After last week’s reflection about contemporary young priests and American Catholics, this week I would like to offer some reflections about young Americans in “Generation Z.”

On October 4, 2025, Fox News claimed that members of Generation Z are returning to church in astounding numbers. Some people at once reacted that this was a new religious “great awakening” in America. But a leading religious trends researcher at Washington University in St. Louis, Ryan Burge, stressed that the Fox News assertion was really overblown: “We’re not seeing anything at the scale that would even begin to point in the direction of a sustained, significant, substantive revival in America right now.” (Religion News Service, October 21, 2025.)

Generation Z, often shortened to “Gen Z” and informally known as “Zoomers,” has approximately 70.79 million members, representing about 21% of the total U.S. population. They were born between 1997 and 2012. Many in Generation Z are now entering the full-time workforce.

Generation Z’s identity has been shaped by the digital age, climate anxiety, a shifting financial landscape, and COVID-19. They are known as “digital natives” because they are the first generation to grow up with the Internet very much a part of their daily life. Generation Z values fluidity, inclusion, and self-definition.

Another part of their identity: Generation Z is the least religious generation on record, with a large and growing number identifying as religiously unaffiliated, agnostic, or atheist. However, within this generation, there are pockets of increased religious interest, particularly among some young men who are drawn to more fundamentalist religions in a cultic way.

Generation Zers are also passionate about climate change and peace. But there is also a small number of Generation Z Republicans promoting Christian Nationalism; and many Generation Z Republicans voted for the incumbent U.S. president in 2024. Now, today, 67% disapprove of him.

Although Generation Zers generally identify as “spiritual,” Christianity doesn’t seem to resonate as much with them as it did with previous generations. About 45% of America’s Generation Z identify as Christian, according to Pew Research Center’s most recent Religious Landscape Study– a 10% decline from the previous 2014 survey. More than half of the Millennials, born between 1981 and 1996, and a little over 70% of Generation X, born between 1965 and 1980, identified as Christian. But less than a third of Generation Z attend religious services with any regularity.

Generation Z’s parents, belonging to Generation X, were the first generation to use “helicopter parenting,” an over-involved and overprotective style where parents hover over their children, micromanaging their lives and rushing to solve their problems. But Generation Z’s parents did very little to encourage their children’s regular participation in formal religion and to promote their religious development. Today, younger Generation Zers are driving the surge of Americans who identify as “religiously unaffiliated.”

Approximately 29% to 31% of contemporary American adults are religiously unaffiliated, meaning around 90 to 100 million people in the U.S. do not identify with a specific religion. This group, often called “nones,” includes atheists, agnostics, and those who describe their religion as “nothing in particular.”

Religiously unaffiliated Americans express skepticism about the societal benefits of religion. American religious identity, in fact, has experienced nearly three decades of consistent decline. Research has shown that every generation of adults is somewhat less religious than the generation that preceded it. This pattern continues with Generation Z demonstrating less attachment to religion than the Millennial generation.

Yes, in terms of identity, Generation Z is the least religious generation yet. But Generation Z’s relationship with religion is complex, marked by a significant increase in religious disaffiliation and atheism but also a rise in “spiritual but not religious” beliefs, and an active search for meaning. They may reject dogma but are engaged with existential questions, spirituality, and ethics, sometimes in unconventional, non-institutional ways.

Curiously, Generation Z is the first modern generation of Americans in which men appear to be more religious than women. But careful observation is important here.

Generation Z men are more likely than Generation Z women to support Christian Nationalism, and they actually have strong ideas about repealing women’s right to vote! Generation Z men view themselves as victims of modern culture and see themselves as part of a cosmic struggle between good and evil. If these young men view themselves as victims, they will more likely identify with protective male-dominated far-right religious movements.

Generation Z women, on other hand hand, represent, what some observers see as the most leftwing demographic movement in modern U.S. history. They are convinced that both Democrats and Republicans have capitulated in a way to the current presidential administration’s authoritarianism. They came of age amid climate crisis, debt, job insecurity, and the growing threat of authoritarianism. They do not see compromise as civility, but rather as danger. If older generations saw politics as negotiation, Generation Z women see it as self-defense. According to Melissa Deckman, CEO of PRRI the Public Religion Research Institute, in her book The Politics of Gen Z (Columbia University Press), Generation Z men are becoming more conservative as well as increasingly indifferent to politics, but Generation Z women have not only become the most progressive cohort in US history but are also expected to outpace their male peers across virtually every measure of political involvement.

