending church in the General Social Survey, the share who don't believe in God is about 20 percent. But the share of these never attenders who say they believe in God without any doubts is also about 20 percent. Despite the fact that about 40 percent of Americans never attend church and 30 percent say they have no religious affiliation, just one in ten Americans says God does not exist or that we have no way to know if God exists. Religious belief is persistent in the United States, and while someone may not act on that belief by going to a house of worship on Sunday morning, that doesn't mean they think their spiritual life is unimportant.
  57. ^ Johnson, Todd; Zurlo, Gina (2016). "Unaffiliated, Yet Religious: A Methodological and Demographic Analysis". In Cipriani, Roberto; Garelli, Franco (eds.). Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion: Vol. 7: Sociology of Atheism. Leiden: Brill. pp. 58–60. ISBN 9789004317536. While much of the media - as well as non-religious advocacy groups - honed on the fact that "unaffiliated" category was growing, Pew stressed their finding that most unaffiliated adults had religious and spiritual leanings. According to the Pew survey, 68% of the unaffiliated said they believed in God; more than a third described themselves as "spiritual but not religious"; and 21% said they prayed every day. This report provided evidence that that people who check "nothing in particular" are not uniformly non-religious; many are individuals who are unaffiliated with traditional religious structures like churches or synagogues but still engage in religious practices and hold religious beliefs.
  58. ^ Hout, Michael; Fischer, Claude (2014). "Explaining Why More Americans Have No Religious Preference: Political Backlash and Generational Succession, 1987-2012". Sociological Science. 1: 423–447. doi:10.15195/v1.a24. ISSN 2330-6696.
  59. ^ Wehner, Peter (May 24, 2022). "No Atheist Has Done This Much Damage to the Christian Faith". The Atlantic. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  60. ^ Smietana, Bob (September 13, 2022). "U.S. Christian majority could fade in coming decades, models find". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  61. ^ a b c Johnson, Byron; Stark, Rodney; Bradshaw, Matt; Levin, Jeff (2022). "Are Religious "Nones" Really Not Religious?: Revisiting Glenn, Three Decades Later". Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion. 18 (7).
  62. ^ a b Johnson, Byron; Stark, Rodney; Bradshaw, Matt; Levin, Jeff (2022). "Are Religious "Nones" Really Not Religious?: Revisiting Glenn, Three Decades Later". Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion. 18 (7). As briefly noted above, proportions of atheists and intense, practicing Christians appear to be somewhat stable across time, casting some doubt on a major decline in religiosity (Stark 2008, 2011; Hout and Smith 2015; Stetzer 2015). According to Stark (2008:177), data from multiple population surveys show that the proportion of the U.S. population that identifies as atheist was unchanged for at least 70 years, from the 1940s until the past decade, at about 4%.
  63. ^ "American History: Massachusetts Bay Colony". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Archived from the original on December 4, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  64. ^ Feldman, Noah (2005). Divided by God. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, p. 10 ("For the first time in recorded history, they designed a government with no established religion at all.")
  65. ^ Marsden, George M. 1990. Religion and American Culture. Orlando: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, pp. 45–46.
  66. ^ a b c Newport, Frank (December 23, 2016). "Five Key Findings on Religion in the U.S." Gallup. Archived from the original on September 12, 2017. Retrieved April 5, 2018.
  67. ^ a b c d e "Religion Census Newsletter" (PDF). RCMS2010.org. Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies. March 2017. Retrieved March 17, 2017.
  68. ^ ANALYSIS (December 19, 2011). "Global Christianity". Pewforum.org. Archived from the original on July 30, 2013. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  69. ^ "Global Christianity". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. December 1, 2014. Archived from the original on July 19, 2014. Retrieved August 23, 2015.
  70. ^ "The top 10 most Catholic Countries in the world". January 18, 2019.
  71. ^ "SBC Missions and Ministries" (PDF). Southern Baptist Convention.
  72. ^ "National Baptist Convention, USA, INC | Baptist World Alliance". July 21, 2022.
  73. ^ "Latter-day Saint membership increased this much in 2021, according to new church statistical report". April 2, 2022.
  74. ^ "UMData".
  75. ^ Gaustad 1962
  76. ^ "Annual of the 2007 Southern Baptist Convention" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on April 21, 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  77. ^ The figures for this 2007 abstract are based on surveies for 1990 and 2001 from the Graduate School and University Center at the City University of New York. Kosmin, Barry A.; Egon Mayer; Ariela Keysar (2001). "American Religious Identification Survey" (PDF). City University of New York.; Graduate School and University Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 14, 2007. Retrieved April 4, 2007.
  78. ^ Johnstone, Patrick; Miller, Duane (2015). "Believers in Christ from a Muslim Background: A Global Census". IJRR. 11: 14. Archived from the original on September 28, 2019. Retrieved November 20, 2015.
  79. ^ "Why Are Millions of Muslims Becoming Christian?". National Catholic Register. May 19, 2016. Archived from the original on July 26, 2017. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  80. ^ Sydney E. Ahlstrom, A religious history of the American people (1976) pp. 121-59.
  81. ^ McKinney, William. "Mainline Protestantism 2000." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 558, Americans and Religions in the Twenty-First Century (July 1998), pp. 57-66.
