43.9 F
Spokane
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
spot_img
HomeNewsHighly religious people say they’re happier, too, survey finds

Highly religious people say they’re happier, too, survey finds

Date:

Related stories

Spokane’s Home of Shalom brings worship to a coffee house atmosphere

This is what Tyler Kern’s Home of Shalom is based on: the idea that church is people, not a building.

What happens when Spokanites learn the art of everyday peacemaking?

Jer Swigart with Global Immersion will lead an Everyday Peacemaking Workshop at Hamblen Park Presbyterian Church on March 29 to equip Spokanites for peacebuilding.

Religious Freedom vs. Health care Access: How Faith Influences Health Care in Washington and Idaho

The Idaho state Legislature is currently embroiled in an ideological battle on whether to allow health care professionals and entities to opt out of participating in nonemergency procedures that would violate their sincerely held moral and religious beliefs. 

Photo essay: Spokane’s Hindu community celebrates new beginnings this Holi

With a new temple location and a new full-time priest, Spokane's Hindu Temple & Cultural Center had much to celebrate March 15, when they commemorated Holi.

Diocese of Boise opposes Idaho’s new death penalty by firing squad bill

The Diocese of Boise condemns Idaho's firing squad bill, reaffirming the Catholic Church's opposition to the death penalty, emphasizing mercy and human dignity.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
Highly religious adults more engaged with family, more likely to volunteer and happier overall. Photo courtesy of Pew Research Center
Highly religious adults more engaged with family, more likely to volunteer and happier overall. Photo courtesy of Pew Research Center

(RNS) Look around. Three in 10 people you see claim they are pretty satisfied with life, happy, healthy and moral, too.

They’re the “highly religious,” 30 percent of U.S. adults who say they pray daily and attend church at least once a week.

Religion in Everyday Life,” a new survey from Pew Research released Tuesday (April 12), teases out the particular ways they differ from the majority of U.S. Christians who are less observant and from non-Christians, including the “nones” who claim no religious identity.

The highly religious are overwhelmingly (95 percent) Protestant, Catholic or other Christians. Nearly half (49 percent) are white evangelicals. Most of the overall group (62 percent) are women.

And many are smiling. Four in 10 highly religious people say they’re “very happy” with the way things are going in life, compared to 29 percent of those who are not highly religious.

But, “we don’t know why they are happier“ or more satisfied with their health, said Pew researcher Besheer Mohamed, a co-author of the report.

“We see the patterns but we don’t know what is causing what. Is it that regular churchgoers get something from the church practice and involvement or is it that a certain sort of person is more likely to go to worship more frequently?” he said.

Nearly three in four (74 percent) highly religious people say they’re “very satisfied with family life” compared to 67 percent of those who are not highly religious.

And 47 percent say they gather with extended family at least monthly (compared to 30 percent of those not highly religious).

The less religious may also be prayerful folks who attend worship less frequently or people with no religious affiliation who value moral behavior. The report points out that many say “attributes such as gratitude, forgiveness and honesty are essential” to what being religious or moral means to them personally.

Still, the survey finds many similarities in beliefs and behavior between the two groups.

Few rely on clergy.

Rather than consult a pastor or priest, 82 percent of the highly religious and less religious rely on their own research when making important decisions; 45 percent turn to prayer and personal reflection; 43 percent to family; 25 percent to professional experts; but only 15 percent to religious leaders.

“It’s the age of Google and consulting your own conscience or Aunt Susie,” said Boston University professor of sociology Nancy Ammerman, an adviser to Pew on the research.

Believers don’t act on their faith in the marketplace.

Most people rely on own research when making major life decisions; highly religious also rely on prayer. Graphic courtesy of Pew Research Center
Most people rely on own research when making major life decisions; highly religious also rely on prayer. Graphic courtesy of Pew Research Center

Fewer than 30 percent, highly religious or not, and across all traditions, say they pay attention to a company’s environmental record or to whether it pays fair wages before making purchases. Bringing religious views to economic choices “is still very low no matter where you look,” she said.

Couch potatoes are “very satisfied with their health.”

The highly religious also admit they overeat about as often, and don’t exercise much more than the seven in 10 Americans whose everyday lives are less shaped by religiosity.

The report draws on two major sources. The basis for most of the demographic data is the 2014 Pew Religious Landscape Study based on a telephone survey of 35,000 adults that has a margin of error of plus or minus 1 percentage point. A second survey, delving into beliefs and behavior, was conducted among 3,278 members of Pew’s American Trends Panel and it has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points. There were too few interviews to break out findings about minority religions or among historically black Protestants.

Pew also asked people about what they saw as the essentials of their faith or philosophy.

According to the report, “Christians are about equally likely to cite moral behaviors as vital to their Christian identity as they are to mention explicitly religious behaviors.”

Among Christians, the top five of 16 beliefs and behaviors were:

  • Belief in God (86 percent)
  • Gratitude for what they have (71 percent)
  • Forgiving those who have wronged them (69 percent)
  • Honesty (67 percent)
  • Praying regularly (63 percent)

At the bottom: Living a healthy lifestyle and resting on the Sabbath each were cited by only 18 percent. Only 14 percent said being Christian means “buying from companies that pay a fair wage.”

Among the 27 percent who said they were religiously unaffiliated, the top five criteria for a moral life were similar, minus God:

  • Being honest at all times (58 percent)
  • Being grateful for what they have (53 percent)
  • Committing to spend time with family (47 percent)
  • Forgiving those who have wronged them (39 percent)
  • Working to protect the environment (35 percent)

There was one other noteworthy divide between the highly religious and the other 70 percent of Americans.

The most faithful were also more likely to admit that they told a “white lie” in the prior week (45 percent compared to 39 percent among the less religious).

“Maybe they just have a greater sense of introspection or conscience,” said Ammerman. “Maybe they are more empathetic and attuned to other people’s feelings. Or maybe they’re just more willing to tell (that they had lied).”

(Cathy Lynn Grossman is senior national reporter for RNS) 

Cathy Lynn Grossman
Cathy Lynn Grossmanhttp://wwww.favs.news
Cathy Lynn Grossman is a senior national correspondent for Religion News Service, specializing in stories drawn from research and statistics on religion, spirituality and ethics, and manager for social media.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x