Future of American Religion Relies on Strong Marriages

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You should talk about money before jumping into it, a story in The New York Times says. You can spice it up by doing more housework, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. And this just in: Your strong commitment to it is a sign you’re trying to practice what you regularly hear preached.

“It,” of course, is marriage. Marriage and its connection to religious involvement will be one of the themes highlighted Thursday during “Religious Practice and the Family,” a conference sponsored by The Heritage Foundation at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center.

Contributing researcher and University of Virginia sociologist Brad Wilcox has written numerous books about love and marriage, including the provocatively titled “Soft Patriarchs, New Men: How Christianity Shapes Fathers and Husbands.”

But you don’t have to be a sociologist to notice that marriage and parenting often serve as an impetus, specifically for men, to get more involved with church. In a new research paper to be presented at Thursday’s conference, Wilcox examines the data and makes a further claim.

His study provides substantial evidence for the idea that “the fortunes of American religion rise and fall, at least in part, with the fortunes of the intact, married family,” Wilcox says. So if the nation’s retreat from marriage continues, his work suggests, American churches will be weakened.

Using data from the General Social Survey, Wilcox concludes that unmarried parents are 23 percent less likely to attend church on a weekly basis than are adults who don’t have children. However, men and women who are married and have children are 62 percent more likely to attend church than unmarried peers who are childless.

“Clearly,” Wilcox says, “adults who combine marriage and parenthood in a conventional manner are most likely to attend religious services.”

Join Heritage and our research partners, Child Trends and Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion, to find out more about the connection between religious practice and family life. The conference is open at no charge to anyone interested in the intersection of faith with life in the here and now. For details, and to register, go here.

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topapito's picture

I am totally, and wholeheartedly in favor of gay marriage . I consider it an insult to humanity that it is even under discussion. I am not religious, I am married and have two wonderful girls and attended church twice to baptize them both, whatever that was. Baptism took place only because family and friends seemed like they would have died if the girls were not baptized. But my girls DO NOT go to church and they will not be taught religion .

They will make up their own minds about religion when they are old enough to. I do not believe in god and never will. I recognize that churches have no choice but to accept gay HUMAN BEINGS and no other human has a right to judge another over sexual preference. It's that simple, and it is coming.

Religion WILL die, and when it does, good riddance.

Babaroni's picture

That's why it needs to be available to ALL citizens on an equal basis.

And I think you are correct that married couples with children are more likely to attend religious services. In fact there are at least 3 or 4 married gay couples with children (including my family) who attend our church .

It is a very good thing that churches are becoming more accepting toward gay couples and our children. Loving, strong family bonds which receive the nurturing support of both society at large and local religious institutions can only help to strengthen society as a whole.

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