Pew study explores how people view the role of religion in national identity and policymaking. It surveyed nearly 55,000 people in three dozen countries from January to May 2024.
In his two-month tour of the United States, Baranov spoke to churches and business groups in California, Texas and Louisiana. In Nebraska, he spoke at a Christian Business Men's Committee event in ...
The religious composition of Congress remains more heavily Christian compared to the general U.S. population. Nearly all Republicans in Congress, 98%, identify as Christian, while 75% of Democrats ...
In a census last spring, 93 percent of the population professed itself Muslim and only 1.75 percent Roman Catholic. A small number of ethnic Albanian Christian activists, all converts from Islam ...
The new Congress is also more religious than the general population by another, related measure: Nearly three-in-ten Americans (28%) are religiously unaffiliated, meaning they are atheist or agnostic ...
The history of religion dates back to the invention of writing some 5,200 years ago when the ... the Church of Sweden has a membership of about 5.6 million people (more than half of the Swedish ...
Indonesia - a vast archipelago comprising more than 17,000 islands - contains a population numbering around 255 million people; a number that makes Indonesia the fourth most populous country in the ...
We asked people in three dozen countries how they see religion’s role in society, government and national identity. Fewer than four-in-ten teens (36%) say they know someone who’s transgender, and 28% ...
Hinduism is the third-largest religion in Indonesia. Currently, around 1.7 percent of the Indonesian population adheres to Hinduism, which in absolute terms constitutes approximately four million ...