  82. ^ Harriet Zuckerman, Scientific Elite: Nobel Laureates in the United States New York, The Free Press, 1977, p.68: Protestants turn up among the American-reared laureates in slightly greater proportion to their numbers in the general population. Thus 72 percent of the seventy-one laureates but about two thirds of the American population were reared in one or another Protestant denomination-)
  83. ^ a b c d e f B. Drummond Ayres Jr. (December 19, 2011). "The Episcopalians: An American Elite with Roots Going Back to Jamestown". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  84. ^ Hacker, Andrew (1957). "Liberal Democracy and Social Control". American Political Science Review. 51 (4): 1009–1026 [p. 1011]. doi:10.2307/1952449. JSTOR 1952449. S2CID 146933599.
  85. ^ Ron Chernow, Titan (New York: Random, 1998) 50.
  86. ^ a b c W. Williams, Peter (2016). Religion, Art, and Money: Episcopalians and American Culture from the Civil War to the Great Depression. University of North Carolina Press. p. 176. ISBN 9781469626987. The names of fashionable families who were already Episcopalian, like the Morgans, or those, like the Fricks, who now became so, goes on interminably: Aldrich, Astor, Biddle, Booth, Brown, Du Pont, Firestone, Ford, Gardner, Mellon, Morgan, Procter, the Vanderbilt, Whitney. Episcopalians branches of the Baptist Rockefellers and Jewish Guggenheims even appeared on these family trees.
  87. ^ Irving Lewis Allen, "WASP—From Sociological Concept to Epithet," Ethnicity, 1975 154+
  88. ^ "America's Changing Religious Landscape". Pew Research Center. May 12, 2015. Archived from the original on March 24, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  89. ^ DAVID MASCI (October 11, 2016). "How income varies among U.S. Religious groups". Retrieved August 21, 2024.
  90. ^ "The Harvard Guide: The Early History of Harvard University". News.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on July 22, 2010. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  91. ^ "Increase Mather". Archived from the original on February 11, 2006. Retrieved February 16, 2022., Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, Encyclopædia Britannica
  92. ^ Princeton University Office of Communications. "Princeton in the American Revolution". Archived from the original on June 14, 2007. Retrieved May 24, 2011. The original Trustees of Princeton University "were acting in behalf of the evangelical or New Light wing of the Presbyterian Church, but the college had no legal or constitutional identification with that denomination. Its doors were to be open to all students, 'any different sentiments in religion notwithstanding.'"
  93. ^ McCaughey, Robert (2003). Stand, Columbia: A History of Columbia University in the City of New York. New York, New York: Columbia University Press. p. 1. ISBN 0231130082.
  94. ^ Childs, Francis Lane (December 1957). "A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman". Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. Archived from the original on September 8, 2015. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  95. ^ Hochstedt Butler, Diana (1995). Standing Against the Whirlwind: Evangelical Episcopalians in Nineteenth-Century America. Oxford University Press. p. 22. ISBN 9780195359053. Of all these northern schools, only Columbia and the University of Pennsylvania were historically Anglican; the rest are associated with revivalist Presbyterianism or Congregationalism.
  96. ^ Khalaf, Samir (2012). Protestant Missionaries in the Levant: Ungodly Puritans, 1820-1860. Routledge. p. 31. ISBN 9781136249808. Princeton was Presbyterian, while Columbia and Pennsylvania were Episcopalian.
  97. ^ "Duke University's Relation to the Methodist Church: the basics". Duke University. 2002. Archived from the original on June 12, 2010. Retrieved March 27, 2010. Duke University has historical, formal, on-going, and symbolic ties with Methodism, but is an independent and non-sectarian institution ... Duke would not be the institution it is today without its ties to the Methodist Church. However, the Methodist Church does not own or direct the University. Duke is and has developed as a private nonprofit corporation which is owned and governed by an autonomous and self-perpetuating Board of Trustees
  98. ^ "Boston University Names University Professor Herbert Mason United Methodist Scholar/Teacher of the Year". Boston University. 2001. Archived from the original on December 26, 2010. Retrieved October 20, 2011. Boston University has been historically affiliated with the United Methodist Church since 1839 when the Newbury Biblical Institute, the first Methodist seminary in the United States, was established in Newbury, Vermont.
  99. ^ W.L. Kingsley et al., "The College and the Church," New Englander and Yale Review 11 (Feb 1858): 600. accessed 2010-6-16 Archived April 13, 2017, at the Wayback Machine Note: Middlebury is considered the first "operating" college in Vermont as it was the first to hold classes in Nov 1800. It issued the first Vermont degree in 1802; UVM followed in 1804.
  100. ^ James Davison Hunter (March 31, 2010). To Change the World: The Irony, Tragedy, and Possibility of Christianity in the Late Modern World. Oxford UP. p. 85. ISBN 9780199779529. Archived from the original on April 13, 2017. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
  101. ^ Archaeology, Narrative, and the Politics of the Past: The View from Southern Maryland Archived August 19, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, p. 52, UPCC book collections on Project MUSE, Julia A. King, Publisher, Univ. of Tennessee Press, 2012, ISBN 9781572338883
  102. ^ a b Richard Middleton, Colonial America: a History, 1565-1776 (Oxford: Blackwell, 2002) 94-101.
  103. ^ Alan Taylor, American Colonies, (New York: Viking, 2001) 76-90.
  104. ^ Taylor, 454-456; 364-395.
  105. ^ Taylor, 458-459; 365-366, 368.
