Thursday, November 21, 2024

Two Countries With More Religious Younger Populations

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Most people spend their youthful years chasing unrealistic dreams and following fleeting passions. By the time they are crossing 40 (or even later), they realize that most of their precious years have been spent ‘chasing after the wind’, at which point they begin a more intent search. They become more religious.

The trends however are interestingly different in 2 countries.

Here’s an interesting find.

An analysis of 106 nations found Ghana and Georgia are the only 2  places where under-40s are more religious than older compatriots – Ghana, and the former Soviet republic of Georgia – according to a global analysis.

46 out of 106 countries were surveyed by the Washington-based Pew Research Center. People between the ages of 18 and 39 were less likely to say religion was very important to them than adults over the age of 40.

Countries where the age gap is most marked are Poland, Greece, Chile, Romania and Portugal – all predominantly Christian countries, and all with a percentage point difference between the two age groups of 20 or higher.

The US has a 17-point difference, and Ireland a nine-point gap. The UK is among 58 countries in which there is no significant difference between younger and older adults.

In Lebanon, a majority Muslim country but with a large Christian population, there is a 20-point age gap. In Iran, ruled by an Islamic theocracy, there is a nine-point difference.

There is an age gap in a majority of Latin American and Caribbean countries, about half of European countries, and in North America. It is more likely to be a feature of Christian-majority countries than Muslim-majority ones.

According to Pew: “Although the age gap in religious commitment is larger in some nations than in others, it occurs in many different economic and social contexts – in developing countries as well as advanced industrial countries, in Muslim-majority nations as well as predominantly Christian states, and in societies that are, overall, highly religious as well as those that are comparatively secular.”

The report, The Age Gap in Religion Around the World, says that a common explanation is that “new generations become less religious in tandem with economic development – as collective worries about day-to-day survival become less pervasive and tragic events become less frequent.

“According to this line of thinking, each generation in a steadily developing society would be less religious than the last, which would explain why young adults are less religious than their elders at any given time.”

Better education, and a trend towards religious belief as one gets older and faces mortality, could also help explain the gap.

The report notes that the most religious areas of the world are experiencing the fastest population growth, due to high fertility rates and relatively young populations.

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Faithful Scribe is a passionate writer dedicated to exploring Christian teachings and inspiring believers to live out their faith with purpose and conviction. For more insightful articles, stay connected with Charismata News.

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