American Religious Identification
Survey 2008
Principal
Investigators: Barry A. Kosmin and Ariela Keysar
American Religious Identification Survey is Third in Landmark Series
March 9, 2009
HARTFORD, Conn.
- The Catholic population of the United States
has shifted away from the Northeast and towards the Southwest, while secularity
continues to grow in strength in all regions of the country, according to a new
study conducted by the Program on Public Values at Trinity College.
"The decline of Catholicism in the Northeast is nothing short of
stunning," said Barry Kosmin, a principal
investigator for the American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS).
"Thanks to immigration and natural increase among Latinos, California now has a higher proportion of Catholics than New England."
Conducted between February and November of last year, ARIS 2008 is the third
in a landmark series of large, nationally representative surveys of
U.S.
adults in
the 48 contiguous states conducted by Kosmin and Ariela Keysar. Employing the same
research methodology as the 1990 and 2001 surveys, ARIS 2008 questioned 54,461
adults in either English or Spanish. With a margin of error of less than 0.5
percent, it provides the only complete portrait of how contemporary Americans
identify themselves religiously, and how that self-identification has changed
over the past generation.
In broad terms, ARIS 2008 found a consolidation and strengthening of shifts
signaled in the 2001 survey. The percentage of Americans claiming no religion,
which jumped from 8.2 in 1990 to 14.2 in 2001, has now increased to 15 percent.
Given the estimated growth of the American adult population since the last
census from 207 million to 228 million, that reflects an additional 4.7 million
"Nones." Northern New England has now taken
over from the Pacific Northwest as the least religious section of the country,
with Vermont,
at 34 percent "Nones," leading all other
states by a full 9 points.
"Many people thought our 2001 finding was an anomaly," Keysar said. We now know it wasn't. The 'Nones' are the only group to have grown in every state of
the Union."
The percentage of Christians in America, which declined in the
1990s from 86.2 percent to 76.7 percent, has now edged down to 76 percent.
Ninety percent of the decline comes from the non-Catholic segment of the
Christian population, largely from the mainline denominations, including
Methodists, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Episcopalians/Anglicans, and the United
Church of Christ. These groups, whose proportion of the American population
shrank from 18.7 percent in 1990 to 17.2 percent in 2001,
all experienced sharp numerical declines this decade and now constitute just
12.9 percent.
Most of the growth in the Christian population occurred among those who
would identify only as "Christian," "Evangelical/Born
Again," or "non-denominational Christian." The last of these,
associated with the growth of megachurches, has
increased from less than 200,000 in 1990 to 2.5 million in 2001 to over 8
million today. These groups grew from 5 percent of the population in 1990 to
8.5 percent in 2001 to 11.8 percent in 2008. Significantly, 38.6 percent of
mainline Protestants now also identify themselves as evangelical or born
again.
"It looks like the two-party system of American Protestantism--mainline
versus evangelical--is collapsing," said Mark Silk, director of the Public
Values Program. "A generic form of evangelicalism is emerging as the
normative form of non-Catholic Christianity in the United State
s."
Other key findings:
- Baptists, who constitute the
largest non-Catholic Christian tradition, have increased their numbers by two
million since 2001, but continue to decline as a proportion of the population.
- Mormons have increased in
numbers enough to hold their own proportionally, at 1.4 percent of the
population.
- The Muslim proportion of the
population continues to grow, from .3 percent in 1990 to .5 percent in 2001 to
.6 percent in 2008.
- The number of adherents of
Eastern Religions, which more than doubled in the 1990s, has declined slightly,
from just over two million to just under. Asian Americans are substantially
more likely to indicate no religious identity than other racial or ethnic
groups.
- Those
who identify religiously as Jews continue to decline numerically, from 3.1
million in 1990 to 2.8 million in 2001 to 2.7 million in 2008--1.2 percent of
the population. Defined to include those who identify as Jews by ethnicity
alone, the American Jewish population has remained stable over the past two
decades.
- Only1.6 percent of Americans
call themselves atheist or agnostic. But based on stated beliefs, 12 percent
are atheist (no God) or agnostic (unsure), while 12 percent more are deistic
(believe in a higher power but not a personal God). The number of outright
atheists has nearly doubled since 2001, from 900 thousand to 1.6 million.
Twenty-seven percent of Americans do not expect a religious funeral at their
death.
- Adherents of New Religious
movements, including Wiccans and self-described
pagans, have grown faster this decade than in the 1990s.
Professors Kosmin and Keysar
are, respectively, director and associate director of Trinity's Institute for
the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture. The Program on Public Values at
Trinity College
comprises the Institute and the Leonard
E. Greenberg
Center for the Study of
Religion in Public Life, which is also directed by Professor Silk. ARIS 2008
was made possible by grants from Lilly Endowment, Inc. and the Posen
Foundation. To receive a copy of the ARIS 2008 Summary Report by email, contact
any of the above.