Hope in Ukraine: Margerite, her grandmother and youth camp
As the war in Ukraine seems to have ramped up in recent weeks, we are grateful to continue to hear stories of hope and even young people finding Jesus
Church of the Brethren general secretary’s declaration filed alongside dozens of others in motion for preliminary injunction of policy on sensitive sites
Here is an update on the lawsuit filed on Feb. 11, 2025, on behalf of the Church of the Brethren and more than two dozen other Christian and Jewish religious denominations and associations, in response to the Trump Administration’s rescission of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) “sensitive locations” policy that had restricted Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from conducting immigration raids, arrests, and other enforcement actions at houses of worship.
WACC Europe webinar highlights gender gaps in media across Europe
How are women represented in the media, what progress has been made, and what is the role of communicators in shaping a more gender-sensitive media landscape? As part of the WACC Europe Morning Discussion series, communicators and media professionals gathered online on 18 February under...
Decline in American Christian observance has slowed, Pew study finds
[Religion News Service] The Pew Research Center Religious Landscape Study’s 2023-24 edition, released on Feb. 26, points at changes in American religious observance, including those identifying as Christian, stabilizing after years of steady decline and growth of the religiously unaffiliated leveling off. Generally, a decline in American religiousness observed since at least 2007 has slowed over the past four to five years. However, Pew Research Center noted in its report that the country is heading toward less religiousness. “The U.S. is a spiritual place, a religious place, where we’ve seen a signs of religious stabilization in the midst of longer-term decline,” said Gregory Smith, a senior associate director of research at Pew, during a press briefing. Now on its third edition, Pew released similar reports in 2007 and 2014, aiming to fill a gap in recognized, reliable data sources on America’s religious composition, beliefs and practices. From July 2023 to March 2024, the center polled 35,000 adult respondents randomly selected from the U.S. Postal Service address registry. This third edition was to be published in 2021 but was postponed to avoid flawed results due to the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on religious life. After dropping from 78% to 71% between 2007 and 2014, the share of U.S. adults identifying as Christian has now dropped to 62%, according to the report. However, it notes this figure has been relatively stable since 2019, oscillating between 60% and 64%. Protestants are still the largest subgroup of Christians, with 40% of American adults identifying as such. However, all major Protestant denominations have declined since the first Pew RLS report in 2007. The percentage of respondents who identify as evangelical Protestants dropped from 26% to 23%; those who identify as mainline Protestants dropped from 18% to 11%; and those in historically Black Protestant denominations decreased from 7% to 5%. Catholics are the second largest, representing 19% of the entire Christian population. Other denominations, including Greek and Russian Orthodox, The Church of Latter-day Saints and Jehovah’s Witnesses, represent 3% of the Christian population. Members of the United Methodist Church declined from 5% to 3% of U.S. adults since 2007. The report also indicates similar declines in Baptist and Lutheran Christians. However, those identifying as non-Christian religious adults rose from 4.9% in 2007, to 5.9% in 2014, and to 7.1% in 2023-24. Among them, 1.7% identified as Jewish, 1.2% as Muslim, 1.1% as Buddhist and 0.9% as Hindu, in addition to 2.2% who identified as “other non-Christian religions.” Additionally, the growth of the religiously unaffiliated, also called nones, has plateaued after decades of rapid growth. In 2007, they represented 16% of U.S. adults, rising to 23% in 2014, and 29% in 2023-24. It includes 5% who identify as atheists, 6% who describe themselves as agnostics and 19% who identify as “nothing in particular.” More than 8 out of 10 American adults indicated they were spiritual or believe in the supernatural; 86% agreed people have a soul or spirit in addition to their physical body. A large portion also believe in God or a universal spirit (83%) and/or something spiritual beyond the natural world (79%). About 70% indicated they believe in heaven, hell or both. These figures are relatively the same across age categories. Though this latest study shows a stabilizing religious composition in America, Pew researchers project a decline in religiousness in the future. Less religious younger generations are progressively expected to replace older, highly religious and heavily Christian generations. “This means that, for lasting stability to take hold in the U.S. religious landscape, something would need to change,” the report explains. “For example, today’s young adults would have to become more religious as they age, or new generations of adults who are more religious than their parents would have to emerge.” While 54% of adults ages 54 and older said they pray daily, only 31% ages 24-34 do so, and 27% for ages 18-24. Younger cohorts also attend religious services less often compared with older generations and are also less likely to express beliefs in God or the universal spirit than other generations. The trend could shift if younger Americans became more religious as they age, which is unlikely to happen as such a trend has never been observed before, the report notes. And comparing the results to previous report findings, between 2007 and 2023-24, each age group has become less religious as it aged. The share of American adults who switched religions since childhood, at 35%, has also increased the religiously unaffiliated and led to fewer people identifying as Christians. The percentage of Americans who engage in religious practices remained relatively stable over the last few years, despite decreasing from 2007, according to Pew. In the 2023-24 report, 44% of respondents said they pray at least once a day, which is consistent with 2021 findings from Pew’s annual National Public Opinion Reference Survey. However, that’s down from 55% who said they prayed daily in 2014, and 58% in 2007. Also, in Pew’s 2020 NPORS, 33% of U.S. adults said they attend religious services at least once or twice a month. Similar results were found in 2023-24 data, indicating stability over the last several years. Besides the generational aspect, other factors such as gender and political affiliations seem to weigh in levels of religiousness. Overall, women are more religious than men, but that figure appears to be narrowing slightly. Women are more likely to pray daily (50% to 37% for men) and are more likely to believe in God or a universal spirit (59% to 49%). Liberals also seem to be less likely to identify as Christians, with a notable decrease since 2007 — today, 37% of self-described political liberals identify as Christian, compared with 62% who did in 2007. Among self-described conservatives, 89% identify as Christian today, compared with 82% in 2007.
