surveys

LGBTQ+ Americans are more religious than our Supreme Court battles let on

By Kelsy Burke, Andrew Flores, Suzanna Krivulskaya, and Tyler Lefevor — July 7, 2023
(RNS) — Religion and queerness make strange bedfellows, but they are not as hostile as we may think.

One in 4 US Mormons has thought about leaving the LDS Church, study shows

By Jana Riess — May 19, 2023
(RNS) — PRRI's findings showed Latter-day Saints were some of the most religious — but often uncertain — believers.

Did faith fall off a cliff during COVID? New study says no.

By Bob Smietana — November 14, 2022
(RNS) — Religious life in America was disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. But did it lead to a loss of faith as well as a decline in churchgoing?

Americans support religious freedom — as long as it’s convenient for everyone

By Ryan Burge — February 15, 2022
(RNS) — Speaking in generalities about religious freedom will always win admirers.

A new project scores colleges on how much they welcome religious diversity

By Kevin Singer — January 28, 2022
(RNS) — A new tool gauges how welcoming campuses are for students with diverse worldviews.

Trump’s wish to ban Muslim immigration is widely shared in Europe

By Tom Heneghan — February 14, 2017
PARIS (RNS) Majorities across Europe are deeply concerned about Muslim immigration and support an immediate end to it, even as voters think the Muslim populations in their countries are much higher than they really are.

How the decline of white Protestants in South Carolina was exaggerated

By Tobin Grant — February 23, 2016
Turns out, comparing 2007 and 2015 is like comparing apples and pears: similar but not the same.

Religious or not, many Americans see a creator’s hand

By Cathy Lynn Grossman — October 7, 2015
(RNS) A new survey, which asked no questions about evolution, looks at the origin of the universe and human morality in Christian terms.

Poll: Majority of Americans would vote for an atheist for president

By Kimberly Winston — July 26, 2012

(RNS) For the second time in less than a year, Gallup reported that a majority of Americans would vote for an atheist for president. Then again, atheists are running behind every other group, including gays and Muslims. By Kimberly Winston.

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