 

What do we do today?

I think concerned people should focus on Generation Zers’ interest in spiritual growth and making a positive impact on the world. Not lecturing to them but traveling with them in thoughtful conversation and collaboration.

  • Jack

9 thoughts on “Generation Z in the United States

  1. Dear Jack,

    As one who literally has no personal Gen Z connections, your words offer interesting insights as I observe those who appear to be of this generation in our eucharistic worship. Perhaps it is time of day, but I seldom see Gen Z age persons at Mass. Even when visiting other parishes, most of the congregation are blue hairs like ourselves. But when we do see families of the age you described, there are often multiple small children, much like when I was young and “rhythm” was the only sanctioned form of Catholic birth control! Sometimes, but not always, the mothers wear mantillas. Again, not always but often enough, the parents kneel to receive Holy Communion. I have wondered if there is a return to that “old time religion” somewhere in their upbringing or desired approach to the faith that is happening within this younger generation. There is reverence and respectful participation but just a slightly different engagement with worship. But, again, as an old codger with no experience with this demographic, I wonder where they will take us as they become the mainstream population in the church. As Bob Dylan says, “The times, they are a changin’.”

    Peace,

    Frank

    1. Maybe my experience is not directly transferable to the US (I live in the Czech Republic), but it seems to me that the conservative nature of faith has always been typical among young people. Many times, young people “convert” to a more modern faith after they gain some life experience. At least that was the case for me. I think I read in Scott Peck’s book The Different Drum that this type of conversion is fairly common for many people (and it is not well addressed by the practices of the main churches).

  2. Interesting blog. Your statement, “They do not see compromise as civility, but rather as danger,” shows how our situations and backgrounds influence human reason and to make a positive impact requires treating the process of reasoning thoughtfully, not only from my own standpoint. I wrote in Science and Spirituality: Celebrating the 150th anniversary of Mary Baker Eddy’s Science and Health, “But human reason requires revelation, insight, since losing and gaining positions is like putting together a whopping big puzzle that doesn’t fit.
    “We need salt to survive but too much salt kills living organisms, and we may forget that we are the salt of the earth.”
    .

  3. Thanks, Jack. very nice summary. Did not want to post this online as it is a “joke.” – kind of. I really appreciate the nice summary. My grandkids are in this group – and I have both extremes. My Latina daughter in law has 2 died in the wool Catholic Republicans. My MD son and police chief wife are on the other end. AND they are nearb — all good. I have been a “spiritual” non believer since 1968 when I was studying at the Alphonsianum. But I have chosen to “believe” in a form of “GOD” – that life, all of life must have meaning and purpose and value.

    Are you sure you did not use ChatGPT to do the summary. Hmmmm? Just kidding.

    Carl Scheider

  4. Thank you for your beautifully-written, thoughtful observations!!

    The many “Gen-Z” students that I have taught and mentored (at a major research university) are polite, considerate, sensitive, and focused on learning , knowledge, and self-development as well as career success. As you noted, many are “spiritual”, but fewer seem to subscribe to formal or institutionalized rituals or observances. Why?

    Firstly, many “Z-ers” are highly self-determined and individualized – thus, they may lack some degree of group identification that might otherwise have led them toward subscription to institutional beliefs and objectives.

    Secondly, some Z-ers are highly suspicious of formal religion (especially RCC), having been informed of less-than-salutary institutional behaviors (e.g., the clergy abuse crisis).

    Thirdly, for many Z-ers, the Internet is their main source of information. Some Z-ers piece together, synthesize, and curate a personal belief system that can, to our more settled and somewhat more group-oriented views, seem like a beef-stew of heterogeneous, heterodox, and rather tangled belief elements or subsets. Unfortunately, as you have presciently noted, this can include aspects of religious dominionism/nationalism, or (ina darkre sense) nihilism and other extremist views.

    Fourthly, us “older folks” are accustomed to “information push” strategies of inculcation, whereas Z-ers are highly interactive … “information push-pull” is all they know. That habituation is also reinforced by Z-ers intensive and extensive involvement in video games. In contrast, many churches (mainline or otherwise) still reply on “information-push-intensive” techniques for discipleship and indoctrination, which might not necessarily appeal to Z-ers.

    It would be interesting to read your thoughts re: effect of the Internet on religious observance … personal, group, and institutional. Perhaps, in addition to this excellent article, you might consider writing re: the above topics?

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