ROME, MARCH 2, 2008 ( Zenit.org ).- More than one-quarter of American adults have left the faith in which they were brought up. This is one of the most important findings of a survey published last Monday by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.
SOME lessons may have been learned from the rallies staged by protesters against the Arroyo administration. As reported by media and as we have seen them ourselves, the agitation for a change in leadership cannot be shrugged off as tentative and inconsequential.
Abraham’s story is an honest one. It is a story about faith. And within this faith, there is sex and violence, mistakes and doubts, poor decisions and wrong decisions. It isn’t a religious faith. It is a faith lived out in a real life… like we have to do.
Values, or morality and ethics, do not require Christian faith. This statement is the opposite of what most religious people believe. I also think that the above statement may be determined not to be true by most of the people who write for or read th
Get the scoop on Trail Mix, the Journal's new political blog. » Read more More than a quarter of adult Americans have left the faith of their childhood to join another religion or profess no religion, according to a new survey of religious affiliation by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.
The U.S. religious marketplace is extremely volatile, with nearly half of American adults leaving the faith tradition of their upbringing to either switch allegiances or abandon religious affiliation altogether, a new survey finds
More than a quarter of adult Americans have left the faith of their childhood to join another religion or no religion, according to a new survey of religious affiliation. Is that good news or bad news?
By Michael A. CummingsMICHAELC@CULLMANTIMES.COMTodd Kilpatrick founded J-Positive, a faith-based support group for recovering addicts and their co-dependents, in 2003, hoping to relate his experience as a recovering meth amphetamine addict to those struggling with the drug.