fbpx
30 F
Spokane
Monday, December 16, 2024
spot_img
HomeCOVID-19Poll: 4 in 10 US Christians plan to attend in-person Easter services

Poll: 4 in 10 US Christians plan to attend in-person Easter services

Date:

Related stories

Washington State bill would create 5 gender categories for school sports

Explore the proposed changes to gender categories in school sports for trans youth. Learn about the debate surrounding fairness and inclusion in athletic competitions.

Study says less than half of Americans attend church on Christmas

Learn about the changing trends in attending church during Christmas. Discover why less than half of Americans will attend church during this festive season.

Spokane leaders address school gun safety on Sandy Hook Anniversary

Exploe the ongoing impact of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting on national debates about school safety and gun policy, including gun laws in Washington and Spokane County.

FāVS Religion News Roundup: Dec. 13

Learn about The Salvation Army of Spokane's empty food pantry, a Krampus event at a local library, a pastor beomg sued for running a cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme and more in this week's FāVS Religion News Roundup.

Episcopal Diocese of Spokane’s approach to Christian nationalism gains national attention

The Episcopal Diocese of Spokane's response to Christian nationalism is being highlighted as a model for religious communities nationwide in a new book from the Episcopal Church's House of Bishops. 

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

Poll: 4 in 10 US Christians plan to attend in-person Easter services

By Yonat Shimron | Religion News Service

Americans are becoming more confident they can attend in-person religious services but church attendance at Easter services will still be far lower than usual this year, a new Pew Research poll finds.

The poll, conducted in early March among 12,055 Americans, finds the percentage of regular attenders who say they actually have attended religious services — in person — in the past month is slightly higher than it was in June, about 17%.

Among Christians, only 39% said they planned to go in person to church services this Easter Sunday (April 4), with white evangelicals the most likely to say they planned to — 52%. That’s far lower than the 62% of Christians of all kinds who typically attend services at Easter, the holiest day of the Christian year.

“Roughly four-in-ten U.S. Christians plan to attend Easter services in person this year” Graphic courtesy of Pew Research Center

The poll also found that people who attend religious services favor keeping a lot of the COVID-19 restrictions, such as social distancing and mask-wearing, in place.

Catholics, more than any other group, say their churches are open but operating with virus-related precautions in place: 79% are open but require social distancing, masking and attendance limits.

Overall, half of Christians say their congregations are open to in-person services while enforcing social distancing and mask-wearing.

The return to pre-pandemic levels of in-person religious attendance is much slower among Black Protestants. Only 21% said they are attending in-person services now and only 31% plan to attend at Easter — far lower than the 68% who typically attend. The pandemic has hit Black Americans especially hard, and that may be one reason.

About 80% of all religious attenders said their place of worship offers online services.

The poll also found an unsurprising political divide: Republicans who regularly attend services are more than twice as likely as Democrats who regularly attend services to say they recently attended in-person religious services (57% vs. 26%). 

Please consider supporting FāVS so we can continue providing you religion news like this!

Yonat Shimron
Yonat Shimron
Yonat Shimron is a reporter for the Religion News Service.

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
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x