2. Literature Review
All of this literature has contributed to a largely unchallenged declension narrative, which posits that religion, in general, and Christianity and Protestantism, in particular, are witnessing rapid decline across America.
Newsweek sensationalized these developments in its 2009 cover story “The Decline and Fall of Christian America.”
2 The struggling periodical seemed to echo the spirit of the “Is God Dead?”
TIME magazine cover story from 1966.
3 These articles have been joined by a growing cacophony of scholarly books (of mixed quality and partisanship) and clergy in some denominations echoing similar prognostications. Their main claims are that Christianity in America is in a downward spiral and that traditional mainline Protestant and, more recently, Evangelical and Catholic denominations have witnessed steady and in some cases rapid losses over the past twenty years. This decline, they argue, is due in part to the growing politicization of American Christianity by Evangelicals and the rapid secularization and growth of Americans with no religion. This latter theory contends that people do not want to associate any longer with Christianity in general because Evangelical Christianity in particular is writ large for the Christian religion by secular elites and ordinary Americans, and for this reason, moderate and liberal Christians are abandoning the faith in unprecedented numbers. A similar corollary seems to suggest that these defections are due to some Christians being uncomfortable with traditional claims that the Bible is infallible, Jesus is the only way to heaven, marriage should be between one man and one woman, and because of their biblical criticisms of feminism, abortion, and same-sex marriage (
Hout and Fisher 2002;
Thomson-DeVeaux and Cox 2019).
This is not the first time in American history that scholars and clergy heralded the decline of Christianity. In colonial America, mainline clergy, such as Lyman Beecher, lamented the steep drop off in religious attendance and what they perceived as the cool indifference to (their) religion in general. This lament was picked up by nineteenth-century historians and scholars, such as Robert Baird in 1844 and later by William W. Sweet in 1930 (
Sweet 1930), and Sydney Ahlstrom in 1972 (
Ahlstrom 1972), who spotlighted declining church attendance and formal religious affiliation within mainline Protestant traditions (e.g., United Church of Christ, Episcopalian Church).
However, this declension theory has since been challenged by a growing number of historians of colonial America, such as Patricia Bonomi, and historical sociologists, such as Roger Finke and Rodney Stark, who, after looking more closely at archival, statistical, church membership, and other records across a broad swath of mainline and non-mainline Protestant and other religious traditions, argued that while there was a real decline in church attendance and affiliation for some denominations, it was not uniform across all denominations and religions. In fact, sectarian Evangelical and other religious traditions were growing rapidly, albeit under the radar of mainstream churches.
4Furthermore, while mainline and more liberal varieties of Christianity were, in fact, declining, the first and second great awakenings in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, along with other new independent and non- and trans-denominational movements, birthed upstart revivalist Protestant Evangelical sects that made converts and drew congregants away from colonial mainline traditions. These new Evangelical revivalists led by George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards, Gilbert Tennent, Charles Wesley, and later Charles Finney, Francis Asbury, and others created revivalist-based movements that transcended denominational boundaries and were, therefore, hard to track, measure, interpret, and understand since not all required membership or kept records. Unlike mainline traditions, which tended to center their religious practices around rich liturgies, church membership, institutional credal formulations, infant baptism, and an increasingly elastic theological framework, these upstart Evangelicals from both credal and non-credal traditions focused on having a personal born-again conversion experience with Jesus Christ, revivalism, evangelism, youth outreach, evangelistic social work, and living a holy life according to the Bible. Their revivals helped give birth to a revivalist tradition that was carried on through the work of countless other evangelists, such as Dwight L. Moody, Billy Sunday, Billy Graham, and more recently, Luis Palau, T.D. Jakes, Samuel Rodriguez, and Greg Laurie. They brought about massive revivals of religion in general and Christianity in particular that ran roughshod over American religion well into the 21st century.
