Gallup: Less Than Half of Americans Consider Religion Important - Protestia
Gallup’s newest World Poll puts numbers on what anyone with eyes has known for a long time: America is no longer a religious nation. The percentage of adults who say religion is important in their daily lives has fallen from 66% in 2015 to 49% in 2025—a 17-point nosedive in a single decade. Gallup notes that this is one of the steepest declines on earth over that timespan.
So much for the comforting myth of a “deeply religious America.” The data is revealing the reality.
The U.S.: Still Christian on Paper, Functionally SecularThe Gallup numbers reveal a country that still likes to check the Christian box but has no intention of letting Christianity interfere with daily life. This is the classic hallmark of a collapsing culture: a population that retains the labels but abandons the substance.
America is sliding into the same secular posture as Europe—but with the added American flair of pretending nothing is happening.
What Conservative Evangelicals Should See HereThe data isn’t complicated, and neither is the interpretation:
This isn’t a drift. It’s a snap.
Why This Collapse HappenedGallup isn’t analyzing causes, but the cultural fingerprints are obvious:
Combine those, and you get a society where “religion is important” becomes a minority opinion.
What This Means Going ForwardThe evangelical assumption that America is “basically Christian but confused” needs to be retired. The Gallup data make it official: America isn’t confused. It’s unconvinced. And no amount of nostalgic rhetoric will resurrect the old civil religion.
For conservative evangelicals, this moment likely isn’t surprising—it’s just finally documented. The façade has fallen. The mask is off. The numbers tell the same story Protestia has been telling for years:
You cannot build a Christian society on people who don’t actually believe Christianity.
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