The Largest Survey Ever Conducted of American Religious and Denominational Identity: 14 Major Findings from a Landmark Study

Screen Shot 2017-09-06 at 11.54.31 AM

PRRI (Public Religion Research Institute)—a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to conducting independent research at the intersection of religion, culture, and public policy—has released their report on the 2016 American Values Atlas (AVA), which was the single largest survey of American religious and denominational identity ever conducted.

The AVA draws upon data from more than 100,000 bilingual telephone interviews conducted among a random sample of Americans in 2016, with 40,000 interviews on political issue areas.

Because of its large sample size, the AVA allows analysis of specific census regions, all 50 states, and even 30 major metropolitan areas, while providing a rare portrait of smaller religious communities and ethnic groups.

The following is drawn from their executive summary.

1. White Christians now account for fewer than half of the public.

2. White evangelical Protestants are in decline—along with white mainline Protestants and white Catholics

3. Non-Christian religious groups are growing, but they still represent less than one in ten Americans combined.

4. America’s youngest religious groups are all non-Christian. 

5. The Catholic Church is experiencing an ethnic transformation. 

6. Atheists and agnostics account for a minority of all religiously unaffiliated. Most are secular. 

7. There are 20 states in which no religious group comprises a greater share of residents than the religiously unaffiliated

8. No state is less religiously diverse than Mississippi

9. The cultural center of the Catholic Church is shifting south. 

10. Jews, Hindus, and Unitarian-Universalists stand out as the most educated groups in the American religious landscape. 

11. Asian or Pacific-Islander Americans have a significantly different religious profile than other racial or ethnic groups.

12. Nearly half of LGBT Americans are religiously unaffiliated.

13. White Christians have become a minority in the Democratic Party.

14. White evangelical Protestants remain the dominant religious force in the GOP.

To read more details on each of these points, go here.

Or use their interactive map to interact with specific questions that interest you.

Exit mobile version