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Part
II of U.S. Religious Landscape Survey details
Americans' religious beliefs and behaviors as
well as their social and political attitudes
WASHINGTON
- The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life
today released its second report on the U.S. Religious
Landscape Survey, which finds that while many
Americans are highly religious, most are not dogmatic
in their approach to faith. This new analysis
examines the diversity of Americans' religious
beliefs and practices as well as their social
and political attitudes. It follows the first
report of the Landscape Survey, which was published
in February 2008 and detailed the size, internal
changes and demographic characteristics of major
religions in the United States.
"The
fact that most Americans are not exclusive or
dogmatic about their religion is a fascinating
finding," said Luis Lugo, director of the
Pew Forum. "Most people will be surprised
that a majority of adherents in nearly all religious
traditions, including a majority of evangelical
Protestants, say that there isn't just one way
to salvation or to interpret the teachings of
their own faith."
Based
on interviews conducted in English and Spanish
with a nationally representative sample of more
than 35,000 adults, part two of the Landscape
Survey includes a wealth of information on the
religious beliefs and practices of the American
public. It also explores the social and political
attitudes of religious groups, including members
of many small religious traditions - such as Mormons,
Jehovah's Witnesses, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists,
atheists and agnostics - not typically analyzed
in public opinion surveys.
"This report illustrates, chapter and verse,
the amazing diversity and dynamism both between
and within religious traditions in America,"
noted John Green, senior fellow at the Pew Forum.
"And this diversity of affiliation, belief
and practice matters when it comes to social and
political questions."
The
second report of the U.S. Religious Landscape
Survey finds:
*
Although many Americans are highly religious,
they are not dogmatic in their faith. Seventy
percent of Americans with a religious affiliation
say that many religions - not just their own -
can lead to eternal life. Most also think there
is more than one correct way to interpret the
teachings of their own faith.
* This does not mean, however, that Americans
take religious matters lightly. Most, in fact,
say they rank the importance of religion very
highly in their lives, and a plurality wants to
preserve the traditional beliefs and practices
of their faith, while only a small minority wants
to accommodate their religion to modern culture.
* There is tremendous diversity of religious beliefs
and practices in the U.S. Important religious
differences exist between the major religious
traditions, but there are also important differences
within religious traditions.
o
While more than nine-in-ten Americans (92%) believe
in the existence of God or a universal spirit,
there are considerable differences in the nature
of this belief. Six-in-ten adults believe that
God is a person with whom people can have a relationship;
but one-in-four - including about half of Jews
and Hindus - see God as an impersonal force. Similarly,
seven-in-ten Americans say that they are absolutely
certain of God's existence, while roughly one-in-five
(22%) are less certain in their belief.
o Three-quarters of Americans report praying at
least once a week, with large majorities among
most religious traditions saying they pray on
at least a weekly basis. Even among the unaffiliated,
roughly one-in-three pray on a weekly basis. At
the same time, however, there are those among
all faith groups who pray much less frequently;
overall, one quarter of the public says they pray
a few times a month or less often.
o Almost two-fifths of Americans report meditating
at least once a week. This practice is particularly
common among Buddhists, but nearly half of evangelical
Protestants and Muslims say they meditate at least
weekly. About one-quarter of the unaffiliated
report weekly meditation. These patterns may incorporate
elements of both Christian and non-Christian traditions.
*
Politics and religion in the United States are
intertwined, and religion is highly relevant to
understanding politics in the U.S. Yet while the
diversity of religious affiliation, belief and
practice translates into important differences
on many social and political issues, differences
on other issues are less pronounced.
o Religion is closely linked to political ideology.
The survey shows that Mormons are among the most
politically conservative groups in the population.
Jews, Buddhists and Hindus, by contrast, are among
the most likely to describe their ideology as
liberal.
o People who regularly attend worship services
and say religion is important in their lives are
much more likely to identify as conservative,
and this pattern extends to many religious traditions.
For example, within the evangelical, mainline
Protestant, historically black Protestant, Catholic,
Mormon and Orthodox Christian traditions, those
who attend church weekly are significantly more
likely than those who attend less often to describe
themselves as political conservatives. And among
Jews, those who say religion is very important
to them or pray every day are more likely than
others to be politically conservative.
o The connection between religious engagement
and political attitudes appears to be especially
strong when it comes to hot button social issues
such as abortion or homosexuality. For instance,
about six-in-ten Americans who attend religious
services at least once a week say abortion should
be illegal in most or all cases, while only three-in-ten
who attend less often share this view. This pattern
holds across several religious traditions.
o On other topics covered in the survey, such
as views on the role and size of government and
foreign policy attitudes, the role of religion
is less clear and there appears to be greater
consensus across and within religious traditions.
For instance, a majority of nearly every religious
group supports stricter environmental regulations
and believes the government should do more to
help Americans in need. Similarly, most Americans,
including majorities of most faiths, say it is
more important to focus on problems here at home
than to be active in world affairs.
In
conjunction with the release of this report, the
Pew Forum is updating its online presentation
of the findings at religions.pewforum.org. Updated
features include interactive mapping by state,
dynamic charts and a variety of other tools that
allow users to explore the beliefs and practices
as well as social and political views of major
religions in the United States.
Subsequent
releases will include a re-contact survey that
delves deeper into the relationship between religious
and political identity, issues related to conversion
and attitudes toward religious pluralism in America.
The
Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life delivers
timely, impartial information on issues at the
intersection of religion and public affairs. The
Forum is a nonpartisan, non-advocacy organization
and does not take positions on policy debates.
Based in Washington, D.C., the Forum is a project
of the Pew Research Center, which is funded by
The Pew Charitable Trusts.
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