Most Emerging Adults Stay the Same as Early Teen Years
What then causes emerging adults to be religiously devoted?
A commercial on television recently informed us that "90% of bone strength is developed before adulthood". So to with religious behavior of young adults. A key finding of the NSYR study is that the degree of "religiousness" of an early teenager (13-15) is a significant predictor of their religious behaviors as an emerging adult.(18-23).
In other words they generally don't change much.
- Over half of those studied remained statistically similar in religious behavior from age 13-15 to age 18-23.
- Of those indicating a change in religiousness more declined in religious behavior from early teens to emerging adulthood than increased.
In the words of the study authors:
"Religious commitments and orientations appear to be set early in life and follow a consistent trajectory from early formation through adolescence and emerging adulthood. For most (emerging adults), what happens religiously before the teenage years powerfully conditions what happens thereafter."
Parental/ Adult Influence is Critical
While multiple factors combine in various ways to predict religiousness the study identified a number of key factors driving religious behavior:
- Having highly religious parents
- Importance of faith as an early teen
- Frequency of personal prayer as an early teen
- Frequent religious service attendance as an early teen
- Not having friends and school mates who look down on religious beliefs
- Supportive religious adults (other than parents)
- Current congregation 'a good place to discuss religious issues'.
In the words of the study authors:
"It is a myth that as children enter adolescence that parents do not matter. Most parents have swallowed the 'parents are irrelevant' myth. Yet parents are hugely important. Peers are important but less important than parents. Parents, and other non-parental adults, know it or like it or not, are always socializing and teaching emerging adults about religion."
College No Longer the Culprit
Another study conclusion seems worthy of sharing. College does NOT corrode religious belief and practice as much as previously thought. Some quotes:
"The religiously undermining effect of higher education on recent youth has disappeared."
"Among recently surveyed college students 2.7 times as many report strengthening religious beliefs than weakening."
"If anything NOT attending college is associated with lower levels of religious practice."
"American higher education seems to have become an environment less corrosive than in the past."
One factor is growth of campus based religious and parachurch organizations "that provide alternative plausibility structures for sustaining religious faith and practice in college."