Sponsor

2025/02/26

The Morning: A major religious shift

Plus, Ukraine, Israel and egg prices.
The Morning

February 26, 2025

Good morning. We're covering a new report about religion in America. Plus, Ukraine, Israel and egg prices.

A woman kneels in prayer on a red carpeted floor, inside a small chapel with wood paneling on the walls.
In Cumberland, Md. Maggie Shannon for The New York Times

One nation, under God

Author Headshot

By Lauren Jackson

I'm working on a project about belief.

As religion in America declined, experts administered last rites.

Churches were approaching "their twilight hour" as attendance fell, The Brookings Institution wrote in 2011. In his 2023 book, "Losing Our Religion," the evangelical preacher Russell Moore asked: "Can American Christianity survive?"

The answer appears to be yes. People have stopped leaving churches en masse, according to a new study released this morning by Pew Research. America's secularization is on pause for now, likely because of the pandemic and the country's stubborn spirituality. Most Americans — 92 percent of adults — say they hold one or more spiritual beliefs that Pew asked about:

A chart shows the share of adults in the United States who believe people have a soul or spirit, in god or a universal spirit, in something spiritual beyond the natural world, and in an afterlife.
Source: Pew Research Center | By The New York Times

"Spirituality is not declining. And in fact, it's high; it's stable," said Penny Edgell, a sociologist at the University of Minnesota.

The United States is an outlier compared with most other Western countries, which are far less religious. America's persistent religious and spiritual curiosity is visible in its centers of power. In Washington, President Trump and JD Vance talk a lot about God in their quest to remake America. In Silicon Valley, tech billionaires — long obsessed with religion-adjacent projects like artificial intelligence, transhumanism and immortality — are warming to Christianity. In Hollywood, films and shows about faith, such as "Conclave," the latest season of "The White Lotus" and "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives," have dominated streaming charts.

Below, I'll explain why religion still has such a strong hold in America.

What is happening?

Over the last 25 years, tens of millions of people left American religion. It was a major shift that affected how people voted, when they married and where they lived. Christianity took the hardest hit: Around 15 percent of American adults who once went to church stopped going. While some people switched to new faiths, many left religion altogether.

Experts called this phenomenon the "rise of the nones," a group that includes atheists, agnostics and people who said in surveys that they identified with "nothing in particular." The nones grew to include about 30 percent of the country.

But the rise of the nones has stopped, Pew found. People are no longer leaving churches en masse, and other major religions are growing, largely because of immigration.

A chart shows the share of adults in the United States who identify as Christian. In 2007, 78 percent of people identified as Christian. The share of Christian-identifying people was lowest in 2022 at 60 percent, and has risen to 63 percent in 2024.
Source: Pew Research Center | By The New York Times

The report's authors are careful to say that the nones could resume growing, especially as younger people, who are less religious than older people, age. (Read more about the report from my colleague Ruth Graham.)

Why is this happening?

Experts point to a few possible explanations.

First is the pandemic. Pew found that people turned to faith for support during those years, as the number of people going to religious services — either in person or virtually — remained consistent at about 40 percent. About a quarter of Americans even told Pew that the pandemic had strengthened their faith. "Religion was in their psychological tool kit for dealing with the hard times," said Alan Cooperman, an author of the report.

The second explanation is that secularization has a limit in the United States.

Americans pray more often, are more likely to attend weekly religious services and value faith in their lives more than adults in other wealthy democracies like Canada, Australia and most European countries, Pew found in a separate study. Americans — both religious and not — also report high levels of spirituality: Eighty-three percent say they believe in God or a universal spirit, Pew found.

Ryan Burge, a political scientist, argues that most people who disagree with their religion on political or social issues — on Trumpism, abortion or gay marriage, for instance — have already left or switched faiths. "What's left is like the bedrock of American religion, which is exceptionally large," he said. The report reveals how many people remain committed to their religious traditions even after those defections.

What does this mean?

Churchgoers stand in the pews with their hands over their hearts while praying inside a large cathedral with a vaulted ceiling and stained glass windows.
Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan this week. Dave Sanders for The New York Times

We're in a moment of resurgent religious conservatism. The Supreme Court has anointed prayer in public schools. Elon Musk said he believes in the teachings of Jesus. Religious tradwives reign supreme on Instagram. The right says it all amounts to a "vibe shift."

Still, those examples are anecdotal. And as the swing from George Floyd protests to sudden D.E.I. takedowns shows, vibes in America can shift quickly.

This data doesn't rely on vibes. Instead, it offers measurable insights on the trends shaping American politics and culture. The ranks of the godless have stopped growing for now. But, when it comes to spiritual longing for the possible, the transcendent — Americans are surprisingly in agreement.

Related: We want to hear more about people's experiences with religion or spirituality. Have you discovered, deepened, questioned or lost faith? I'm working on a project about the moments that shape our beliefs. Tell me your story here.

