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6/13/2025, 4:12:11 AM
>>507162768
From the very study you're referencing:
>Namely, younger Americans remain far less religious than older adults.
>For example, the youngest adults in the survey (ages 18 to 24) are less likely than today’s oldest adults (ages 74 and older) to:
>Identify as Christian (46% vs. 80%)
>Pray daily (27% vs. 58%)
>Say they attend religious services at least monthly (25% vs. 49%)
>Bar chart showing big age gaps in shares of Americans who identify as Christian, pray regularly
>And the youngest adults are more likely than the oldest Americans to be religiously unaffiliated (43% vs. 13%).
>Also, younger Americans are less likely than older adults to say they were raised in religious households.1 And, compared with older adults, fewer young people who were raised in religious households have remained religious after reaching adulthood.
You're taking a victory lap over dying boomers, cope.
Also, nearly all christians are brown/black.
From the very study you're referencing:
>Namely, younger Americans remain far less religious than older adults.
>For example, the youngest adults in the survey (ages 18 to 24) are less likely than today’s oldest adults (ages 74 and older) to:
>Identify as Christian (46% vs. 80%)
>Pray daily (27% vs. 58%)
>Say they attend religious services at least monthly (25% vs. 49%)
>Bar chart showing big age gaps in shares of Americans who identify as Christian, pray regularly
>And the youngest adults are more likely than the oldest Americans to be religiously unaffiliated (43% vs. 13%).
>Also, younger Americans are less likely than older adults to say they were raised in religious households.1 And, compared with older adults, fewer young people who were raised in religious households have remained religious after reaching adulthood.
You're taking a victory lap over dying boomers, cope.
Also, nearly all christians are brown/black.
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