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Church Attendance Has Declined in Most U.S. Religious Groups

Three in 10 Americans, but 67% of Mormons, attend church regularly. Most religious groups show declines in attendance over the past two decades.

In U.S., 47% Identify as Religious, 33% as Spiritual

Slightly less than half of U.S. adults describe themselves as religious, while 33% say they are spiritual but not religious and 18% are neither.

Religion and Spirituality: Tools for Better Wellbeing?

A new report from Gallup and Radiant Foundation reveals a relationship between religiosity and wellbeing.

How Religious Are Americans?

Most Americans have a religious preference -- predominantly a Christian one -- but less than half say religion is "very important" to them.

The Politics of Religion

Recent Gallup data confirm a significant and growing relationship between religiosity and partisan identity in the U.S.

Slowdown in the Rise of Religious Nones

The percentage of Americans with no formal religious identity has increased dramatically since the 1950s, but that increase appears to have leveled off in Gallup's recent data.

What Do Gallup's Indicators on Religion and Faith Tell Us?

Dr. Frank Newport rejoins the podcast to opine on Gallup's decadeslong trends on faith and religion in the U.S.

In U.S., Childhood Churchgoing Habits Fade in Adulthood

Although 67% of U.S. adults say they attended religious services regularly while they were growing up, 31% attend regularly today.

Global Study Aims to Uncover How Humans Flourish

Results from the first year of the multiyear Global Flourishing study offer insights into why people's lives are going well.

U.S. Church Attendance Still Lower Than Pre-Pandemic

Americans' church attendance levels dipped at the beginning of the pandemic and have remained lower since then.
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