On top of these new largely Protestant Evangelical traditions, there was an explosion of alternative forms of Christianity in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (e.g., Unitarians, Mormons, Adventists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Christian Science) that also made major inroads into the U.S. religious marketplace. This led Thomas Jefferson to predict that Unitarianism would one day become the dominant religion of America, something that never came to pass because the Second Great Awakening and other alternative forms of spirituality changed the trajectory of American religiosity (
Lambert 2006). Taken together, there was not so much a raw numerical decline in Christianity, but rather a radical shift to upstart and often unruly religious traditions that, in many ways, were theological and ethically conservative but also stylistically and culturally more adaptive, creative, innovative, and entrepreneurial than some previous traditions. Moving beyond just believing, many of these new upstart sects required people to belong, as concretely demonstrated by their level of religious commitment, participation, proselytism, and devotion.
However, these new upstart Evangelical Presbyterian, Methodist, American Baptist, and Disciples of Christ sects created in the wake of the first and second great awakenings, over time became by the mid-20th century mainline Protestants and theologically moderate and liberal (though not always culturally or economically) in the twentieth century. They, like their colonial mainline Protestant predecessors, have struggled since the 1970s to maintain their once dominant status in the American religious marketplace and today have been outpaced (at least in the pews, though not in politics, media, and the arts) by a wide variety of Evangelical and new religious movements. They have been joined not only by new independent and non-denominational churches and experientially-oriented movements, but also by other world religious traditions and a bewildering array of new religious movements that run the scale of human creativity. While these world religions and new other religious movements have contributed richly to religious pluralism, their share of the marketplace has remained relatively modest, with less than six percent of Americans practicing another world religion because the majority of Americans that are religious still self-identify with the Christian tradition (
Finke and Stark 2005;
PRRI Staff 2021).
Break-away varieties of these new Evangelical traditions within historic mainline Protestant traditions (e.g., Free Methodists, Conservative Baptists, Lutheran, Missouri Synod, the Evangelical Presbyterian and Presbyterian Church in America), along with those that stayed true to their earlier Evangelical heritage (e.g., Southern Baptists) for the most part quietly grew throughout the twentieth century. They were joined by an influx of Pentecostal and Holiness denominations (e.g., Church of God in Christ, Assemblies of God, United Pentecostal Church) and a plethora of newer independent and non-denominational Charismatic churches (e.g., Calvary Chapel, Vineyard), which of which were racial-ethnic and indigenous the Black and Latino communities (e.g., COGIC, PAW, AG, Apostolic). They came out of the shadows in the 1940s, led by Billy Graham and the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE), and by the 1970s, had become a highly decentralized and unruly and yet a somewhat culturally and morally cohesive social and political force to reckon with. Initially led by symbolic leaders, such as Billy Graham from the 1940s to the 1980s, they were then joined by a cacophony of other leaders and organizations with varying degrees of political involvement, all of which helped propel Jimmy Carter to the presidency in 1976, which led Newsweek and other periodicals to call it “The Year of the Evangelical”.
However, Evangelicals come in a wide variety of theological, cultural, racial, ethical, and political traditions. After Jimmy Carter’s progressive policies at home and abroad failed to live up to the hopes, dreams, and political expectations of his grassroots Evangelical base, especially in the South where they historically voted Democrat, other Evangelical leaders rose in Republican ranks to fill the gap and leverage their frustration in American politics. White Evangelicals began to switch parties in large numbers across the nation and helped usher Ronald Reagan into the White House, all of which seemed the stop the cultural hemorrhaging of traditional values unleashed by the countercultural movement of the 1960s and 1970s. This shift contributed to a string of Republican victories from Reagan to George W. Bush to Donald Trump. Black and Latino Evangelicals remained true to the Democratic Party, and also contributed to their victories from Bill Clinton to Barack Obama to Joe Biden. Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority and Pat Robertson’s Christian Coalition led the vanguard. They were later joined by more mainstream and centrist (on racial and social justice issues, though not on moral issues) Evangelical leaders such as James Dobson’s Focus on the Family, Pastor Rick Warren, T.D. Jakes, Charles E. Blake, Jesse Miranda, Samuel Rodriguez, Paula White, and others in national politics. The resurgence of Evangelical and new religious movements challenged the earlier speculation] about the “Death of God” in America. This led to TIME running cover stories on 26 December 1969, “Is God Coming Back to Life” and on 21 June 1971, “The Jesus Revolution”. Resurgent Evangelicalism in all of its bewildering varieties and racial-ethnicities seemed to demonstrate that God was alive—and all too well—for many stunned scholars and cultural elites.
Despite these past misfires about the decline of Christianity and the Death of God, the new declension theory claims are serious because researchers have better tools to survey and measure religious identity and practice across the nation and traditions. This enables them to ascertain a more accurate reading of the status and health of religious traditions and identity. This research is augmented by other social and cultural indicators across academic disciplines and spheres of society, all of which make the claims about decline more compelling and seemingly incontrovertible. In its wake, a new and emerging narrative has emerged in some circles about the decline and fall of Christian America. This new narrative has taken on a kind of doctrine of inevitability, which is welcome news to some atheists, strict secularists, and people who loathe Evangelical Christianity’s defiant cultural intervention and political influence.
However compelling this new declension theory is at first sight, it has been challenged by scholars who argue that not all religions and forms of Christianity are declining equally. Some are more or less stable, and a few are even growing in their share of the religious marketplace. They point out that church attendance and religious beliefs and practices have, in many circles, remained surprisingly stable and constant over the past decade or two, as have people’s views of the Bible and salvation in Christ alone. In their rush to herald these new seemingly incontrovertible discoveries, the print media and even the scholarly community have at times pushed forward often simple, unrefined, and unqualified narratives and theories about religious declension in America.
5Despite this fact, over the past ten years, the evidence, scholarly basis, and theoretical sophistication of their arguments have grown and seem to have all but put the nail in the coffin of Christian America. In many respects, they are correct. There has been a real decline in religious affiliation across many (though not all) traditions. There also has been a corresponding increase in those individuals (many of which formerly identified as Christian—largely mainline Protestant or liberal or disaffected Catholic) who now say they have no religion, or perhaps more accurately—have no religious preference. However, whether this is also true for all Christians and people with a religious or spiritual identity is a more complicated story.
While there are many factors that have gone into the calculus of this new declension theory, perhaps the single most important is the rise and growth of the “nones”—or those Americans with no religion. Almost every social science indicator that tracks religious identity and affiliation over the past twenty years points to the decline of Christian religious affiliation and a corresponding rise of the “nones”.
However, a growing number of scholars are beginning to problematize, refine, and even challenge some of these findings about the purported massive decline of Christianity and Protestantism and the growth of the “nones”. They start by pointing to serious methodological and theoretical problems with how scholars and journalists measure religious and non-religious identity. This is consistent with our own research and writing on this, which we first noted in 2000 and published in 2006. Some of our findings problematized this declension theory, at least in the Latino community (
Espinosa 2006;
Johnson and Levin 2022;
Levin et al. 2022).
First, until relatively recently, in some surveys, the “nones” were a composite category made up of smaller religious and non-religious identity survey response options and collectively called the “nones”, by which they meant people that did not identify with any specific denomination or religion. Often included in this group were people who reported having “no religion”, “no religious preference”, other religion, something else, independent, non-denominational, and did not know/refused to answer the question. In some cases, “other Christian”, “just Christian”, and “other Protestants” were also included. However, we found that just because a person reports having no religious preference, this does not necessarily mean they do not have a religion. They might see themselves, for example, as broadly Protestant and, therefore, have no problem hopping from a Presbyterian to an Episcopalian church, or among Evangelicals, from a Baptist to an Evangelical Free church, or from a Pentecostal to an independent church. In short, while they might not have one particular denomination they have remained true to their entire life, this does not necessarily mean that they do not attend church or identify with a larger or broader movement (mainline, Evangelical, or Pentecostal/Charismatic, born-again, other, etc.).
Second, until recently many scholars did not cross-analyze these respondents by other religious identity, belief, and practice questions to test if those identifying as a “none” did not, in fact, have any personal religious beliefs under closer inspection and cross analysis. Neither do most surveys ask follow-up questions to these respondents.
Third, until relatively recently, on many past surveys, people who responded as having no religion were treated and/or analyzed as literally having no religion and/or were often lumped together with atheists and agnostics. More refined analyses by Pew Research Center in 2018 and others have called into question this practice of lumping them all together into a “nones” category. Pew Research Center reported that upwards of 44 percent of the “nones” actually reported that religion is important in their daily living and 72 percent of “nones” believe in God or a higher power, which is relatively consistent with the findings discussed later in this study among Latinos (
Espinosa 2006,
2014;
Lipka 2015;
Fahmy 2018). Despite this fact, it has not stopped journalists and even some scholars from continuing to classify respondents who say religion is important in their lives as religious “nones”. This is surprising and begs the question: why? There are many possible reasons for this decision. The most straightforward are that they did not cross-analyze the respondents against other religious identity, belief, and practice questions, they have little training in U.S. religious taxonomy and terminology especially among non-mainline traditions, and/or because it would problematize and punch a hole in the current declension theory, which has become almost an uncontested doctrine in some circles.
Fourth, there are classification and taxonomical problems in past social science research on religious identity in the U.S. and U.S. Latino communities. The main problems are that past scholars were not trained in American religious history, Christianity, theology, terminology, and the Protestant family traditions (mainline, Evangelical, Pentecostal, Independent) and denominationalism (more than 2000 in the U.S.) and the bewildering varieties of racial-ethnic and U.S. religious traditions (over 3000). Religious diversity is also present in the U.S. Latino community, which beyond Catholicism is heavily Pentecostal, Charismatic, and independent and non-denominational. This lack of attention to history, classification, terminology, and denominational and non-denominational nuance has led, in some cases, to the misclassification of survey respondents. The survey vendors who are hired by sociologists to field the surveys and call and classify the respondents in the past were not trained in religious studies and religious classifications, and if they did, they tended to work from a largely dated mainline Protestant classification system in labeling, coding, and analyzing respondents from smaller religious traditions. Even if they allowed respondents to state their own religion, tradition, or church, the list of traditions provided by the sociologists often reflected a simplistic or mainline Protestant framework that did not take into account the post-1970 explosion of Pentecostal and other Evangelical and Charismatic independent and non-denominational churches (especially racial-ethnic) and religious identity and language. For example, many Evangelicals and Pentecostals/Charismatics described themselves—especially if they attended independent and non-denominational churches—as “just Christians”, “believers”, “Spirit-filled” (shorthand for Chrismatic), and “people of faith”, while people from mainline Protestant churches are much more likely to list their actual denomination. Most Evangelicals do not use the label “Evangelical” or “Protestant” to describe themselves, and thus, when this is used on surveys, they do not always respond affirmatively, especially if they are new converts or if their church is non-denominational or Pentecostal/Charismatic. For this reason, many end up getting misclassified. This lack of understanding has led vendors to place respondents that did not specify large, recognizable Protestant traditions into composite categories, which often misclassified individually small, but combined collectively a notable number of respondents. In one study, social scientists classified people from the Church of the Nazarenes as Pentecostals, when in fact, their tradition explicitly repudiates Pentecostalism, even dropping the word “Pentecostal” from their original name, the Pentecostal Church of the Nazarenes. Similarly, some classify all Methodists and Presbyterians with the mainline Protestant tradition, when it is largely the Evangelically oriented Free Methodists and PCA and EPC Presbyterian churches that are growing. In some cases, this has led to some studies arguing that liberal mainline Protestant traditions are growing. Still others listed Mormons and/or Jehovah’s Witnesses with Protestants in their data analyses, neither of which identify as Protestant (
Hunt 1999,
2000;
Espinosa 2006;
PRRI Staff 2021).
Fifth, there are nomenclature and survey language problems with the survey instruments and questions themselves. The most common national survey screening question asks respondents if they practice a “religion”. However, many Evangelicals throughout American history and especially since the explosion of independent and non-denominational Evangelical, Pentecostal, and Charismatic Protestantism in the latter half of the 20th century rejected the label of “religion” as a descriptor of their faith and instead focus on having a personal born-again experience with Jesus Christ. And most others simply say they are “just Christians”, “believers”, or “Spirit-filled”, or “people of faith”. This is true in racial-ethnic and Latino communities, where many are recent converts and know little about the spiritual roots of their pastor and/or church. This was driven home after a former African American doctoral student once told us in a conversation that she did not consider herself “religious”, but rather was a born-again, Spirit-filled woman of faith. Similarly, in churches across the U.S., people say they are not religious and do not believe in “man-made” religions, but rather in having a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. This is why scholars are often puzzled by the relatively high percentage (33–42%) of Americans who say they are born-again, which is much larger than any single denomination.
