Politics Magazine

The Number Of Nonreligious People Is Growing In U.S.

Posted on the 02 November 2014 by Jobsanger
The Number Of Nonreligious People Is Growing In U.S.
The Number Of Nonreligious People Is Growing In U.S.
The Number Of Nonreligious People Is Growing In U.S.
The last poll I saw (from the Pew Research Center) showed the percentage of nonreligious Americans was about 20% (with the youngest adults, the millennials, having about 30%). This new poll shows that may well have been an undercount of the nonreligious. It is the CBS News / New York Times / YouGov Poll done between October 16th and 23rd with only a 1/2 point (0.5%) margin of error. The margin of error is so small because the random national sample was so large -- about 98,411 adults.
This survey shows a massive 29% of Americans who say they have no religion (5% atheists, 5% agnostics, and 19% who just claim no religion). Perhaps even more important, a record low of 61% claim to be christian. That's just about 2 christians for every 1 nonreligious person. That may sound like a lot, but it used to be 4 or 5 christians for every nonreligious person. America is steadily becoming a secular nation, and it's happening much faster than expected.
And that's not the only bad news for christians. Only 51% of Americans attend church -- and only 29% of them attend regularly (at least once a week). Another 8% attends once or twice a month, and 14% say they attend a "few" times a year.
In addition, the evangelicals (the group that would like to legislate our democracy into a theocracy) currently makes up only about 31% of the population. The size of their group is not nearly as large as the noise they make politically and socially.

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