THE LATEST NEWS

War in Ukraine

Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelensky, sits in a chair in front of a blue backdrop. People are sitting nearby, in chairs.
Volodymyr Zelensky Tetiana Dzhafarova/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Trump Administration

More on Politics

New York

Middle East

  • The Israeli military struck sites in southern Syria. It announced the move hours after the new Syrian leadership had demanded that Israel pull back in the country, where it has seized territory since the fall of Bashar al-Assad.
  • Syria's new president is trying to prove that he can rebuild the country. Read about his unlikely path from Al Qaeda commander to head of state.

More International News

A crowd filling St. Peter's Square at night. Some of those in the foreground are holding rosary beads.
In St. Peter's Square at the Vatican. James Hill for The New York Times

Other Big Stories

Chickens stand near to stacks of brown eggs separated by fencing.
In Petaluma, Calif. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
  • Egg prices are soaring, and the biggest U.S. egg producer has rising revenues and profits. Now some Democrats are calling for an investigation into pricing.
  • The Supreme Court granted a new trial to a death row inmate in Oklahoma. The state's attorney general had backed the request.

Opinions

"Heartbeat of the bygone": Deborah Garrison writes a poem on Timothée Chalamet's portrayal of a young Bob Dylan.

Here are columns by Bret Stephens on how Trump indulges Russia and Thomas Friedman on Trump and Putin.

Subscribe Today

The Morning highlights a small portion of the journalism that The New York Times offers. To access all of it, become a subscriber with this introductory offer.

MORNING READS

Illustration by Eric Schwarz

Letter of Recommendation: A poetry ritual to replace early-morning scrolling.

$8.50 per shrimp: Would you pay $34 for shrimp cocktail? A lot of people do.

Four-minute mile: Can a woman finally break the barrier?

Most clicked yesterday: A fake, graphic video of Trump and Musk played in a government building.

American division: After a woman interrupted a town-hall meeting in Idaho, private security guards dragged her out. See the video.

Lives Lived: Marian Turski survived Auschwitz and returned to his home in Poland to give voice to fellow victims of the Nazis and their collaborators. He warned the world in writings and speeches about the dangers of indifference to racial and ethnic injustice. Turski died at 98.

SPORTS

W.N.B.A.: The Mercury star Diana Taurasi, 42, announced her retirement after a 20-year career.

N.F.L.: The Ravens general manager called allegations of sexual misconduct against the team's kicker Justin Tucker "concerning" in the Ravens' first comments since the news broke.

N.B.A.: Luka Dončić recorded a triple-double in the Lakers' 107-99 win over the Mavericks, the team that traded him last month.

ARTS AND IDEAS

An illustration of an older man and woman standing beneath trees. The tree the man stands beneath is barren, while the woman's tree still retains its leaves.
Bianca Bagnarelli

Women tend to outlive men. This is true regardless of where women live or how much they earn. But they also tend to live fewer years healthy years: They are generally more frail in old age and more vulnerable to Alzheimer's. Some scientists are trying to understand why the sexes age differently.

More on culture

An animated photograph of a ballerina performing a small section from
Miriam Miller Thea Traff for The New York Times

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

A plate of pancakes garnished with raspberries, blueberries and twists of lemon zest.
Craig Lee for The New York Times

Whip up classic lemon pancakes with cottage cheese.

Read one of these great thrillers, recommended by the best-selling mystery writer S.A. Cosby.

Visit Bolivia's wine country.

GAMES

Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangrams were building, bundling, unbuilding and unbundling.

And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. —Lauren

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.

The Morning Newsletter Logo

Editor: David Leonhardt

Deputy Editor: Adam B. Kushner

News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti

Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson

News Staff: Desiree Ibekwe, Brent Lewis, German Lopez, Ashley Wu

News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar

Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for the Morning newsletter from The New York Times, or as part of your New York Times account.

To stop receiving The Morning, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebookxinstagramwhatsapp

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

No comments:

Post a Comment

Keep a civil tongue.

Label Cloud

Technology (1464) News (793) Military (646) Microsoft (542) Business (487) Software (394) Developer (382) Music (360) Books (357) Audio (316) Government (308) Security (300) Love (262) Apple (242) Storage (236) Dungeons and Dragons (228) Funny (209) Google (194) Cooking (187) Yahoo (186) Mobile (179) Adobe (177) Wishlist (159) AMD (155) Education (151) Drugs (145) Astrology (139) Local (137) Art (134) Investing (127) Shopping (124) Hardware (120) Movies (119) Sports (109) Neatorama (94) Blogger (93) Christian (67) Mozilla (61) Dictionary (59) Science (59) Entertainment (50) Jewelry (50) Pharmacy (50) Weather (48) Video Games (44) Television (36) VoIP (25) meta (23) Holidays (14)

Popular Posts