Christian Post
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
Few Millennials Interested in Religion, Study Finds
Wed, Jan. 12, 2011 Posted: 06:27 PM EDT   
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Millennials, those born between 1980 and 2000, are not anti-Christian or  
anti-religion, but they are, in general, just not interested in religion, 
says a  new book based on a survey of members of this generation. 
An apathetic attitude towards religious and spiritual matters is common 
among  members of this generation, according to The Millennials by Thom  
Rainer, president and CEO of LifeWay Christian Research, and his son Jess, a  
Millennial born in 1985. Members of this generation are likely to care less  
about spiritual matters than those from previous generations, the Rainers  
wrote. 
Nearly two-thirds (65 percent) of this generation rarely or never attend  
religious services, according to the survey conducted by LifeWay on 1,200  
Millennials. And spiritual matters was ranked sixth, below friends and  
education, in a list based on an open-ended question on what is important to  
respondents. 
“The [Baby] Boomers began the decline [in caring about religion] right 
after  the Builder generation. Then came Gen X where it decreased again. And 
the 
 Millennials are even less so (religious),” Thom Rainer explained to The  
Christian Post. 
Rainer suggested that the church has become less effective in reaching the  
Millennials because members of this group tend to be a high commitment  
generation and they see most of what takes place in churches as low commitment  
so they are not interested. Another possible reason is that three-fourths 
of  these Millennials come from an unchurched background, meaning they have 
no  Christian faith background. 
“They are not anti-religious or anti-Christian, but they tend to be totally 
 ambivalent towards anything religious or Christian,” he said. 
The survey also found that Millennials are “a confused generation  
spiritually.” Although, 65 percent of this generation describe themselves as  
Christian – notably many of them do not know or practice the basic teachings of 
 
the faith – only 26 percent say they believe they will go to heaven when they 
 die because they have accepted Christ as their savior. 
Millennials are also confused over who Jesus is. They were divided on 
whether  Jesus is the only way to salvation and if he was sinless. 
“In summary we can say that the church’s challenge is not overcoming an  
adversarial attitude from the Millennials. The true challenge is overcoming  
apathy,” the Rainers say in the book. “Christianity is not the belief of 
the  vast majority of this generation. And they believe the American church to 
be one  of the least relevant institutions in society.” 
An astounding 70 percent of Millennials agree that American churches are  
irrelevant today. 
But the Rainers are optimistic about the future of Christianity in America  
because they believe the 15 percent of Millennials who are true Christians, 
 based on their study, may have the highest level of Christian commitment 
of any  generation in America’s history. 
Katie Davis, for example, moved to Uganda initially to teach kindergarten 
at  an orphanage at 19. But she has since started a ministry where American 
sponsors  help support the education and feeding of poor children in the 
country. She also  adopted 14 Ugandan children by the time she was 21 years 
old. 
“[T]he mindset of Katie Davis is pervasive among Millennial Christians. And 
 though the Christian population of this generation is likely no higher 
than 15  percent, these young people may well turn the world upside down with 
their  commitments and causes.” 
The Rainers state that most Millennials see churches as “business as usual”
  and inward focused, which turns them off. The members of this generation 
are  looking for radical churches that are dedicated to living the life of 
the  disciples in the first century. 
“Millennials don’t ask what the community can do for the church; they ask  
what they can do for the community,” the authors stress. “Millennial 
Christians  are seeking to move as close to New Testament Christianity as 
possible.” 
In other findings, Millennials are not as environmentally driven as  
previously thought; they have a surprisingly close relationship with their  
parents; they respect older people; and they consider family the most important 
 
thing in their life.
Michelle A. Vu
Christian Post Reporter   
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