  106. ^ Diarmaid MacCulloch, Christianity, The First Three Thousand Years, (New York: Penguin Books, 2009), 670, 837.
  107. ^ The Catholic Priest in the United States: Historical Investigations, John Tracey Ellis, editor (Collegeville: St. John's University Press, 1971), 31. Ellis notes: Between 1850-1900,"the net German Catholic population reached a total of 1,134,887, not to mention the additional thousands of German-speaking immigrants during the same years among the 42,289 Catholics from Switzerland, and the 443,230 who came from Austria-Hungry."
  108. ^ Michael V. Gannon, "Before and After Moderism: the Intellectual Isolation of the American Priest," in The Catholic Priest in the United States: Historical Investigations, ed. by John Tracy Ellis (Collegeville: St. John's University Press, 1971), 300.
  109. ^ Gannon, p. 301.
  110. ^ U.S. News & World Report, College Rankings, 2024.
  111. ^ FitzGerald 2007, p. 269-279.
  112. ^ Alexei D. Krindatch, ed., Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches (Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2011) online Archived August 16, 2021, at the Wayback Machine.
  113. ^ "Largest Latter-day Saint Communities (Mormon/Church of Jesus Christ Statistics)". adherents.com. April 12, 2005. Archived from the original on October 2, 1999.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  114. ^ "American Religious Identification Survey". Exhibit 15. The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Archived from the original on July 9, 2011. Retrieved November 24, 2006.
  115. ^ a b c d e f g h Barry A. Kosmin and Ariela Keysar (2009). "American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) 2008" (PDF). Hartford, Connecticut, US: Trinity College. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 9, 2017. Retrieved April 1, 2009.
  116. ^ "Barna Survey Examines Changes in Worldview Among Christians over the Past 13 Years". The Barna Group. March 6, 2009. Archived from the original on March 12, 2009. Retrieved June 26, 2009.
  117. ^ a b c d "America's Changing Religious Landscape". Pew Research Center: Religion & Public Life. May 12, 2015. Archived from the original on March 24, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  118. ^ US Religious Landscape Survey: Diverse and Dynamic (PDF), The Pew Forum, February 2008, p. 85, archived (PDF) from the original on April 23, 2015, retrieved September 17, 2012
  119. ^ "The most and least educated U.S. religious group". Pew Research Center. October 16, 2016. Archived from the original on May 20, 2019. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  120. ^ Leonhardt, David (May 13, 2011). "Faith, Education and Income". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 11, 2018. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
  121. ^ "How income varies among U.S. religious groups". Pew Research Center. October 16, 2016. Archived from the original on May 11, 2019. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  122. ^ "The most and least educated U.S. religious groups," and "how income varies among U.S. religious groups" in Pew Research Center: 26% and 19% of 75 million Catholics are college graduates and high income earners, respectively. No religious community can match those numbers
  123. ^ Ira M. Sheskin and Arnold Dashefsky, University of Miami and University of Connecticut (2009). "Jewish Population of the United States, 2009" (PDF). Mandell L. Berman North American Jewish Data Bank in cooperation with the Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry and the Jewish Federations of North America. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 12, 2012. The authors concluded the 6,543,820 figure was an over-count, due to people who live in more than one state during a year.
  124. ^ a b "The Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA), Year 2000 Report". ARDA. 2000. Archived from the original on March 21, 2008. Retrieved June 4, 2011. Churches were asked for their membership numbers. ASARB estimates that most of the churches not reporting were black Protestant congregations.
  125. ^ Taylor, Humphrey (October 15, 2003), "While Most Americans Believe in God, Only 36% Attend a Religious Service Once a Month or More Often" (PDF), The Harris Poll #59, HarrisInteractive.com, Harris Interactive, archived (PDF) from the original on September 24, 2015, retrieved February 18, 2014
  126. ^ Kosmin, Mayer & Keysar (December 19, 2001). "American Identification Survey, 2001" (PDF). The Graduate Center of the City University of New York New York. pp. 8–9. Archived (PDF) from the original on January 3, 2018. Retrieved November 24, 2012.
  127. ^ "Jewish Americans in 2020". Pew Research Center. May 11, 2021. In absolute numbers, the 2020 Jewish population estimate is approximately 7.5 million, including 5.8 million adults and 1.8 million children (rounded to the closest 100,000).
  128. ^ Forman, Ethan. "New Brandeis study estimates 7.6 million Jews living in U.S." Jewish Journal. Jewish Journal. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
  129. ^ "Jewish Community Study of New York" (PDF). United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York. 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 14, 2007. Retrieved March 22, 2008.
  130. ^ a b c "America's Changing Religious Landscape". Pew Research Center: Religion & Public Life. May 12, 2015. Archived from the original on March 24, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  131. ^ "CIA Fact Book". CIA World Fact Book. 2002. Archived from the original on March 21, 2021. Retrieved December 30, 2007.
  132. ^ Wertheimer, Jack (2002). Jews in the Center: Conservative Synagogues and Their Members. Rutgers University Press. p. 68. ISBN 9780813532066. Archived from the original on January 9, 2016.
  133. ^ a b Wertheimer, Jack (1991). "Recent Trends in American Judaism". In Neusner, Jacob (ed.). An Introduction to Judaism: A Textbook and Reader. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster/John Knox Press. pp. 85–116. ISBN 0-664-25348-2. pp. 86–88.
