Mormons and Family Life
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Family Demographics
Intermarriage
Life Goals
Gender Roles
Previous
Pew Research Center surveys
have found that one common association that the general public has for Mormons
is “family” or “family values.” This survey finds that family is, indeed, very
important to most Mormons. Mormons are more likely than the general public to
feel that marriage and childrearing are some of the most important things in
life. More Mormons are married compared with the population as a whole, and
Mormons have more children on average than the general public. Finally, Mormons
hold traditional views of gender roles inside the family and in their religious
community.
Family Demographics
Two-thirds
of Mormon adults in the current sample (67%) are married, compared with 52% of
the general public.6
Mormons also tend to have more children than does the general public. Mormons
in the current survey report having had 2.6 children on average, compared with
1.8 among the general population.7

Intermarriage
More
than four out of five Mormons who are married or living with a partner (85%)
are married to or partnered with another Mormon; 6% have a spouse or partner
who is Protestant, while 3% are in a relationship with a Catholic and 5% have a
partner who is religiously unaffiliated. By comparison, the Pew Forum’s 2007 U.S. Religious Landscape Survey found that 81% of
Protestants are married to another Protestant and 78% of married Catholics are
married to another Catholic. Intermarriage rates are higher among the
religiously unaffiliated, 28% of whom are married to Protestants and 22% of
whom are married to Catholics.

Life Goals
Four
out of five Mormons (81%) say that being a good parent is one of their most
important goals in life. Being a good parent also ranks among the top life
goals of the public overall, though only 50% of the general population says
that being a good parent is one of their most important goals in life. Nearly
three out of four Mormons (73%) believe that having a successful marriage is
one of the most important things in life, compared with 34% of the general
public. For Mormons (as for the general public), this puts family concerns
significantly above career concerns, having free time and even living a very
religious life.

This
prioritization of family life is seen across Mormon subgroups. Being a good
parent and having a successful marriage rank as top priorities in life for both
Mormon men and Mormon women, and for both the highly religious and those with
lower levels of religious commitment. Married Mormons are more likely than
those who are not married to say having a successful marriage is one of their
most important goals in life, but more than half of those who are not married
(56%) express the same view. Similarly, those who have had children are more
inclined than those who have not to say being a good parent is one of the most
important things in life, but large majorities of both groups express this
point of view.

Those
with higher levels of educational attainment are more likely than those with a
high school degree or less to say that being a good parent, having a successful
marriage and being very religious are among their most important goals in life.
Gender Roles

Nearly
six-in-ten Mormons (58%) say that the more satisfying kind of marriage is one
in which the husband provides for the family and the wife takes care of the
house and children. About four-in-ten (38%) prefer a marriage in which both the
husband and wife have jobs and both take care of the house and children. Among
the general public, including many other major religious groups, the balance of
opinion on this question is reversed, with 62% preferring a marriage in which
both husband and wife work and 30% preferring a marriage in which the husband
is the sole breadwinner for the family.
Mormon
men and women express similar views on this question, and there is no
difference in views across age cohorts. Upwards of seven-in-ten Mormon college
graduates (71%) say they prefer a marriage in which the husband is the sole
provider, compared with 59% of those with some college education and less than
half of those with a high school education or less (45%). This pattern is not
observed among the general public.
Married
Mormons are more likely than those who are unmarried to say they prefer a
marriage in which the husband works and the wife stays home (65% vs. 43%). And
Mormons who have had three or more children are much more inclined than those
who have had fewer children to prefer this approach, with 70% of this group saying
they prefer a marriage in which the wife stays home and the husband works. More
than two-thirds of Mormons (69%) who have high levels of religious commitment
believe that the ideal family structure is one in which the wife stays home and
her husband works, but only one-third of Mormons (33%) with lower levels of
religious commitment hold this view.
The
survey finds little support for the notion that women should be eligible for
the Mormon priesthood. (The Mormon priesthood is different than the priesthood
in some other faiths; all worthy male members of the church are eligible to
begin priesthood service when they reach age 12, and they may hold various
offices in the priesthood at different stages in their lives. Mormon women are
not ordained to the priesthood. See the glossary for more details.)
One-in-ten Mormons (11%) believe that women should be ordained to the
priesthood of their church, whereas 87% think the priesthood should be open
only to males. Large majorities of both men and women express this view, but
Mormon women are somewhat more likely than Mormon men to say the priesthood
should be open only to males (90% vs. 84%). The belief that women should be
ordained to the priesthood is less common among those who have the highest
levels of religious commitment than among those with lower levels of
commitment. Even among this latter group, however, nearly seven-in-ten (69%)
say women should not be eligible for the priesthood.

Footnotes:
6 The estimate that 52% of adults in the general population are married comes from surveys conducted in 2010-2011 by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press and differs slightly from a recent, comprehensive analysis of trends in marriage rates published by the Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends project, which was based on U.S. Census Bureau data. The Pew Research Center surveys were used for comparison in this report because the marital status question in those surveys is identical to the marital status question used in the current survey of Mormons. (return to text)
7 Source for general public comparison is the Pew Forum’s 2010 U.S. Religious Knowledge Survey. (return to text)
Photo Credit: © Walter Bibikow/JAI/Corbis