Religious Attendance

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From 2002 to 2012, the percentage of Americans attending religious services weekly declined by 1.0 percentage point.

*Attendance percentages are estimated using the variables “year” (row) and “attend” column, using the composite weight. “Weekly” attendance includes respondents who report attending “nearly every week” or more frequently; “monthly” attendance includes those who report attending “once” or “several times” a month; “yearly” attendance includes those who report attending “several times a year”; and “rarely/never” attendance includes those who report attending “once a year” or less frequently. See sources below.

Dispelling Rumors of Religion’s Demise

By Byron R. Johnson

In order to understand social trends, collecting data on indicators like religious attendance is an important undertaking. Media accounts suggest a consistent if not dramatic decline of the faith factor in America: that young people under 30 are deserting the church;[1]that women are rapidly falling away from religion; that millennials are leaving the faith of their parents; and that the religiously unaffiliated (a.k.a., “nones”) have increased twofold in recent decades.

But upon closer examination of additional data from the General Social Survey (GSS), as well as other data sources, these headlines are revealed as misleading, inaccurate, and biased. The real story is that across 40 years, there have been only small variations in church attendance.

Surveys perennially find that younger people are less likely to attend church, reflecting the fact that many single young adults choose to sleep in on Sunday mornings once they are out on their own. Once they marry, and especially once they have children, their attendance rates recover. However, recent research confirms if people do not marry, and if they do not have children, there is a real decline in church attendance — a finding that is particularly striking among the poor and less educated. On the other hand, many who do not attend church regularly, especially the elderly, consistently report high levels of religious commitment and belief.

Media reports have also highlighted a supposed significant decline in women’s religious attendance, but this is not accurate.[2]F or has the gender gap narrowed. Moreover, the Baylor Religion Survey[3]shows that in 2007, 38 percent of women, compared with 26 percent of men, described themselves as “very religious.” This gap, a phenomenon observable for every nation around the globe, continues in America.[4] In 1991, according to GSS data, 38 percent of women and 28 percent of men said they attended weekly; in 2002, 36 percent of women and 24 percent of men; in 2008, 36 percent of women and 25 percent of men; and in 2010, 34 percent of women and 25 percent of men said they attended weekly.

Millennials, like the vast majority of Americans, consider themselves religious. In fact, in a pluralistic society like America, where options abound, many people, including millennials, switch churches, and they do so for a variety of reasons. Oftentimes this means they will attend a church from a denomination different from the one in which they were raised. This change does not mean, as many have wrongly concluded, that they have departed the faith. In fact, many go to churches that are more theologically conservative than the ones in which they were raised. Switching churches is a fascinating subject and if anything, a marker of religious vitality, not decline.

The rise of those reporting no religious affiliation (a.k.a., “nones”) on traditional surveys has contributed to other inaccurate perceptions. Most surveys, including the GSS, do not ask respondents enough questions to accurately sort out religious affiliation. In the Baylor Religion Survey, we not only asked the identical affiliation question used by the GSS; we also asked respondents — including the nones — if they attended religious services. Some of the nones not only indicated they regularly attended, but provided us with the name and address of their church, and a surprising number were nondenominational and evangelical. The knee-jerk reaction that all nones are unaffiliated — or atheists — is false.[5]

Finally, the fact that the number of American atheists has remained steady at 4 percent since 1944, and that church membership has reached an all-time high,[6] remind us that indicators are helpful in seeing an accurate picture of what is really happening in our society.

— Byron R. Johnson is distinguished professor of the social sciences at Baylor University and founding Director of the Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion (ISR).

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Sources

General Social Survey, “Cumulative Datafile 1972–2012,” (accessed July 14, 2014).

Endnotes

  1. This commentary uses “church” to describe the preponderance of religious practice in America and because the specific trends discussed here relate to changes particularly within Christian affiliation.
  2. Rodney Stark and Byron R. Johnson, “Religion and the Bad News Bearers,” The Wall Street Journal, August 26, 2011, (accessed June 17, 2014).
  3. For more information on the Baylor Religion Survey, Waves I, II, III, see Baylor University, Baylor Religion Survey, (accessed May 8, 2014).
  4. Rodney Stark, “Physiology and Faith: Addressing the ‘Universal’ Gender Difference in Religiousness,” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol. 41, No. 3 (2002), pp. 495–507.
  5. Kevin Dougherty, Byron R. Johnson, and Edward Polson, using national survey data from the Baylor Religion Survey, find that (1) Americans remain connected to congregations, but less so to denominations or more generic religious identity labels, and (2) religious adherents are considerably more evangelical than prior studies have found. For example, 6 percent of persons claiming no religion on the survey provided the name of a denomination, congregation, or both in subsequent questions. Source: Kevin D. Dougherty, Byron R. Johnson, Edward C. Polson, “Recovering the Lost: Remeasuring U.S. Religious Affiliation,” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol. 46, No. 4 (2007), pp. 483–499.
  6. J. Gordon Melton, Nelson’s Guide to Denominations: The Primary Resource for Understanding and Navigating America’s Christian Organizations (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2007).

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Heritage Foundation
2014 Index of Culture and Opportunity

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