• About Us
    • Mission & Vision
    • Impact
    • Eboo Patel
    • Team
    • Board of Directors
    • Careers
    • Reports & Financials
  • Sectors
    • Higher Education
    • Racial Equity
    • Emerging Leaders
    • Faith & Health
    • Religion in the Workplace
    • Religious Diversity & Bridgebuilding
    • Policy
    • Faith & Civic Life
    • Tech & Interfaith
  • What We Do
    • Courses, Curricula, and Tools
    • Events
    • Grants & Leadership Awards
    • Research
    • Consulting
    • Speaking
  • Magazine
    • Interfaith America Magazine
    • Interfaith America with Eboo Patel
  • Get Involved
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    • Support Us
    • Our Supporters
Menu
  • About Us
    • Mission & Vision
    • Impact
    • Eboo Patel
    • Team
    • Board of Directors
    • Careers
    • Reports & Financials
  • Sectors
    • Higher Education
    • Racial Equity
    • Emerging Leaders
    • Faith & Health
    • Religion in the Workplace
    • Religious Diversity & Bridgebuilding
    • Policy
    • Faith & Civic Life
    • Tech & Interfaith
  • What We Do
    • Courses, Curricula, and Tools
    • Events
    • Grants & Leadership Awards
    • Research
    • Consulting
    • Speaking
  • Magazine
    • Interfaith America Magazine
    • Interfaith America with Eboo Patel
  • Get Involved
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    • Support Us
    • Our Supporters
Subscribe
Support Us
American Civic Life

Most Americans are Proud to Be Part of a Religiously Diverse Nation, PRRI/IFYC Study Shows

By
Staff Report

March 24, 2022

Woman in head scarf facing camera working with two coworkers
Many Americans support religious pluralism and have coworkers, neighbors, or classmates who follow different religions than their own. (Shutterstock/Yuriy Golub)

Most Americans are proud to be part of a nation that is becoming more religiously diverse, a new study confirms, and nearly 3 in 4 have built a relationship with someone from a different religion than their own.

The PRRI/IFYC survey also showed America’s religious landscape is becoming increasingly diverse. PRRI CEO and founder Robert P. Jones and IFYC President and founder Eboo Patel announced the findings today (March 24) at the Religion News Association conference in Bethesda, Maryland.

Key findings include:

In 1990, 72% of Americans were white Christian, 15% were Christians of color, 8% were unaffiliated, and 5% practiced non-Christian religions. In 2021, that has shifted to 44% white Christian, 25% Christians of color, 25% unaffiliated, and 6% belonged to non-Christian religious.

The survey also showed that younger Americans are more likely to be religiously unaffiliated: 34% of those 18-29 are unaffiliated, compared to 16% 65 and older.

Many Americans support religious pluralism: 72% of Americans – and at least 2/3 of most religious groups – report that they have built a relationship with a coworker, neighbor, or classmate who follows a different religion than their own.

Most Americans (70%) are proud to be part of a nation that is becoming more religiously diverse. White Christian evangelicals (53%) and Hispanic Protestants (41%) are notable outliers.

There are some signs of discomfort and ambivalence about religious pluralism, though. When asked on a scale of 1-10 whether they want the U.S. to be made up of people belonging to a wide variety of religions or people who follow the Christian faith, a plurality (39%) of Americans fall in the middle, while 38% stating a desire for a variety of religions, and 24% indicating they prefer mostly people who follow the Christian faith.

Share

Related Articles

  • American Civic Life

    Why Voting is Sacred

  • American Civic Life

    Faith Based Efforts Work in Vaccine Uptake: Now Let’s Make it Easy

  • American Civic Life

    Eboo Patel and Wajahat Ali: Is “Interfaith America” Even Possible?

Latest Articles

People voting at polling place. (Hill Street Studios/Getty Images)
  • Faith & Civic Life

The Dream of a Religiously Diverse Democracy is Ours to Achieve

Mar 21, 2023
The Sikh Center of New York distributes meals to those protesting the killing of George Floyd and other black Americans by the police, in Sunnyside, Queens, June 4, 2020. The Sikhs' centuries-old faith tradition of nourishing anyone in need has found new energy and purpose in America's turmoil.  The photo is on display in the “City of Faith: Religion, Activism, and Urban Space” exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York. (Ryan Christopher Jones/The New York Times)
  • Faith & Civic Life

‘City of Faith’ Exhibit Celebrates South Asian Religion in NYC

Mar 20, 2023
Vasu Bandhu during his Buddhism practice. Courtesy photo
  • Faith & Civic Life
  • /Emerging Leaders

Buddhist Teacher Creates Multilingual Spaces for “Diálogo Interreligioso”

Mar 20, 2023
People holds signs in support of recognizing Eid al-Fitr as a holiday during San Francisco Unified School District meeting on March 7, 2023. Photo courtesy of the Arab Resource and Organizing Center
  • Faith & Civic Life

Across the Country, a Push to Observe Muslim Holidays in School Calendars

Mar 17, 2023
End of content
No more articles to load
Interfaith America, 141 W. Jackson Blvd, Suite 3200, Chicago, IL 60604, US

© 2022 Interfaith America

Instagram Youtube Facebook Twitter
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use