Skip to content
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
The Baptist Paper
The Baptist Paper
  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your state news
  • Classifieds
  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your state news
  • Classifieds

Decline of religious identification stalled but not trending up yet

Religion in America might be best described in the words of rap artist LL Cool J: Don’t call it a comeback. At least not yet.
  • December 9, 2025
  • Religion News Service
  • Church Life, Latest News, National News
(Unsplash photo)

Decline of religious identification stalled but not trending up yet

Religion in America might be best described in the words of rap artist LL Cool J: Don’t call it a comeback. At least not yet.

Despite claims of a revival of religion in the United States, a new report from Pew Research Center finds young Americans remain less religious than their parents or grandparents, with just more than half (55%) claiming a religion.

“On average, young adults remain much less religious than older Americans,” reads the report released Dec. 8. “Today’s young adults also are less religious than young people were a decade ago.”

For more stories at your doorstep, subscribe to The Baptist Paper.

SIGN UP for our weekly Highlights emails.

However, the decades-long religious decline remains stalled for now, according to the report, based on data from two Pew surveys — the National Public Opinion Reference Survey and the 2023–24 U.S. Religious Landscape Study.

Relative stability

Since 2020, about 70% of Americans have identified with a religion, according to Pew, a period of relative stability.

The percentage of Americans claiming no faith — a group known as the nones — nearly doubled in size from 2007 (16%) to 2022 (31%). The percentage of Americans who identify with a religion decreased from 84% to 69% during that time period, according to Pew research.

The percentage of nones has settled at around 30% over the past five years.

“The recent stability is striking because it comes after a prolonged period of religious decline,” according to Pew. “For decades, measures of religious belonging, behaving, and believing had been dropping nationwide.”

Pew also found the number of Americans who pray daily (46%), who say religion is important in their life (43%) and who say they attend services at least once a month (34%) has remained steady over the past few years.

“There is some bouncing around from year to year, as is to be expected in survey research,” Gregory A. Smith, Pew’s senior associate director of research, wrote in the report. “But there is no clear trend of either increasing or decreasing religiousness since 2020.”

Future decline still likely

Researchers expect the percentage of Americans who are religious will decline in the future, as older Americans die and are replaced by young, less religious Americans.

Just over half (55%) of Americans born between 1995 and 2002 — the youngest group studied in Pew’s latest report — identify with a religion. By contrast, 83% of the oldest Americans studied (born in 1954 or earlier) say they are religious.

However, the youngest Americans are slightly more religious than those who are a few years older, Pew found. Among those born between 1995 and 2002, 55 percent said they identify with a religion in Pew’s National Public Opinion Reference Survey. That jumped to 61% for Americans born between 2003 and 2007, according to the report.

The report also found 26% of Americans born between 1995 and 2002 say they attend religious services at least monthly, while 41% of Americans born between 2003 and 2007 do so. That’s a significant jump, Smith said in an email.

“This is not the first time we have seen the youngest adults come of age with levels of religiousness that equal or exceed those of slightly older adults. But analysis shows that a gap between these cohorts tends to appear over time,” according to the report.

‘Calm before the storm’

It’s not clear how long the decline of religion may stay paused.

A previous Pew report, based on data from the General Social Survey, showed during the late 1980s to early 1990s, the percentage of Americans who identified as Christian dropped from 90% to about 80 %, then stayed stable for more than a decade before dropping again.

The percentage of Americans who identified with other religions over the same time period was relatively stable (between 5% and 7%), while the religiously unaffiliated increased in a pattern opposite the Christian decline.

Ryan Burge, a professor at the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis, said something similar could be happening now.

“I think it’s the calm before the storm,” said Burge, who writes about the religious landscape in his Graphs about Religion Substack. At some point, the decline will begin again due to generational shifts.

“Gravity still goes down,” he said.

Looking at the data, Burge suspects in the future, just over half of Americans will be religious, with about 45% of Americans identifying as Christians and 10% as other faiths, while just under half will be nones.

Religion in America isn’t going away, he said. But it won’t have the same social power as it did in the past.

Signs of vibrancy among students

Dan Allan, a long-time national staffer for Cru, a national evangelical campus ministry, said he’s seen some signs that religion among younger Americans may be becoming more vibrant.

For example, just under 17,000 students attended fall retreats sponsored by Cru campus groups this year, up 7% from last year and nearly 20% from 2023. Allan said attending a retreat is one sign Cru students are becoming more serious about their involvement.

Allan also said more than 100 groups that minister to American college students have formed a partnership called Every Campus, with the hope of starting new ministries at colleges where there are none.

Campus groups are seeing both renewed interest in faith and, at the same time, a large segment of students who are not religious, Allan said. He cited Christian podcaster and writer Carey Nieuwhof, who said young people are experiencing both “revival and retreat.”

“There’s a great deal of interest and still a set of people who are skeptical,” Allan said.


EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Bob Smietana and originally published by Religion News Service.

Share with others:

Facebook
X/Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Latest News

  • Abuse lawsuits rising against Harvest Christian Fellowship’s founder Greg Laurie
    Abuse lawsuits rising against Harvest Christian Fellowship’s founder Greg Laurie
    December 9, 2025/
    0 Comments
  • Nigeria: 100 students freed after kidnapping
    Nigeria: 100 students freed after kidnapping
    December 9, 2025/
    0 Comments
  • ‘Ultimate gift’: Reaching every inmate in South Carolina at Christmas
    ‘Ultimate gift’: Reaching every inmate in South Carolina at Christmas
    December 9, 2025/
    0 Comments

Sign up for the Highlights

Get all latest content delivered to your email a few times a month.
Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

Related Posts

Abuse lawsuits rising against Harvest Christian Fellowship’s founder Greg Laurie

The number of lawsuits filed against Harvest Christian Fellowship’s founder Greg Laurie—related to alleged abuse of young men at a children’s home in Romania — now stands at 12.

Nigeria: 100 students freed after kidnapping

Authorities have released 100 children abducted last month from St. Mary’s Catholic School in Nigeria.

‘Ultimate gift’: Reaching every inmate in South Carolina at Christmas

For 49 years, South Carolina Baptists have provided a Christmas gift to every inmate in the state, bringing hope to nearly 1 million people over the life of the ministry.

Union trustees authorize purchase of seminary campus

Union University will acquire the Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary property on Appling Road in Cordova, Tenn., after university trustees in their Dec. 5 meeting authorized the purchase.

Want to receive news highlights throughout the week? Sign up here!

Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

About

  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us
  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us

Explore

  • Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos

Submissions

  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy
  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy

Subscribe

  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
The Baptist Paper
Address:
3310 Independence Dr.
Birmingham, AL 35209
Copyright © 2025 TAB Media Group
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ

Email:
news@thebaptistpaper.org

About

  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Photo Galleries
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church
  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Photo Galleries
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church

Explore

  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news
  • Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news

Subscribe

  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe
  • Start a new subscription at the group rate

Log Out?

Lost your password?

Log In

Lost your password?

Log in

Become a part of our community!
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy/Terms of Use

Reset password

Recover your password
A password reset link will be e-mailed to you.
Privacy/Terms of Use
Back to
Login
×
Close Panel