Shoulder to Shoulder: CWS and Churches Stand Together
For nearly 80 years, CWS has stood for welcome and for dignified, community-centered solutions to hunger, poverty, displacement and disaster. We’ve never stood alone. Churches and people of faith from across the United States and around the world stand shoulder to shoulder with us in vision and mission every day. On Ash Wednesday, CWS launched The Ash Wednesday Ecumenical ... Read More
Bishop Mariann Budde receives mountain of supportive mail after post-inauguration sermon
[Episcopal News Service] Washington Bishop Mariann Budde has drawn intense national and international attention in the past month for her Jan. 21 sermon at Washington National Cathedral, in which she spoke directly to President Donald Trump in attendance and asked him to “have mercy.” This week, Budde thanked all the people who have responded favorably to that sermon, in a video message she recorded literally in front of some 20,000 positive responses – a mountain of letters piled high in postal crates on a desk. “I cannot tell you how much it has meant to me to receive the letters and phone calls and notes and gifts and expressions of gratitude, support and encouragement, and I am persuaded that there is a spirit of love and goodness in this land that flows through all of us,” Budde said. Budde, in her post-inauguration sermon, had asked Trump to show mercy to “the people in our country who are scared now,” and she specifically held up the fears felt by many LGTBQ+ people and immigrants at the start of Trump’s second term. Trump later demanded an apology, calling Budde a “Radical Left hard line Trump hater” whose sermon was “ungracious” and “nasty in tone.” Though many of Trump’s supporters shared the president’s view, Budde also became a kind of folk hero for many Americans who saw her as one of the few public figures calling for compassion and respect for human dignity as the new Trump administration began swiftly upending existing policies and democratic norms. Last week, churchwide leaders thanked Budde personally for her “courageous, Gospel-related words” when she appeared via Zoom in a gathering with members of Executive Council, which was meeting Feb. 17-19 in suburban Baltimore, Maryland. Executive Council greeted Budde with applause, according to an official summary of the meeting. “Then council members shared stories of the impact of her remarks as well as concerns about her safety,” the summary said. “Budde reassured everyone she was fine. One speaker described Budde’s remarks as a breaking in of the Spirit into the midst of much turmoil.” A Diocese of Washington spokesperson said nearly all of the more than 20,000 pieces of physical mail Budde received in the past month were positive. “They are almost all letters of thanks to Bishop Budde for speaking about mercy and kindness and for helping them feel comfort in their fear,” she told Episcopal News Service. Email communications to Budde and the diocese, on the other hand, have been more divided, some angry at the bishop and others expressing gratitude and support. Budde offered more words of encouragement in her video statement, posted Feb. 25 as a Facebook reel. The video had logged more than 300,000 views in less than two days. “Now is a time for us to stand together, to take courage from one another and learn together how we are to be brave now and to hold on to the things that are good about us and about our country,” Budde said. “Together, God will work through us to bring about the kind of society, the kind of community, that we all deserve and that we want to pass on to those who come after us. So, take good care, have courage and remember that together we can all be brave.” – David Paulsen is a senior reporter and editor for Episcopal News Service based in Wisconsin. He can be reached at dpaulsen@episcopalchurch.org.
WCC welcomes Taizé community for visit that focuses on deep collaboration
World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay welcomed Br Matthew, prior of the Taizé Community, as well as seven other Taizé brothers, who visited Geneva for three days this week.
Archbishop Anastasios of Albania, an Orthodox Hierarch of International Recognition
Upon the admission of Archbishop Anastasios of Albania to “Evangelismos” Hospital in Athens at the beginning of January 2025, expressions of widespread acceptance and appreciation emerged from people of all educational backgrounds and ages, from various societal circles (ecclesiastical, academic, political, journalistic), as well as from international inter-Christian and interfaith communities and beyond.
Pasqua Together 2025” delegation visits WCC, focuses on sharing faith with the world
A “Pasqua Together 2025” delegation visited the World Council of Churches (WCC) on 27 February during the JC2033 International Gathering in Geneva to discuss the movement of Christians around the world who are celebrating the 2000th anniversary of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ at Easter 2033.
United Church and 30+ Asset Owners Urge Banks to Maintain Net Zero Commitments
Canadian asset owners call for continued climate leadership from Canada’s financial institutions.