  134. ^ Wertheimer, Jack (2018). The New American Judaism: How Jews Practice Their Religion Today. Princeton, NJ; Oxford: Princeton University Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-691-18129-5.
  135. ^ "2001 National Jewish Population Survey". Ujc.org. Archived from the original on May 15, 2004. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  136. ^ "Impact Report of Muslim Contributions to New York City". Muslims for American Progress. Institute for Social Policy and Understanding. July 2018. Archived from the original on February 27, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  137. ^ a b c d e "American Muslim Poll 2017 | ISPU". Institute for Social Policy and Understanding. March 21, 2017. Archived from the original on November 21, 2018. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  138. ^ Tweed, Thomas A. "Islam in America: From African Slaves to Malcolm X". National Humanities Center. Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. Retrieved July 21, 2009.
  139. ^ Kambiz GhaneaBassiri, A History of Islam in America: From the New World to the New World Order (Cambridge University Press, 2010) pp. 59–94
  140. ^ Timothy Miller (1995). America's alternative religions. State University of New York Press. p. 280. ISBN 9780791423974. Ahmadiyya.
  141. ^ Mattias Gardell, In the Name of Elijah Muhammad: Louis Farrakhan and The Nation of Islam (Duke University Press, 1996)
  142. ^ C. Eric Lincoln, The Black Muslims in America (3rd ed. Eerdmans, 1994)
  143. ^ "First Muslim Elected to Congress". Cbsnews.com. February 11, 2009. Archived from the original on October 12, 2013. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  144. ^ Cebula, Judith (March 11, 2008). "Second Muslim elected to Congress". Reuters.com. Archived from the original on October 8, 2020. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  145. ^ "Zogby phone survey" (PDF). Projectmaps.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 26, 2013. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  146. ^ "America's Muslims after 9/11". Voice of America. Archived from the original on July 17, 2011. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
  147. ^ "Muslim Americans, Pew Research Center" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 16, 2012. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  148. ^ "Henry H. Jessup, D.D., Makes an Eloquent and Instructive Address". The Inter Ocean. Chicago, Illinois. September 24, 1893. p. 2. Retrieved February 8, 2014.
  149. ^ Stockman, Robert H. (2009). "Chase, Thornton (1847–1912)". Baháʼí Encyclopedia Project. Evanston, IL: National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. Retrieved May 6, 2022.
  150. ^ Linfoot (1970). "In Memoriam; Corine Knight True" (PDF). The Baháʼí World; An International Record. Vol. XIII, 1954–1963. Universal House of Justice. pp. 846–849.
  151. ^ Johnson, Todd M.; Grim, Brian J. (March 26, 2013). "Global Religious Populations, 1910–2010". The World's Religions in Figures: An Introduction to International Religious Demography. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 59–62. doi:10.1002/9781118555767.ch1. ISBN 9781118555767.
  152. ^ "Religion (&) Bahá'í Faith". Britannica Book of the Year. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica. 1988. p. 303.
  153. ^ "Largest Non-Christian Religion by County" (PDF). USReligionCensus.org. Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies. November 4, 2022. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
  154. ^ Mike McMullen; Michael McMullen (November 27, 2015). The Baháʼís of America: The Growth of a Religious Movement. NYU Press. pp. 153, 193. ISBN 978-1-4798-5152-2.
  155. ^ Kolodner, Alexander (May 1, 2014). "The Baha'i Faith Compared to Race in American Counties" (PDF). Retrieved March 18, 2015.
  156. ^ "Quick Facts and Stats". Official website of the Baha'is of the United States. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States. June 11, 2014. Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  157. ^ "Most Baha'i Nations (2005)". QuickLists > Compare Nations > Religions >. The Association of Religion Data Archives. 2005. Archived from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
  158. ^ a b Cainkar, Louise (2021). Arab American Women: Representation and Refusal. Syracuse University Press. p. 23. ISBN 9780815655138.
  159. ^ a b "Sending relief--and a message of inclusion and love—to our Druze sisters and brothers". Los Angeles Times. April 6, 2021. Archived from the original on November 15, 2021. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  160. ^ a b c "Finding a life partner is hard enough. For those of the Druze faith, their future depends on it". Los Angeles Times. August 27, 2017. Archived from the original on November 22, 2021. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  161. ^ A. Kayyali, Randa (2006). The Arab Americans. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 21. ISBN 9780313332197. Many of the Druze have chosen to deemphasize their ethnic identity, and some have officially converted to Christianity.
  162. ^ Hobby, Jeneen (2011). Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life. University of Philadelphia Press. p. 232. ISBN 9781414448916. US Druze settled in small towns and kept a low profile, joining Protestant churches (usually Presbyterian or Methodist) and often Americanizing their names..
  163. ^ "Rastafarian history". BBC.co.uk. Archived from the original on October 28, 2021. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  164. ^ Loadenthal, Michael. "Jah People: The cultural hybridity of white Rastafarians". GlocalismJournal.net. Archived from the original on September 14, 2019. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  165. ^ "Rastari History". Religionfacts.com. Archived from the original on November 26, 2021. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  166. ^ "Rastafarianism". Religionfacts.com. Archived from the original on February 1, 2022. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  167. ^ Reflections on Hindu Demographics in America: An Initial Report on the First American Hindu Census. Archived October 20, 2019, at the Wayback Machine J. Gordon Melton and Constance A. Jones. A paper presented at the Association for the Study of Religion, Economics & Culture meeting in Washington, D.C., April 7–10, 2011.
