This Week In God (Maddow Blog)
First up from the God Machine this week is a national study showing amazing generational differences when it comes to Americans religiosity.
Six months ago, we talked about the Pew Research Centers report on the U.S. religious landscape, noting, among other things, the sudden increase over the last decade in the number of religious unaffiliated Americans including atheists, agnostics, and people who simply identify spiritually as nothing at all. This week, the researchers published the second half of their findings, and what jumped out at me were the generational differences.
"Who are the largely nonreligious adults whose ranks are growing, thus reducing the percentage of Americans who exhibit strong religious commitment? They are mainly young people just entering adulthood. Older Americans those in the Silent generation, Baby Boomers and even Generation Xers are, by and large, about as religious today as when the Religious Landscape Study was first conducted in 2007.
But these three generational cohorts constitute a shrinking share of the total U.S. population, and, as their numbers begin to dwindle, they are being replaced by a new cohort of young adults (Millennials) who are, in many ways, far less religious than their parents and grandparents generations."
Pew Research found, for example, that two-thirds of Americans in the Silent generation (Americans born between 1928 and 1945) say religion is very important in their lives. For older Millennials (those born in the 1980s), the total is less than half. For younger Millennials (those born between 1990 and 1996), its not even 4 out of 10.
According to the study, every younger generation is progressively less religious Baby Boomers are less religious than the Silent Generation; members of Generation X are less religious than Boomers, Millennials are less religious than Generation X, and so on.
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The rest
http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/week-god-11715-0?cid=sm_fb_maddow