In Today's Interfaith-y News

Over on her blog, On Being Both, Susan Katz Miller reflects on the latest Pew Survey on America's Changing Religious Landscape

But first, let’s look at the important data on interfaith families in the new report. The researchers write that “people who have gotten married since 2000 are about twice as likely to be in religious intermarriages as are people who got married before 1960.” They found 28 percent of Americans living in an interfaith marriage or partnership (when we consider Protestants as one religion). That rises to 33 percent if we consider evangelical Protestants, mainline Protestants, and historically black Protestant denominations, as separate religious groups.

Here's the breakdown from the study: