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Near quarter of U.S. adults ‘spiritual but not religious,’ Pew finds

WASHINGTON (BP) — Nearly a quarter of American adults consider themselves “spiritual but not religious,” and a plurality of those say organized religion is divisive and spreads intolerance, Pew Research said in its latest release.

The 22 percent of Americans describing themselves as spiritual but not religious track with recent U.S. declines in traditional religious beliefs and practices, a decline in Christianity in the U.S., and speculations that younger Americans are replacing organized religion with their own hodgepodge of spiritual beliefs and practices.

Still, 70 percent of American adults consider themselves spiritual in some way. A smaller majority, 53 percent, say they are religious. Nearly half, 48 percent, say they are both; while about a fifth, 21 percent, say they are neither.

Pew studied spirituality among U.S. adults for the first time, surveying personal concepts of spirituality, measuring the prevalence of spirituality, and discovering spiritual beliefs, practices and experiences.

“We plan to use our new questions about spiritual beliefs, practices and experiences as a baseline, re-asking them periodically to see which measures are rising, which are falling and which are stable,” Pew said Dec. 7 in releasing the findings. “And rather than imposing a definition of spirituality, we will let survey respondents tell us what it means to them and how they practice it.”

Pew culled its findings from 11,201 U.S. adults included in its American Trends Panel, an online survey panel considered representative of the U.S. population.

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Pew asked all respondents whether they observed various rituals or activities as a spiritual practice. Responses included centering or looking inward, 44 percent; spending time in nature, 26 percent; meditating, 22 percent; exercising, 7 percent, and practicing yoga, 4 percent.

Among the spiritual but not religious:

Many spiritual but not religious people assign spiritual characteristics to nature or created things, as do many in the religious-and-spiritual category.

Comparatively:

Among other top findings:

The study’s findings are available here [2].