CHICAGO (Reuters) - Belief in God is
highest among older people and increases with age, perhaps due to the growing
realization that death is coming closer, University of Chicago researchers said on
Wednesday.
Summarizing data from surveys performed in
1991, 1998 and 2008 in 30 countries from Chile to Japan, the university's National Opinion Research
Center found that, on average, 43 percent of those aged 68 and older were
certain that God exists.
By comparison, an average of 23 percent of
people aged 27 and younger were firm believers in God, according to the
report, which gathered data from the International Social Survey Program, a
consortium of the world's leading opinion survey organizations.
"Looking at differences among age groups,
the largest increases in belief in God most often occur among those 58 years of
age and older. This suggests that belief in God is especially likely to increase
among the oldest groups, perhaps in response to the increasing anticipation of
mortality," researcher Tom
Smith said in a statement.
Over the past two decades, belief in God
has decreased in most countries, but the declines were modest, Smith said.
Israel, Slovenia and Russia were three
exceptions where belief in God had grown. For instance in Russia, non-believers
who became believers outnumbered by 16 percent those who had lost their belief
in God.
Belief was highest in strongly Catholic
countries such as the Philippines, at 94 percent, and lowest in Western Europe,
with only 13 percent of former East Germans believers.
In the United States, 81 percent of people
surveyed said they had always believed in God, and 68 percent support the
concept that God is concerned with people in a personal way.
People were asked about their range of
beliefs, from atheism to strong belief in God; their changing beliefs over their
lifetimes; and their attitudes toward the notion that God is concerned with
individuals.
The countries surveyed were Australia,
Austria, Chile, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Britain,
Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Latvia, The Netherlands, New Zealand,
Northern Ireland, Norway, The Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Slovakia,
Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States.
(Reporting By Andrew Stern; Editing by Greg
McCune)
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