  168. ^ Kosmin, Mayer & Keysar (December 19, 2001). "American Identification Survey, 2001" (PDF). The Graduate Center of the City University of New York New York. p. 13. Archived (PDF) from the original on January 3, 2018. Retrieved November 24, 2012.
  169. ^ a b "Religious Composition of the U.S." (PDF). U.S. Religious Landscape Survey. Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. February 2008. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 23, 2015. Retrieved August 8, 2012.
  170. ^ "Pewforum religious landscape study". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. Archived from the original on January 3, 2020. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  171. ^ "Bad Buddhist Vibes". Utne. December 20, 2011. Archived from the original on May 12, 2013. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  172. ^ The Faces of Buddhism in America. University of California Press. Archived from the original on February 25, 2021. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  173. ^ The Pioneers, America, "A historical perspective of Americans of Asian Indian origin 1790–1997" Archived April 10, 2020, at the Wayback Machine October 31, 2006
  174. ^ Stockton Gurdwara, America, "Stockton California" Archived May 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine October 31, 2006
  175. ^ Mann, Gurinder Singh; Numrich, Paul; Williams, Raymond (December 3, 2007). Buddhists, Hindus and Sikhs in America: A Short History, p. 120. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198044246. Archived from the original on August 17, 2021. Retrieved August 10, 2012.
  176. ^ The Racialization of Hinduism, Islam, and Sikhism in the United States, Khyati Y. Joshi, 2006.
  177. ^ Ronald H. Bayor (July 31, 2011). Multicultural America: An Encyclopedia of the Newest Americans. ABC-CLIO. pp. 985–. ISBN 978-0-313-35787-9. Archived from the original on April 24, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  178. ^ "About JAINA". Archived from the original on February 28, 2018. Retrieved January 16, 2012.
  179. ^ "Taoism at a glance". Bbc.co.uk. January 1, 1970. Archived from the original on January 30, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  180. ^ "largest religious groups in the US". Adherents.com. Archived from the original on August 20, 2018. Retrieved December 29, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  181. ^ Underhill 1965; Gill 1982; Hultkrantz 1987; Hirschfelder & Molin 2000; Garrett & Garrett 2003; Melton 2009, "Native American Religions"; Utter 2001, p. 145; Paper 2007.
  182. ^ a b Leavelle, Tracy Neal (2010). "American Indians". In Goff, Philip (ed.). The Blackwell Companion to Religion in America. Malden, Ma; Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 397–416. ISBN 978-1-4051-6936-3.
  183. ^ Underhill 1965, pp. 1–9.
  184. ^ a b Hultkrantz 1987.
  185. ^ Tooker 1979, p. 31.
  186. ^ Or about .003% of the US population of 300 million.James T. Richardson (2004). Regulating Religion: Case Studies from Around the Globe. Springer. p. 543. ISBN 9780306478864. Archived from the original on April 24, 2016.
  187. ^ Tooker 1979.
  188. ^ Underhill 1965; Brown 1982, pp. 1–28; Brown & Cousins 2001; Hirschfelder & Molin 2000; Garrett & Garrett 2003; Melton 2009, "Native American Religions".
  189. ^ Underhill 1965, pp. 254–270.
  190. ^ a b c d e Champagne 2005.
  191. ^ Wallace 2010, p. 3.
  192. ^ Mooney 1896.
  193. ^ Kehoe 2006.
  194. ^ Underhill 1965, pp. 142–153.
  195. ^ Aberle 1991.
  196. ^ a b Stewart 1987.
  197. ^ Beyer, Catherine (April 2, 2015). "Peyote and the Native American Church". Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  198. ^ Fikes, Jay (August 21, 2007). "CSP — 'A Brief History of the Native American Church'". Archived from the original on August 21, 2007. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  199. ^ Barbara Jane Davy, Introduction to Pagan Studies, p. 151 (2007)
  200. ^ Rosemary Guiley, The Encyclopedia of Magic and Alchemy, p. 84 (2006)
  201. ^ Raymond Buckland, Scottish Witchcraft: The history & magick of the Picts, p. 246 (1991)
  202. ^ "Siver Chalice Ancestry". Angelfire. Archived from the original on February 24, 2021. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  203. ^ Trinity ARIS 2008; Trinity ARIS 2001 Archived June 25, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  204. ^ Adler 2006. pp. 337–339.
  205. ^ William James, "The Varieties of Religious Experience". pp. 92–93. New York 1929
  206. ^ "Unitarian Universalists Denounce White Supremacy, Make Leadership Changes". NPR.org. Archived from the original on July 10, 2018. Retrieved April 3, 2018.
  207. ^ "Unitarian Universalism's Seven Principles". UUA.org. November 24, 2014. Archived from the original on May 1, 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
  208. ^ (The 4th principle of Unitarian Universalism) UUA.org Seven principles Archived May 1, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  209. ^ "Unitarian Universalist Origins: Our Historic Faith". UUA.org. February 8, 2013. Archived from the original on October 6, 2017. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
  210. ^ "Unitarian Universalist Congregration of Northern Chautauqua". Archived from the original on October 6, 2017. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
  211. ^ "Who We Are | UUA.org". www.uua.org. Archived from the original on September 15, 2017. Retrieved April 8, 2021.
