The Most Religious US State Is ...
Once again, Mississippi
reigns as the most religious U.S. state, with 61 percent of its
residents classified as "very religious," according to the results of a
Gallup survey released Monday (Feb. 3).
In contrast,
only 22 percent of people in Vermont ranked just as devout, and the
Green Mountain state held onto its title as "least religious."
Overall, about 41 percent of Americans indicated that they are "very religious," meaning that religion
is an important part of their daily lives and that they attend
religious services every week or almost every week. Some 29 percent were
classified as nonreligious, because they did not attend services and
didn't cite religion as an important part of their daily life. Another
29 percent fell somewhere in the middle of the two extremes, and were
labeled as "moderately religious."
For the most part, the rankings have remained largely unchanged since Gallup first started tracking religiosity
in 2008. The most religious states still tend to be clustered in the
South, though Utah — with its large population of Mormons, typically the
most religious of any denomination — stands out as an exception and
ranks No. 2 in religiosity, according to Gallup. Meanwhile, the least
religious states are mostly found in New England, the Pacific Northwest
and other states in the West.
Top 10 most religious states
- Mississippi: 61 percent are very religious
- Utah: 60 percent
- Alabama: 57 percent
- Louisiana: 56 percent
- South Carolina: 54 percent
- Tennessee: 54 percent
- Georgia: 52 percent
- Arkansas: 51 percent
- North Carolina: 50 percent
- Oklahoma: 49 percent
- Kentucky: 49 percent
Top 10 least religious states
- Vermont: 22 percent are very religious
- New Hampshire: 24 percent
- Maine: 24 percent
- Massachusetts: 28 percent
- Oregon: 31 percent
- Nevada: 32 percent
- Washington: 32 percent
- Connecticut: 32 percent
- Hawaii: 32 percent
- District of Columbia: 32 percent
Gallup
officials said cultural differences and the geographic spread of
different religions could explain the state-level variations in religiousness revealed in the poll.
Protestants,
for examples, have "above-average religiousness," according to Gallup,
and the Southern states have a higher percentage of Protestants than the
rest of the nation. In contrast, states in New England have a higher
percentage of those with no religious identity at all.
In
some states, there seems to be a strong cultural predisposition to be
religious. According to Gallup, Protestants in Mississippi are more
religious than Protestants in Vermont, and even those who don't identify
with any organized religion in Mississippi are still more religious
than Vermonters with no religious identity.
The
rankings are based on more than 174,000 phone interviews conducted
nationwide throughout 2013 as part of the Gallup Daily tracking survey.
The results were weighted to be representative of each state's adult
population by gender, age, race, Hispanic ethnicity and education, based
on Census data, Gallup officials said.
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