Pew Research has determined this--but also says highly religious Americans are also no more likely to exercise and eat right or recycle than the not so religious. Well, go for what's important and work on the less important stuff.
WASHINGTON, D.C. (April 12, 2016)
– A
new
Pew Research Center study of the ways religion influences the daily lives of
Americans finds that people who are highly religious are more engaged with their
extended families, more likely to volunteer, more involved in their communities
and generally happier with the way things are going in their lives.
For example, 47% of highly
religious Americans – defined as those who say they pray every day and attend
religious services each week – gather with extended family at least once or
twice a month. By comparison, just 30% of Americans who are less religious
gather as frequently with their extended families. Roughly two-thirds of highly
religious adults (65%) say they have donated money, time or goods to help the
poor in the past week, compared with 41% who are less religious. And 40% of
highly religious U.S. adults describe themselves as “very happy,” compared with
29% of those who are less religious.
However, in several other areas of
day-to-day life – including interpersonal interactions, attention to health and
fitness, and social and environmental consciousness – Pew Research Center
surveys find that people who pray every day and regularly attend religious
services appear to be very similar to those who are not as religious.
For instance, highly religious
people are about as likely as other Americans to say they lost their temper
recently, and they are only marginally less likely to say they told a white lie
in the past week. When it comes to diet and exercise, highly religious Americans
are no less likely to have overeaten in the past week, and they are no more
likely to say they exercise regularly. Highly religious people also are no more
likely than other Americans to recycle. And when making decisions about what
goods and services to buy, highly religious Americans are no more inclined to
consider the manufacturers’ environmental records or whether companies pay
employees a fair wage.
Additional key findings in the
report include:
Three-quarters of adults –
including 96% of members of historically black Protestant churches and 93% of
evangelical Protestants – say they thanked God for something in the past
week. And two-thirds, including 91% of those in the historically black
Protestant tradition and 87% of evangelicals, say they asked God for help during
the past week. One-third of religiously unaffiliated Americans say they thanked
God for something in the past week, and one-in-four have asked God for help in
the past week.
Nearly half of Americans (46%)
say they talk with their immediate families about religion at least once or
twice a month. About a quarter (27%) say they talk about religion at least
once a month with their extended families, and 33% say they discuss religion as
often with people outside their families. Having regular conversations about
religion is most common among evangelicals and people who belong to churches in
the historically black Protestant tradition. By contrast, relatively few
religious “nones” say they discuss religion with any regularity.
One-third of American adults
(33%) say they volunteered in the past week. This includes 10% who say they
volunteered mainly through a church or religious organization and 22% who say
their volunteering was not done through a religious organization.
Three-in-ten adults say they
meditated in the past week to help cope with stress. Regularly using
meditation to cope with stress is more common among highly religious people than
among those who are less religious (42% vs. 26%).
Nine-in-ten adults say the
quality of a product is a “major factor” they take into account when making
purchasing decisions, and three-quarters focus on the price. Far fewer –
only about one-quarter of adults – say a company’s environmental responsibility
(26%) or whether it pays employees a fair wage (26%) are major factors in their
purchasing decisions. Highly religious adults are no more or less likely than
those who are less religious to say they consider a company’s environmental
record and fair wage practices in making purchasing decisions.
Three-quarters of Catholics say
they look to their own conscience “a great deal” for guidance on difficult moral
questions. Far fewer Catholics say they look a great deal to the Catholic
Church’s teachings (21%), the Bible (15%) or the pope (11%) for guidance on
difficult moral questions.
When asked to describe, in
their own words, what being a “moral person” means to them, 23% of religious
“nones” cite the golden rule or being kind to others, 15% mention being a
good person and 12% mention being tolerant and respectful of others.
These are among the latest
findings of Pew Research Center’s
U.S.
Religious Landscape Study. Two previous reports on the Landscape Study,
based on a 2014 telephone survey of more than 35,000 adults, examined the
changing religious composition of the U.S. public and described the religious
beliefs, practices and experiences of Americans. This new report also draws on
the national telephone survey but is based primarily on a supplemental survey
among 3,278 participants in the Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel, a
nationally representative group of randomly selected U.S. adults surveyed online
and by mail. The supplemental survey was designed to go beyond traditional
measures of religious behavior – such as worship service attendance, prayer and
belief in God – to examine the ways people exhibit (or do not exhibit) their
religious beliefs, values and connections in their day-to-day lives.
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