by Sandi Villarreal 10-09-2012 | 9:40am
Image: DBE |
One-in-five adults in the United States — and a third of
adults under 30 — say they have no religious affiliation. The numbers
are out in a new report called “’Nones’ on the Rise,” put out by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. That 20 percent of the population is up from 15 percent just five years ago.
But
while our church membership rolls may be shrinking, “unaffiliated
doesn’t necessarily mean wholly secular,” said senior researcher Cary
Funk at the Religion Newswriters Association Conference in Bethesda,
Md., on Saturday.
In fact, two-thirds of the 46
million Americans self-identifying as having no religion also say they
believe in God. And 21 percent of them say they pray every day. A large
portion of this group — 37 percent — say they consider themselves
“spiritual but not religious.”
The increase in disaffiliation goes hand-in-hand with an overall lack of trust in American institutions across the board, from the government to the news media, and now, to our houses of worship.
The
“nones” overwhelmingly say religious institutions are too concerned
with money and power, and 67 percent say they both focus too much on
rules and are too involved in politics.
So where are
the “nones” coming from? That uptick in those checking “nothing in
particular” comes largely from a shrinking number identifying as
evangelical or mainline Protestant — a decline from 53 to 48 percent
since 2007. An influx of Latin immigration has supplanted any decline of
Catholic affiliation.
But another source is simple
generational replacement, as the unaffiliated are overwhelmingly
concentrated in the millennial generation.
Millennials Drop the Labels
Pew
Forum senior researcher Greg Smith said not only are millennials more
likely to be unaffiliated, but “they’re more likely to be unaffiliated
than previous generations were at their age” — meaning, the group is unlikely to change as they get older.
Thirty
percent of millennials overall (age 18-31) identify as unaffiliated.
But when you break that down to younger millennials (age 18-25), a full
third of our youngest voting bloc says they have no religion.
This
is in large part to the fact that unaffiliation among parents is on the
rise. Much of the millennial generation was raised in household with no
religion.
Political implications
The
group —which also includes atheists and agnostics — largely swings
left. More than six-in-ten say they are Democrat and 38 percent identify
as liberal. And that divide is on the increase.
In 2008, 75 percent of the “nones” voted for the Democratic candidate, up from 61 percent in 2000. “In
the future, unaffiliated vote may be as important to the Democratic
party as traditional religions are to the Republican Party,” said John
Green, senior research adviser for Pew.
The
unaffiliated — as with young Millennials — don’t vote at the same rate
as those in traditional religions, and neither candidate has been able
to mobilize the group.
But the “nones” are the
Democratic Party’s single largest religious group. If mobilized
effectively, they could become critical in November.
Key statistics
- 88 percent of “nones” are not looking for a religion
- Since 2007, unaffiliated have risen from 17 to 24 percent of all registered voters who are or lean Democrat
- The number of unaffiliated has increased consistently across demographics — college educated and not, male and female, high and low income, and in all regions of the country.
- Only 27 percent of “nones” say they do not believe in God or a universal spirit.
- 52 percent of “nones” say religious institutions “protect and strengthen morality” compared with 76 percent of the U.S. general public
- 72 percent of “nones’ say abortion should be legal in all or most cases
- 76 percent of “nones” say homosexuality should be accepted by society, and 73 percent say they are in favor of same-sex marriage
Sandi Villarreal is Associate Web Editor for Sojourners. You can follow her on Twitter @Sandi.
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