Sixth, there were also language problems. Many surveys used to analyze religious identity were only conducted in English. This resulted in undercounting the nation’s estimated 45 million legal and 10 million undocumented immigrants. This is a problem because sociologist R. Stephen Warner found in his own research that the majority of religious immigrants arriving in the U.S. are disproportionately Christian per their home country and have higher rates of Christian identity than their U.S.-born Euro-American counterparts. In fact, many arrive predominantly traditional Catholic, Evangelical, and/or Pentecostal/Charismatic, among others. Similar studies by the Pew Research Center and others found that over 83 percent of undocumented immigrants are Christian, which is much higher than the Christian identity national U.S. population (
Pew Research Center 2013). Since immigrants generally have higher birthrates than the general U.S. population and because some (e.g., Latin America) do not often assimilate as quickly as European immigrants did in the past because the border is so close, it is possible that they may actually contribute to the growth of more traditional forms of Christianity and other religions in the future, albeit in racial-ethnic forms. Since the racial-ethnic population is projected to skyrocket from 40 percent of the U.S. today to 56 plus percent of the U.S. by 2060, there is good reason to believe that they will contribute to the growth of Christianity in particular and religion in general in the future. The white non-Hispanic population is projected to decline from 60 percent today to 44 percent by 2060 (
Vespa et al. 2020). While assimilation may mitigate this immigrant religious growth among some populations, it is unlikely to completely stop or significantly retard it overall, especially among Latinos with the U.S.-Mexico border so close and Latin America constantly replentishing those that assimilate secular values. The rapid racialization of American society and religiosity may result in what Robert P. Jones calls
The End of White Christian America (2017), wherein a majority of Christians in the future will be racial-ethnic. This shift in the complexion of Christianity was driven home in the 15 April 2013,
TIME cover story: “The Latino Reformation: Inside the new Hispanic Churches Transforming Religion in America”. It spotlighted socially progressive Latino Pentecostal and Baptist leaders leading the reform and transforming the face of American Christianity.
Seventh, the methodological approaches to survey research on religious identity in America have changed significantly over the past twenty years, going from almost exclusively random sample dialing digit telephone calls to surveying people via a mixed medium of telephones and computer-based surveys. The latter, despite claims to the contrary, run the risk of biasing the sample in favor of respondents from higher educational and income brackets, both of which past scholarship has demonstrated are less likely to be religious and undercount racial-ethnic Americans, immigrants, the poor, and rural Americans—all of which tend to be more religious than the general population. Despite controls put in place to counteract these biases, some of these controls are based on the faulty sampling of these groups that affect the control figures themselves. All of these factors run the risk of biasing the results slightly in favor of people who have higher educational and income brackets and who are, therefore, less religious. This is even a greater risk among Latinos and racial-ethnic persons, since people with computers would be more educated and likely to assimilate larger U.S. values, including secular attitudes. While this might accurately capture the views of more highly educated and assimilated Latinos and racial-ethnic persons, it may not accurately capture their general populations and provide an accurate picture nationally. In short, the growth of the “nones” may also be due in part to the change to mixed-medium sampling methods.
Eighth, there is also a foreign language problem. Today, there are over 45 million immigrants in the U.S., half of which are from Latin America, and half of these are from Mexico and the Caribbean. There are literally millions of Americans that do not speak English as their primary language. On top of this, there are another 10 million undocumented immigrants (primarily from Mexico & Latin America), some of whom do not have computers and, in some cases, regular phones. While a growing number of surveys are now bilingual, they often report Spanish response rates lower than previous Latino-framed bilingual surveys, wherein 34–38 percent of their respondents answered in Spanish—approximately the same percentage of the population that is immigrant. Although social scientists try to take this into account when weighting the samples, this also may skew the sample in favor of non-immigrants, which past research has shown are less likely to be religious than immigrants from Latin America, Africa, Korea, the Philippines, and other sending countries.
In addition to these concerns, there are still other concerns, such as fielding the survey on Sundays, which may also affect the response rates of people who attend religious services, which the scholarship has again shown tend to be more a little more religious than the U.S. population. Many data sets used to analyze religious identity are also sometimes fielded for other purposes, such as political and social attitudes, and thus do not pay careful enough attention to the wording on religious identity questions and/or to the day(s) when the survey is fielded, which if performed on a Sunday will affect who is able to respond.
