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Surveys
- In Asian American Churches, Generational Differences Deter Young LeadersSurvey: Majority Asian churches are half as likely to have leaders under 30.Dorcas Cheng-Tozun|简体中文繁體中文
- Americans Are Still Inviting People to ChurchYoung, evangelical, and African American churchgoers ask the most.Aaron Earls - Lifeway Research|
- After Roe’s Reversal, Most Churches Still Aren’t Involved with a Local Pregnancy CenterOver two years of new state-level restrictions, younger Christians, Hispanics, and megachurch attendees are more likely to say their congregation supports their community’s alternative to abortion clinics.Aaron Earls - Lifeway Research|
- Most Pastors Still Oppose Same-Sex MarriageLevels of support for LGBTQ relationships have plateaued among Protestant clergy.Aaron Earls - Lifeway Research|Français
- Filipinos and Americans Diverge on Trusting PastorsStudies find that while less than a third of Americans trust church leaders, 90 percent of Filipinos do.Hannah Keziah Agustin|
- Survey: US Hispanic Churches Could Do More if They Had MoreTheir pastors are mostly evangelical, sometimes bivocational, and eager for additional workers and funding to better serve their communities.Aaron Earls - Lifeway Research|español
- More Evangelicals See Immigrants as a Threat and Economic DrainSurvey: Even with growing concerns over the past two years, most still favor immigration reform and say the church has a responsibility to help.Aaron Earls - Lifeway Research|español
- Why Evangelicals Aren’t Afraid of Being Outnumbered by NonesChurch leaders believe Christ still offers the answers that the religiously unaffiliated are looking for, even if religious baggage is driving them away.Kate Shellnutt|Português
- Above Reproach? Fewer Americans See Pastors as EthicalThe biblical call to maintain “a good reputation with outsiders” is becoming a bigger challenge in the US as public perception of clergy falls to a record low.Kate Shellnutt|
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