  212. ^ "Measuring Religion in Pew Research Center's American Trends Panel". Measuring Religion in Pew Research Center's American Trends Panel | Pew Research Center. Pew Research Center. January 14, 2021. Archived from the original on February 8, 2021. Retrieved February 9, 2021. Statistics are from the 2020 ATP profile survey after adjustments from NPORS.
  213. ^ Phillips, Erica E.; Kesling, Ben (March 9–10, 2013). "Some Church Folk Ask: 'What Would Jesus Brew?'". The Wall Street Journal (paper).
  214. ^ Thompson, Derek (September 26, 2019). "Three Decades Ago, America Lost Its Religion. Why?". The Atlantic. Retrieved October 2, 2022. ...when it comes to religion, Americans really are exceptional. No rich country prays nearly as much as the U.S, and no country that prays as much as the U.S. is nearly as rich... Stubbornly pious Americans threw a wrench in the secularization thesis. Deep into the 20th century, more than nine in 10 Americans said they believed in God and belonged to an organized religion, with the great majority of them calling themselves Christian. That number held steady—through the sexual-revolution '60s, through the rootless and anxious '70s, and through the "greed is good" '80s. But in the early 1990s, the historical tether between American identity and faith snapped. Religious non-affiliation in the U.S. started to rise—and rise, and rise. By the early 2000s, the share of Americans who said they didn't associate with any established religion (also known as "nones") had doubled. By the 2010s, this grab bag of atheists, agnostics, and spiritual dabblers had tripled in size. History does not often give the satisfaction of a sudden and lasting turning point. History tends to unfold in messy cycles—actions and reactions, revolutions and counterrevolutions—and even semipermanent changes are subtle and glacial. But the rise of religious non-affiliation in America looks like one of those rare historical moments that is neither slow, nor subtle, nor cyclical. You might call it exceptional.
  215. ^ Hout, Michael; Fischer, Claude (2014). "Explaining Why More Americans Have No Religious Preference: Political Backlash and Generational Succession, 1987-2012". Sociological Science. 1: 423–447. doi:10.15195/v1.a24. ISSN 2330-6696.
  216. ^ Wehner, Peter (May 24, 2022). "No Atheist Has Done This Much Damage to the Christian Faith". The Atlantic. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  217. ^ Smietana, Bob (September 13, 2022). "U.S. Christian majority could fade in coming decades, models find". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  218. ^ "Atheists Are Distrusted". May 3, 2006. Archived from the original on June 13, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  219. ^ Paulos, John Allen (April 2, 2006). "Who's Counting: Distrusting Atheists". ABC News. Archived from the original on August 6, 2020. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  220. ^ "Atheists identified as America's most distrusted minority, according to new U of M study". UMN News. Archived from the original on April 23, 2014. Retrieved March 22, 2006.
  221. ^ a b "Pew survey: Doubt of God growing quickly among millennials". Religion.blogs.cnn.com. August 16, 2012. Archived from the original on November 17, 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  222. ^ Raushenbush, Paul (March 24, 2012). "Atheists Rally on National Mall". Huffingtonpost.com. Archived from the original on June 8, 2016. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  223. ^ Blankholm, Joseph (2022). The Secular Paradox: On the Religiosity of the Not Religious. New York University Press. pp. 3, 8. ISBN 9781479809509. Secular people's efforts to avoid religion and the creative ways in which they embrace it generate the diversity in American secularism. This book makes sense of secular people's strange ambivalence toward religion. Though being secular means being not religious, it also means participating in a secular tradition and sharing ways of life with other secular people. The secular paradox is the tension between what secular people do not share and what they have in common between avoiding religion and embracing something like it...all secular people live with the secular paradox." & "Each chapter of this book examines a different aspect of religion: belief, community, ritual, conversion, and tradition. Because secular people struggle to simply remove all of these religion-like elements from their lives, they affirm them in part or entirely, sometimes uncritically but more often quite carefully and not without reservations.
  224. ^ "How Many Americans Believe in God?". Gallup. June 24, 2022. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  225. ^ Mitchell, Travis (November 23, 2021). "Few Americans Blame God or Say Faith Has Been Shaken Amid Pandemic, Other Tragedies". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. [...] nearly six-in-ten U.S. adults (58%) say they believe in God as described in the Bible, and an additional one-third (32%) believe there is some other higher power or spiritual force in the universe.
  226. ^ "Key findings about Americans' belief in God". Pew Research Center. April 25, 2018. The vast majority of Americans (90%) believe in some kind of higher power, with 56% professing faith in God as described in the Bible and another 33% saying they believe in another type of higher power or spiritual force. Only one-in-ten Americans say they don't believe in God or a higher power of any kind.
  227. ^ "Religious Landscape Study - Pew Research Center". May 11, 2015. Archived from the original on January 14, 2022. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  228. ^ "Religiosity and Atheism" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 6, 2012. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  229. ^ Merica, Dan (June 12, 2012). "Pew Survey: Doubt of God Growing Quickly among Millennials". CNN. Archived from the original on November 17, 2021. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
  230. ^ "More Than 9 in 10 Americans Continue to Believe in God". Gallup.com. June 3, 2011. Archived from the original on August 30, 2017. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  231. ^ "What People Do and Do Not Believe in" (PDF). Harris Interactive. December 15, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 24, 2011. Retrieved May 15, 2011.
