Pew Research Center October 17, 2019
The religious landscape of the United States continues to change at a
rapid clip. In Pew Research Center telephone surveys conducted in 2018
and 2019, 65% of American adults describe themselves as Christians when
asked about their religion, down 12 percentage points over the past
decade. Meanwhile, 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.
Both Protestantism and Catholicism are experiencing losses of
population share. Currently, 43% of U.S. adults identify with
Protestantism, down from 51% in 2009. And one-in-five adults (20%) are
Catholic, down from 23% in 2009. Meanwhile, all subsets of the
religiously unaffiliated population – a group also known as religious
“nones” – have seen their numbers swell. Self-described atheists now
account for 4% of U.S. adults, up modestly but significantly from 2% in
2009; agnostics make up 5% of U.S. adults, up from 3% a decade ago; and
17% of Americans now describe their religion as “nothing in particular,”
up from 12% in 2009. Members of non-Christian religions also have grown
modestly as a share of the adult population.
These are among the key findings of a new analysis of trends in the
religious composition and churchgoing habits of the American public,
based on recent Pew Research Center random-digit-dial (RDD) political
polling on the telephone.1 The data shows that the trend toward religious disaffiliation documented in the Center’s 2007 and 2014 Religious Landscape Studies, and before that in major national studies like the General Social Survey (GSS), has continued apace.
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