Still, despite these problems, there is still evidence that there is a decline in religious affiliation in general and Christianity and mainline Protestantism in particular, though not all religions and Evangelical and non-denominational/independent forms of Christianity. Rather than fixate on the religious decline or growth and treat it as a zero-sum gain/loss, we will turn our attention to one of the key lynchpins in this new declension theory—the rise of the “nones” and those who report having “no religion” and “no religious preference” among Latinos—in order to see if the “nones” and those who claim to have “no religion” actually mean what they say. Then we will speculate about what this might mean for the future of American religions in general and Christianity and Protestantism in particular. This is something other scholars would have to explore to draw any larger conclusions (and some are beginning to do this), since this study will focus exclusively on Latinos (
Levin et al. 2022).
5. Future National Survey Methodology Recommendations
To secure a more accurate portrayal of the U.S. and Latino religious communities, after identifying the research study’s problem(s), framework, theories, and board of advisors, we recommend the following steps to all survey directors, staff, and vendors.
First, secure broad training in the history and contemporary trends and developments of U.S. religions, paying special attention to new religious, immigrant, and Protestant, Evangelical, Pentecostal/Charismatic, and independent and non-denominational groups and movements, because these are the most diverse religious groups and the respondents that are most often misclassified. This is especially true in the Latino community. One should pay special attention to the historical sociology of American religions in order to understand its changing contours over the past two centuries (e.g.,
Finke and Stark 2005;
Albanese 2012;
Bonomi 2003).
Second, draw up a culturally, racial-ethnically, and religiously sensitive taxonomy and classification systems that take into account specific indigenous and immigrant traditions in the populations surveyed (e.g.,
Espinosa 2006). They should train all survey vendors in these taxonomies and classifications to avoid misclassification and allow for multiple, combinative, transnational and/or regional identities, especially within family groupings (e.g., born-again & Methodist, Pentecostal/Charismatic & independent).
Third, allow religious identity respondents in more generic identity categories (e.g., “no religion”, “no religious preference”, none, agnostic, just Christian, other religious tradition, other world religion, metaphysical) to specify what they mean via smaller churches or minority traditions in follow-up questions (e.g., Other religious tradition—Specify___). These can be later reclassified in many cases to provide a more accurate set of findings.
Fourth, ask all no religion, no religious preference, none, and agnostic respondents a follow-up question that allows them to clarify what they mean by the term. As we found in this study, over 60 percent of “no religion” and “no religious preference” respondents clarified in a follow-up question they meant something else other than having no religion.
Fifth, make all surveys bilingual or perhaps multilingual depending on the target communities and make sure the translations are based on the religious terminology in these communities (
Espinosa 2006).
Sixth, realize that all English and computer only- & majority samples will probably bias the findings (even with controls & weighting—especially if outdated) in favor of more assimilated, upper-middle class, college-educated, and thus less religious respondents.
Seventh, make sure the demographic and religious controls and weights that are used to weigh and interpret the data are themselves based on more sophisticated sampling methodologies so they are not simply replicating biased methods that reinforce faulty or outdated weighting, controls, taxonomies, and classifications.
Eighth, keep in mind that most independent and non-denominational respondents are Evangelical and the vast majority of them are—at least in the U.S. Latino and Latin American communities—Pentecostal/Charismatic in heritage and theological outlook (e.g., openness to practice tongues & spiritual gifts, charismatic worship styles, healing).
Ninth, broaden the language of the initial religious identity screening question to use terminology that people within the largest religious traditions use as self-descriptors of their religious identity (e.g., Regardless of whether or not you are now actively attending religious services, do you consider yourself religious, spiritual, a person of faith, and/or spiritually open—Specify___?).
Tenth, add a Protestant/Other Christian oversample for cross analyses and make sure the survey is not fielded on days and times when people attend religious services. These oversamples can also be created for other groups for cross analyses.
Finally, avoid clustering religious and non-religious “nones” into a single combinative category, since this is misleading, especially if these “nones” also self-identify as highly religious (e.g., born-again Christian, pray or attend church weekly or more, believe Jesus is the only way to heaven). Avoid lumping all “nones” with atheist and agnostic, since it gives the false impression that they aren’t religious when many are.