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AMERICA IS BECOMING LESS CHRISTIAN, LESS RELIGIOUS

Survey finds the number of Americans with no religion has nearly doubled.

ByABC News
March 10, 2009, 4:07 AM
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March 9, 2009&#151; -- America is still a predominantly Christian nation, but
it's becoming both less Christian and less religious, according to the results
of the new American Religious Identification Survey.

According to the poll, which came out today, the percentage of Americans who
define themselves as Christian has dropped from 86 percent in 1990 to 76 percent
in 2008.

In one of the most dramatic shifts, 15 percent of Americans now say they have no
religion -- a figure that's almost doubled in 18 years. Americans with no
religious preference are now larger than all other major religious groups except
Catholics and Baptists.

Have You Seen Changes at Your Place of Worship? Tell ABC News.

"What seems to be happening is there is a decline in what we might call
traditional brand loyalty to the old denominations, specific churches," said
Barry Kosmin, a principle investigator for the American Religious Identification
Survey.

In the last 18 years, despite population growth and immigration, almost all
religious denominations have lost ground. Mainline Protestants are down the
most. Methodists, for example, have gone from 8 to 5 percent.

Baptists are down from 19.3 to 15.8. And Jews are down from 1.8 to 1.2 percent.

Meanwhile, the number of atheists, while still small, has nearly doubled from
900,000 to 1.6 million. Kosmin says that people may feel more comfortable
admitting their lack of faith at a time when atheist books, like Christopher
Hitchens' "God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything" and movies are
getting a lot of attention. Comedian Bill Maher took aim at religion in his
documentary film "Religulous," saying that he preaches "the gospel of 'I Don't
Know.'"

But researchers point out that just because people are dropping out of organized
religion, that doesn't mean they're abandoning faith. In an informal poll on
Twitter today, we heard similar sentiments.

"I no longer attend church, but still pray to Jesus," said Sean Whitney.




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