  232. ^ Eric Ferreri (August 16, 2011). "according to Mark Chaves". Today.duke.edu. Archived from the original on January 27, 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  233. ^ Newport, Frank (July 28, 2008). "Belief in God Far Lower in Western U.S." The Gallup Organization. Archived from the original on September 11, 2017. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  234. ^ Heelas, Spiritualities of Life, 63.
  235. ^ Heelas, Spiritualities of Life, 64.
  236. ^ Carette and King, Selling Spirituality, 41.
  237. ^ Funk, Cary; Smith, Greg. ""Nones" on the Rise: One-in-Five Adults Have No Religious Affiliation" (PDF). pewforum.org. The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 26, 2014. Retrieved December 6, 2015.
  238. ^ Johnson, Byron R.; Levin, Jeff (July 28, 2022). "Religion Is Dying? Don't Believe It". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  239. ^ Grose, Jessica (April 19, 2023). "Lots of Americans Are Losing Their Religion. Have You?". New York Times. Retrieved October 23, 2023.
  240. ^ Olson, Roger E.; Mead, Frank S.; Hill, Samuel S.; Atwood, Craig D. (2018) [1951]. "Adventist and Sabbatarian (Hebraic) Churches". Handbook of Denominations in the United States (14th [updated] ed.). Nashville, Tn: Abingdon Press. ISBN 9781501822513.
  241. ^ Morgan 2001.
  242. ^ a b Bergman, Jerry (1995). "The Adventist and Jehovah's Witness Branch of Protestantism". In Miller, Timothy (ed.). America's Alternative Religions. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. pp. 33–46. ISBN 978-0-7914-2397-4. Archived from the original on July 24, 2020.
  243. ^ Reid et al. 1990, pp. 241–242.
  244. ^ Queen, Prothero & Shattuck 1996, p. 295.
  245. ^ Chryssides 2016.
  246. ^ Mauss 1994.
  247. ^ Bowman 2012.
  248. ^ Melton 2005, p. 373, "Messianic Judaism".
  249. ^ Ahlstrom 2004, pp. 1103–6.
  250. ^ Robeck 2006.
  251. ^ Patterson & Rybarczyk 2007, pp. 123–4.
  252. ^ Garrett 2002.
  253. ^ Eddy 1884.
  254. ^ Chireau & Deutsch 2000.
  255. ^ Dorman, Jacob S. (2006). "Black Israelites". In Gallagher, Eugene V.; Ashcraft, W. Michael (eds.). Jewish and Christian Traditions. Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America, 2. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Pub. ISBN 978-0-275-98714-5. LCCN 2006022954. OCLC 315689134.
  256. ^ Rountree, Kathryn (2006). "Goddess movement". In Peter B. Clarke (ed.). Encyclopedia of new religious movements. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 240–242. ISBN 9-78-0-415-26707-6.
  257. ^ Adler 2006, Ch. 8. Women, Feminism, and the Craft.
  258. ^ George D. Chryssides (2001). The A to Z of New Religious Movements. Oxford, UK: Scarecrow Press. p. 298. Emanating from the Radhosoami Satsang (q.v.) background, which is a synthesis of Hinduism and Sikhism (qq.v.), Eckankar teaches a form of surat sabda yoga ...
  259. ^ Niebuhr, Gustav (June 30, 1994). "Humanist Synagogue Tests Reform Judaism". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on August 9, 2022.
  260. ^ Barrett, David V. (2001). The new believers: a survey of sects, cults and alternative religions (Rev. ed.). London: Cassell. ISBN 978-0-304-35592-1.
  261. ^ Gibson 2002, pp. 4, 6.
  262. ^ Berg, Herbert (2005), "Mythmaking in the African American Muslim Context: The Moorish Science Temple, the Nation of Islam, and the American Society of Muslims", Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 73 (3): 685–703, doi:10.1093/jaarel/lfi075
  263. ^ Robert 2003.
  264. ^ Scuro, Juan; Rodd, Robin (2015), "Neo-Shamanism", in Henri Gooren (ed.), Encyclopedia of Latin American Religions, Springer International Pub., pp. 1–6, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-08956-0_49-1, ISBN 978-3-319-08956-0, S2CID 239249964
  265. ^ Liebman, Charles S. (1970). "Reconstructionism in American Jewish Life" (PDF). American Jewish Year Book 1971: 3–99.
  266. ^ Carroll 1997.
  267. ^ Albanese 2007.
  268. ^ Ryan 1975.
  269. ^ Eleanor Nesbitt (2016), Sikhism: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, pp. 101–102, ISBN 978-0-19-106277-3
  270. ^ Sects in Sikhism, Encyclopedia Britannica Online
  271. ^ Staff (2022). "March 2023 NORC/AP poll" (PDF). Wall Street Journal. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  272. ^ Diamant, Jeff; Leppert, Rebecca (April 12, 2023). "Why the U.S. census doesn't ask Americans about their religion". Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 14, 2023. Census forms in the United States don't ask about religion, but relatively few U.S. adults (25%) know this, according to a Pew Research Center survey conducted shortly before census forms were mailed out in 2020. Indeed, while the Census Bureau has long collected troves of data on Americans' income, employment, race, ethnicity, housing and other things, the decennial census, held since 1790, has never directly asked Americans about their religion.
  273. ^ Wuthnow, Robert (2015). "8. Taking Stock". Inventing American Religion: Polls Surveys, and the Tenuous Quest for a Nation's Faith. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190258900.
