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Pew Forum in the News

Selected news stories that cite the Pew Forum and its data.

NPR: More Americans convinced Obama is a Muslim

A growing number of Americans incorrectly believe that President Obama, a Christian, is a Muslim.

Delaware News Journal: Music with a message

"Bar Stools and Church Pews" is a Jerry Jones song whose title tells his life story in just five words.

San Bernardino County Sun: Holy time for Muslims

As Inland Empire Muslims embark on the holy month of Ramadan, a daily ritual of fasting that's one of the five pillars of the religion, they also are keenly aware that their faith remains mysterious and controversial to many Americans.

Lansing State Journal: Empty pews prompt creative recruiting of young adults

On Tuesday evenings, the Rev. Anthony Strouse takes his ministry outside the walls of St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church in East Lansing.

Tennessean: Nashville priest may get in trouble over viral video

A prominent Nashville priest may face church discipline for criticizing Roman Catholic teaching on celibate priests, birth control and papal authority.

LA Times: The Anne Rice defection: It's the tip of the religious iceberg

Novelist Anne Rice's surprise post last week on Facebook — she announced she had quit Christianity "in the name of Christ" because she'd seen too much hypocrisy — brought cheers and smug smiles from critics of institutional faith, and criticism and soul-searching among believers.

AP: Far from ground zero, opponents fight new mosques

Muslims trying to build houses of worship in the nation's heartland, far from the heated fight in New York over plans for a mosque near ground zero, are running into opponents even more hostile and aggressive.

NY Times: Congregations gone wild

The American clergy is suffering from burnout, several new studies show.

Ahmadi Muslims in U.S. eager to spread message of nonviolence

Like many teenagers, Saira Ahmad questioned her religious faith -- once she found out what it was.

A call to Catholics to ‘come home’ again

The Archdiocese of Boston, in an effort to bring lapsed Catholics back to church, is planning a major public relations campaign in the coming year that will use television ads, parish events, and personal invitations to urge inactive Catholics to “come home’’ to their faith.

House Church: Skip the sermon, worship at home

To get to church on a recent Sunday morning, the Yeldell family walked no farther than their own living room to greet fellow worshippers.

Growing number of worshipers make themselves at home

Megachurch, meet microchurch.

French parliament debates burqa ban

The French parliament begins debate Tuesday on a bill that would ban women from wearing Islamic veils, such as the burqa, that fully cover the face and body.

Atheists gather for a holiday they can believe in: Independence Day

The trouble with most major holidays in the United States, if you're an atheist, is that it's difficult to ignore the "holy day" etymology, what with Christmas (obvious), Easter (obvious) and Thanksgiving (whom do you think most people are giving thanks to?).

How missionaries lost their chariots of fire

The 1910 World Missionary Conference was a watershed moment for Protestantism.

Many around world targeted for beliefs

Nearly 70 percent of the world's population lives in countries where religious practices are restricted and minority groups are unable to fully live out their faith, according to the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.

Can God help Uganda to fight corruption?

A recent survey by the US-based Pew Research Centre puts Uganda among the most religious countries on earth.

Obama administration sidelines religious freedom policy

Last week President Obama nominated an ambassador at large for international religious freedom, a position created by the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act.

The murder of albinos in Tanzania

The East African country of Tanzania is known for its natural beauty and relative stability.

Interfaith marriages are rising fast, but they're failing fast too

When Joseph Reyes and Rebecca Shapiro got married in 2004, they had a Jewish wedding ceremony. He was Catholic but converted to Judaism after they married, and they agreed to raise any children in the Jewish faith. However, after their daughter Ela was born, Reyes began to worry about the fact that she had not been baptized. "If, God forbid, something happened to her, she wouldn't be in heaven," he told me.

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