Religious ‘recalibration’ under way, survey indicates
By ADELLE M. BANKS
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Published: October 31, 2009
Religious institutions may be waning in the U.S, but private religious practices such as prayer are on the rise, a new University of Chicago report reveals.
While weekly attendees of religious services dropped from 32 percent to 26 percent of the population between 1983 and 2006, people praying daily rose from 54 percent to 59 percent in the same period.
"There’s some weakening of traditional religious affiliation and practices such as attending religious services, but there’s a slight increase in belief in the afterlife and a slight increase in the frequency of … prayer,” said
Tom Smith, author of "Religious Change around the World,” which was released Oct. 23.
"It’s partly a transformation, or kind of a recalibration, of what it means to be religious in America, rather than a simple decline.”
In 1973, 69 percent of respondents said they believed in an afterlife. By 2006, 73 percent believed in the hereafter.
Belief in God remains strong, according to a range of surveys, said Smith, the director of the General Social Survey at the university’s
National Opinion Research Center.
"If we were just having what secularization theory predicted, then we would be seeing everything going down across the board,” he said.
Instead, while some Americans continue to attend services and be involved in other spiritual practices, others have "redefined” what it means to be religious.
"They no longer think that means they need to go to Mass or services every week, but they still have some type of religious belief and practice, more often personal than organized,” Smith said.
The percentage of people who never have attended a religious service was 22 percent in 2006, a sharp increase from 9 percent in 1972.
Amid changes about how Americans view their own religious life, there has been growing tolerance of those who shun or question religion.
Asked if someone who is "against all churches and religion” should be permitted to speak in their community, 76 percent of respondents agreed in 2008. Just 37 percent agreed with allowing such a speaker in 1954. The percentage who thought such a person should be permitted to teach in a college increased even more dramatically, from 12 percent to 60 percent.
The report’s General Social Survey statistics include random samples of adults ranging from 1,500 to 4,500 with a margin of error ranging from plus or minus 2 percentage points to plus or minus 4 percentage points.
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