U.S. has changed in key ways in the past decade, from tech use to demographics
Among the changes: Smartphones and social media became the norm, church attendance fell, and same-sex marriage and legalizing marijuana gained support.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Among the changes: Smartphones and social media became the norm, church attendance fell, and same-sex marriage and legalizing marijuana gained support.
Black Millennials are more likely than nonblack Millennials, for example, to say they pray at least daily and attend religious services at least weekly.
Nearly eight-in-ten black Americans identify as Christian, compared with 70% of whites, 77% of Latinos and just 34% of Asian Americans.
While Millennials make up 32% of all U.S. adults, they account for roughly half of American Muslim adults. Read five facts about Muslim Millennials.
The generation gap between millennials and older adults on social and political issues exists even among evangelical Protestants.
The share of Americans who do not identify with a religious group is surely growing, but there are differing ideas about the factors driving this trend.
Roughly one-in-five U.S. adults were raised with a mixed religious background, according to a new Pew Research Center study.
About half of U.S. adults tell us they seldom (33%) or never (16%) talk about religion with people outside their family.
We sat down with Michael Hout, a professor of sociology at New York University, to examine possible reasons.
Millennials are less religious than older Americans and less likely to identify with a religious group, and those traits are reflected in the way they celebrate Christmas.
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