Most church attendees trust their clergy and say they have a close relationship with them, but some Christian traditions are more likely than others.
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Christianity Continues to Lose Demographic Ground in U.S.
In new data released by Pew Research, Christianity has dropped to 65% of the U.S. population, while the religiously unaffiliated or “nones” has grown to 26%.
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Protestant Church Attendance Stable, But Warning Signs Remain
Among Protestants, Gallup has found weekly churchgoing to be consistent. In 2017, 45 percent attended at least once a week. In 1955, it was 42 percent.
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Some U.S. Christian Groups May be Declining, But Not Evangelicals
Evangelicals aren’t the Christian group in danger of extinction in the United States—that’s mainline Protestants.
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Protestantism Still Dominates African-American Faith, But Shifts Emerge
Evangelical denominations draw the most African-Americans, but they are increasingly the largest share of a shrinking Protestant pie.
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Where is Protestant Christianity Growing the Fastest?
Europe birthed Protestantism. North America helped spread it around the world. But the future of Protestant Christianity appears to be in Africa and Asia.
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