  274. ^ Burge, Ryan P. (March 2020). "How Many "Nones" Are There? Explaining the Discrepancies in Survey Estimates". Review of Religious Research. 62 (1): 173–190. doi:10.1007/s13644-020-00400-7. S2CID 256240351.
  275. ^ Saad, Lydia; Hrynowski, Zach (June 24, 2022). "How Many Americans Believe in God?". Gallup.com. Gallup. The answer to how many Americans believe in God depends on how the question is asked. Gallup has measured U.S. adults' belief in God three different ways in recent years, with varying results.
  276. ^ a b ARDA- Religion in the United States (General)
  277. ^ a b c "PRRI — American Values Atlas". The American Values Atlas. Public Religion Research Institute. Archived from the original on February 11, 2022. Retrieved July 9, 2021.
  278. ^ "The 2020 Census of American Religion". PRRI. July 8, 2021. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  279. ^ "ARDA Sources for Religious Congregations & Membership Data". ARDA. 2000. Archived from the original on July 25, 2012. Retrieved May 29, 2010.
  280. ^ "The Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA), Year 2010 Report". ARDA. 2010. Archived from the original on November 13, 2021. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  281. ^ "Cultural Research Center". Arizona Chritian University. Retrieved August 29, 2024.
  282. ^ Stats Say Evangelical Christianity Losing Ground in America on YouTube CBN News.
  283. ^ "Barna, CRC Research finds America's evangelicals are fewer, less biblically grounded and politically disengaged". Pathway. August 8, 2024. Retrieved August 26, 2024.
  284. ^ Barna, George; Munsil, Tracy. "American Worldview Inventory 2024 (Release #4) New Research Reveals the Limitations of Christian Evangelicalism in American Society" (PDF). Arizona Christian University.
  285. ^ Lardieri, Alexa (March 29, 2021). "Church Membership Hits All-Time Low in 2020, Gallup Finds". US News. Archived from the original on March 29, 2021. Retrieved March 30, 2021.
  286. ^ Jones, Jeffrey (March 29, 2021). "U.S. Church Membership Falls Below Majority for First Time". Gallup. Archived from the original on October 16, 2021. Retrieved March 30, 2021.
  287. ^ Kaleem, Jaweed (May 17, 2014). "Americans Exaggerate How Much They Go To Religious Services, According To Study". The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on May 23, 2014. Retrieved May 31, 2014. margin of error of 2.5
  288. ^ "Religion Historical Trends". Gallup. 2022.
  289. ^ "Mississippians Go to Church the Most; Vermonters, Least". Gallup.com. February 17, 2010. Archived from the original on August 30, 2017. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  290. ^ "'One in 10' attends church weekly". BBC News. April 3, 2007. Archived from the original on December 22, 2007. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
  291. ^ NCLS releases latest estimates of church attendance Archived December 21, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, National Church Life Survey, media release, February 28, 2004
  292. ^ "Religion Losing Influence in America". Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. Archived from the original on September 20, 2010. Retrieved September 16, 2010.
  293. ^ "Religion and the 2006 Elections". Pew Forum. December 1, 2006. Archived from the original on April 22, 2010. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  294. ^ "Exit poll - Decision 2004- NBCNews.com". NBC News. Archived from the original on September 24, 2020. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  295. ^ NBC News (January 19, 2021). "Biden to become the second Catholic president in U.S. history, after JFK". NBC News. Archived from the original on January 19, 2021. Retrieved January 20, 2021.
  296. ^ "The First Catholic Vice President?". NPR.org. January 9, 2009. Archived from the original on January 14, 2015. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  297. ^ "Why Bernie Sanders doesn't participate in organized religion". www.washingtonpost.com. January 27, 2016. Archived from the original on November 10, 2016. Retrieved December 4, 2016.
  298. ^ Michael Isikoff, "I'm a Sunni Muslim", Newsweek Jan. 4, 2007[dead link]
  299. ^ Jeffrey M. Jones (February 20, 2007). "Some Americans Reluctant to Vote for Mormon, 72-Year-Old Presidential Candidates. Strong support for black, women, Catholic candidates". Gallup News Service. Archived from the original on September 15, 2017. Retrieved December 25, 2007.
  300. ^ Jeffrey M. Jones (June 21, 2012). "Atheists, Muslims See Most Bias as Presidential Candidates". Gallup News Service. Archived from the original on August 31, 2017. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  301. ^ Justin Mccarthy (June 22, 2015). "In U.S., Socialist Presidential Candidates Least Appealing". Gallup News Service. Archived from the original on September 11, 2017. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  302. ^ Kaleem, Jaweed (January 4, 2013). "Tulsi Gabbard, First Hindu In Congress, Uses Bhagavad Gita At Swearing-In". HuffPost. Archived from the original on January 7, 2017. Retrieved October 17, 2017.
  303. ^ Staff (April 24, 2023). "Spring 2023 Harvard Youth Poll: Top Findings and Takeaways". The Institute of Politics at Harvard University. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  304. ^ a b c d Staff (April 20, 2023). "Topline Questionnaire: Spring 2022 Global Attitudes Survey" (PDF). Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
  305. ^ a b Dumitru, Oana (April 18, 2023). "Morality and religion: How closely do Americans think they are related?". YouGov. Retrieved April 25, 2023.

Bibliography

[edit]

The following list of selected printed bibliographies on the topic includes both cited works and further reading.

[edit]

Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_the_United_States
15 views |
Download as ZWI file
Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF