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Rank-and-File Partisans Reflect Their Leaders' Views on Israel and Netanyahu

The visit of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the U.S. and his speech before Congress on Tuesday has underscored, if not exacerbated, the abundant political differences in elected officials' views of the prime minister and of Israel ...

Confidence in Religion at New Low, but Not Among Catholics

Americans' confidence in organized religion has dropped dramatically over the past four decades, hitting an all-time low this year of 42%. While Protestants' confidence in the church is also at a new low, Catholics' has stabilized.

CliftonStrengths in the Church: Gateway to Human Formation

Listen as Fr. Jeff Lorig explains how CliftonStrengths and Q12 are fostering human formation and a more focused vision for the future at the Archdiocese of Omaha.

Gallup Vault: In 1965, the Catholic Church and Birth Control

In 1965, most U.S. Catholics who knew the Catholic Church's views on the issue said they believed the church would eventually approve of some kind of birth control. A substantial majority of this group said the change would happen relatively ...

Latin Americans Say Pope Francis Brings Hope to the Poor

Most Latin Americans believe Pope Francis will bring positive changes to the Catholic Church and hope to the world's poor. A smaller majority says Francis has inspired them to feel closer to the Catholic Church.

Three in Four in U.S. Still See the Bible as Word of God

Three in four Americans consider the Bible to be God's word, with 28% saying it should be taken literally and 47% saying it is open to interpretation. Long-term biblical literalism has declined some, while a secular take on the Bible has become ...

5 Things to Know About Evangelicals in America

Americans' identification as born-again or evangelical has stayed remarkably stable since 1991, even as other indicators show Americans becoming less religious.

Five Key Findings on Religion in the U.S.

A review of key religious indicators in 2016 shows the U.S. remains a largely religious nation, but an increasing percentage of Americans say they have no formal religious identification.

In U.S., Religious Prejudice Stronger Against Muslims

Americans express more prejudice toward Muslims than toward followers of other major religious groups, according to a new report by the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies. The findings also reveal that Americans hold more negative views about ...

Religious Americans Enjoy Higher Wellbeing

Very religious Americans have higher wellbeing than those who are moderately religious or not religious at all, boosted by their higher life evaluation, healthier behaviors, higher emotional wellbeing, and better work orientations.
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