986
Over the past year, those who track religious statistics have been surprised by a trend so rare it hasn’t been recorded before: Gen-Z is the first generation in American history whose men are more likely to go to church than women are.
In fact, about a quarter of men born after 2000 say they attend church weekly—higher than both their female counterparts and men born between 1960 and the 21st century. Gen-Z men are also more likely than millennial men—and just as likely as Gen-Z women—to say religion is important to them.
One possible reason: The church is providing a robust, vibrant vision of masculinity.
Keep reading this article on The Gospel Coalition.