from the  site:
FiveThirtyEight
 
 
AUG 23, 2016 AT 6:29  AM 
 
Religious Diversity May Be Making America Less  Religious

 
 
By _Daniel Cox_ (http://fivethirtyeight.com/contributors/daniel-cox/) 


 
 
 
In the United States, diversity has  generally been considered an asset. It 
is frequently cited by public figures as  both a source of national pride 
and a worthy ambition. It is an oft-stated goal  of _Fortune 500 companies_ 
(https://www.apple.com/diversity/today/) , _private colleges_ 
(http://diverseeducation.com/article/66470/)  and _entire sectors_ 
(http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/how-silicon-valley-is-trying-to-fix-its-diversity-problem/)
  of the  
U.S. economy. And even if Americans don’t claim much diversity in their 
_own social networks_ (http://www.prri.org/research/analysis-social-network/) , 
few believe that our differences are not something  to be celebrated. At 
one point it was even argued that America’s religious  vitality _hinged on its 
diversity_ 
(https://www.jstor.org/stable/2095731?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents)  — greater 
competition between places of  worship would contribute to a 
more vibrant religious culture. However, new  evidence suggests that 
religious pluralism could work in the opposite direction  — undermining the 
vitality of America’s religious  communities. 
This is not a new debate, but it’s more  relevant than ever. The American 
religious landscape is transforming rapidly. At  one time, religious 
diversity meant: Baptist, Methodist and Episcopalian. Today,  it encompasses a 
multiplicity of religious traditions such as Sikhism, Buddhism,  Islam and 
Hinduism, as well as an increasing variety of noninstitutional belief  systems 
such as humanism, skepticism, atheism and subjective spirituality.  Racial and 
ethnic shifts have also changed the face of Christianity. The U.S.  was once 
a predominantly white Christian country, but fewer than _half of Americans_ 
(http://www.prri.org/end-white-christian-america/)  (45  percent) identify 
as white Christian today. 
We don’t know for sure that America’s religious  pluralism is causing a 
drop in religious vitality —  there are reasons to think the two might simply 
be related — but there are a  number of different ways diversity might erode 
commitment. The practical effect  of rising religious diversity is to 
expose Americans to ideas and views that  could challenge their religious 
beliefs. A_recent survey_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/07/16/how-americans-feel-about-religious-groups/) 
 found  that 77 percent of Americans are acquainted 
with someone who is nonreligious, 61  percent know someone who is Jewish and 
38 percent know someone who is Muslim.  The widening array of religious 
beliefs and identities also challenges long-held  understandings of America’s 
Christian heritage and religious character that can  reinforce a commitment to 
religion. This weakening of America’s religious  consensus means there is 
far less social pressure to conform to religious norms.  For young people 
coming of age today, _America’s Christian heritage is no longer a  given_ 
(http://www.prri.org/spotlight/is-america-a-christian-nation-nearly-half-of-americ
ans-no-longer-think-so/) , and being Christian is  not viewed as a critical 
component of national identity._1_ 
(http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/religious-diversity-may-be-making-america-less-religious/#fn-1)
  
Geographically, states with greater religious  variety tend to exhibit 
lower levels of overall religiosity._2_ 
(http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/religious-diversity-may-be-making-america-less-religious/#fn-2)
  No state is 
more religiously uniform  than Mississippi. It is a place where, as my 
colleague and native Mississippian  Robert Jones once said: “It’s hard to swing 
a 
dead cat without hitting a  Baptist.” And this is not far from the truth. 
_Half of the state’s population_ 
(http://ava.publicreligion.org/#religious/2015/States/denomination/m/US-MS) 
identifies as Baptist and _54 percent_ 
(http://ava.publicreligion.org/#religious/2015/States/religion/m/US-MS)  are  
evangelical Protestant. No other state is so singularly dominated by a single  
faith tradition. It’s probably no coincidence that Mississippi is also one of 
 the few states with constitutions that _prohibit atheists from serving in 
elected  office_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/07/us/in-seven-states-atheists-push-to-end-largely-forgotten-ban-.html?_r=0)
 . According  to _Gallup’s 
2016 rankings_ (http://www.gallup.com/poll/189038/new-hampshire-
least-religious-state.aspx)  of the most and least religious states,  
Mississippi has 
the honor of being the most religious state in the  country._3_ 
(http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/religious-diversity-may-be-making-america-less-religio
us/#fn-3)  In contrast, Oregon ranks high in terms  of religious diversity —
 no one religious tradition makes up more than 20  percent of the state’s 
population — and falls near the bottom in Gallup’s  ranking. Only four 
states are less religious.   
Diversity within our immediate social networks  may also serve to weaken 
our ties to a religious community or strengthen our  resolve to remain 
unattached. Much of what we do, what we think, and how we  understand the world 
is 
influenced by those around us. Americans who report  greater religious 
diversity in their social networks demonstrate much less  regular religious 
involvement._4_ 
(http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/religious-diversity-may-be-making-america-less-religious/#fn-4)
  A new analysis based on a _PRRI study_ 
(http://www.prri.org/research/analysis-social-network/)  of  Americans’ 
social networks found that Americans who report greater religious  diversity 
among their close friends and family are less likely to engage in  religious 
activities. Sixty-three percent of Americans who have religiously  diverse 
social networks say they seldom or never attend religious services,  compared 
with only about one-third (32 percent) of those who count  coreligionists as 
their closest friends and family members. This is true for  religious 
Americans as well. In fact, even when controlling for different  demographic 
attributes, including religious identity, Americans with more  religiously 
diverse social networks demonstrate lower rates of religious  participation and 
are less apt to say religion is important in their lives than  other 
Americans.     SHARE THAT ATTEND RELIGIOUS  SERVICES  ATTENDANCE  HIGH 
RELIGIOUS  
DIVERSITY  LOW RELIGIOUS  DIVERSITY   More than once a  week 8%  
–
13%  
–
Once a week 10  
–
25  
–
Once or twice a  month 7  
–
10  
–
A few times a  year 13  
–
18  
–
Seldom 28  
–
19  
–
Never 35  
–
13  
–
People with more religiously diverse social networks  attend religious 
services less often 
>From survey conducted Sept.  21 – Oct. 3, 2013 of 2,317 adults 
SOURCE:  PRRI 
Religious diversity could even subvert  our initial exposure to religion. 
Religiously mixed marriages are _more common than ever_ 
(http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/06/02/interfaith-marriage/) , and 
Americans raised by 
parents of different faiths  report much lower levels of religious activity 
in childhood than those raised in  religiously unified households._5_ 
(http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/religious-diversity-may-be-making-america-less
-religious/#fn-5) Nearly 6 in 10 (58 percent) Americans raised by  parents 
who shared the same religious background say they attended religious  
services weekly or more often. Only 40 percent of Americans raised in  
religiously 
mixed households report attending services regularly as children.  
Americans raised in mixed religious households are also less likely to have  
prayed 
regularly with their family and to have attended Sunday  school.   
Of course, it is possible that religious  diversity is not directly 
precipitating a decline in religious identity and  engagement. Parents of 
different 
faith backgrounds might de-emphasize religious  activities in an effort to 
reduce conflict in the home — a phenomenon supported  by _social network 
theory_ 
(https://www.sas.upenn.edu/polisci/sites/www.sas.upenn.edu.polisci/files/mutz%20ajps%202002.pdf)
 — but it might also be that people who marry 
outside  their particular denomination or tradition care less about their 
religious  identity in the first place. Similarly, Americans may cultivate 
religiously  diverse social connections because their own religious beliefs are 
less 
 important. Religiously diverse states might attract more secular residents 
 because they offer a more accepting and tolerant religious climate. And 
yet, it  is difficult to imagine that weakening social pressure and greater 
exposure to  diverse religious perspectives, including those that are critical 
of religion,  would have no effect on the decisions we make about our own 
religious  lives. 
Diversity is now simply a fact of  American religious life. It does not 
signal the end of religion, but it may make  it easier for Americans to abstain 
from religious involvement and encourage  other types of spiritual and 
philosophical explorations. It may also make  atheists more willing to “come 
out,
” something that can be exceedingly _difficult especially in very religious 
 communities_ 
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/10626076/Is-America-losing-faith-Atheism-on-the-rise-but-still-in-the-shadows.
html) . Organized  religion has never been in jeopardy of dying out due to 
a single traumatic  event. Instead, it is a cumulative series of unanswered 
challenges that pose the  greatest risk. Religious diversity might not 
represent a dramatic threat to  religion, but it may represent another small 
hole 
in an already sinking  ship.

-- 
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