Are Half of All Church Members in the US Single?

The following is Stephen Cranny’s third guest post here at Times & Seasons. Stephen Cranney is a Washington DC-based data scientist and Non-Resident Fellow at Baylor’s Institute for the Studies of Religion. He has produced over 20 peer-reviewed articles and five children.


I was surprised at the Church’s seeming statement (I’ll discuss why it was “seeming” later), echoed around the standard General Conference post-game analysis that half the Church in the United States was single. The surprise came from the fact that self-response surveys on religion and marital status consistently show that a solid majority of adult Latter-day Saints are married. For example, the largest recent self-report survey (Pew 2014) reports that 66% of self-identified adult Latter-day Sainta are married. I checked the General Social Survey, an omnibus survey taken every year with a wide variety of variables, and found similar results. Now, the GSS only has a couple dozen Latter-day Saints every year so the results are much more sporadic (as can be seen below). However, by combining years you basically get the same picture painted in the 2014 Pew report, with Latter-day Saint marrieds in the low-to-mid 60s range as of the mid-2010s (2018 is also available in a different dataset, but I dashed this off in between errands; presumably that one year won’t radically affect the take-away).

Chart showing the percentage of married LDS adults is between 80% and 60% since the early 1990s.

So why the discrepancy? I can think of a few reasons, some more convincing than others.

1. Surveys use self-reported members, while the Church may be drawing from Church records.

Researchers have found significant discrepancies between the numbers reported by the Church and numbers reported by the census in countries that have a religion question on their census. That’s not to demean Church record-keeping; as anybody who has systematically visited every house in a ward list can tell you, a significant portion of people on church records are people who were baptized when they were younger but who have, for all intents and purposes, lost contact with the Church and would not identify as Latter-day Saints on a survey. Presumably it’s difficult for the Church to know how to handle this segment of the Church population because, as any ward clerk who has transferred records from decades ago from another country can tell you, sometimes they do resurface after years and start attending their local ward.

However, the Church does often use a more refined denominator for in-house purposes. For example, in a private setting (it was a very random occurrence and my professional background had absolutely nothing to do with why I happened to be there) I heard a General Authority once note how much the temple-recommend holding membership had grown in the past decade (you would think I would have remembered the details, but I don’t; I vaguely remember being moderately optimistic). However, whatever the condition of activity required to make it into the denominator, it would probably be stricter than the limit set by surveys of simply identifying as a member. Since more religiosity almost certainly means a higher likelihood of being married, the Pew and GSS results should be taken as a very conservative estimate, since the bar for being included as a Latter-day Saint is so low. Consequently, assuming that the Church’s analysis is more sophisticated than just using the raw Church records, I doubt this explains the discrepancy.

2. The latest survey results are several years behind the Church’s in-house numbers. The discrepancy reflects changes since then.

The Pew survey was conducted in 2014, while the GSS trendline here goes up to 2017. Elder Gong noted that the crossover happened very recently. It is technically possible that the gap is due to rather radical changes between the surveys and latest round of Church data collection. However, I am highly dubious about this option, since these kinds of demographic indicators change very slowly for a population. For example, between 2007 and 2014 the percent of self-identified Latter-day Saints that were married in the Pew survey dropped five points. Assuming that trend continued for the next seven years until now, about 59% of self-reported Latter-day Saints (which again, is a very conservative estimate as it includes at least some disappeared ones who don’t make institutional contact with the Church in a way that would register with their data collection) would still be married.

3. The discrepancy reflects random error from the survey.

Any survey that does not include the entire population has a margin of error, and technically it is possible that Pew and GSS were both shifted up simply due to the fact that they were using a sample (Pew’s sample size of Mormons was 664). However, even with this sample size going from 66% to 49% would be a highly unlikely. However, random error could possibly combine with some version of the issues above in a way that would explain the discrepancy.

4. The Church did not actually say that a majority of members were single.

The statements from General Conference regarding percentage single:

President Ballard:

We long to help all who feel this way. Let me mention, in particular, those who are currently single. Brothers and Sisters, more than half of adults in the Church today are widowed, divorced, or not yet married.

Elder Gong:

Also, the majority of adult church members are now unmarried, widowed, or divorced. This is a significant change. It includes more than half our Relief Society sisters, and more than half our adult priesthood brothers.

A significant proportion of divorced or widowed people are currently married, although in surveys the options are usually presented as mutually exclusive categories. It is likely that they were referring to people who don’t meet the Latter-day Saint cultural archetype of consistently married. One could argue that President Ballard implied that the “widowed or divorced” group only included the not-currently-married, but he wasn’t clear here, especially since he used the term “unmarried,” and not “never married”. Ultimately, I believe that the remarried category is the most likely explanation for the discrepancy given the issues with the other explanations noted above, and that therefore the statement that “most Latter-day Saints in the US are single” is false, although I reserve the right to be wrong.

On a related note, in discussions I’ve had with others after conference it is clear that the image some people have in their head as a result of this conference is that this is a Church of 20-40-year old never-marrieds. However, the Pew results show that only 19% of self-identified Latte-day Saints fall into this category. (Of course, the fact that in the minds of many “single” automatically conjures up images of late-20-year old never-marrieds in a student ward, and not a single mother with kids, is another issue, one that I believe the General Conference speakers addressed). Whatever the case with the discrepancy, it is clear the never-married category is still a minority in the Church (a significant minority, but a minority nonetheless).

Conclusion

Are half of all self-identified Latter-day Saints single? I doubt it. Does this change anything about the messages given in response to these statistics? No. Whatever the specifics, the case is that a significant portion of the Church is single, and no point that was made in conference hinges on whether we’ve actually crossed the “majority single” threshold yet.

Does it potentially change people’s assumptions about the US Church’s makeup based on this conference? Potentially. This post was mostly an attempt to respond to certain assumptions I’ve seen people making as a response to conference; it is not an attempt to criticize the Church’s in-house social scientists (some of whom I’ve had the pleasure to know personally) or methodology, nor is it an attempt to needle the powers-that-be to get more specifics. The Church will probably remain silent on technical details leading to this number, and if option # 4 is true, I’m sure there are people at South Temple Street amused at the incorrect assumptions that have led to the “majority single” soundbite.

9 comments for “Are Half of All Church Members in the US Single?

  1. Here’s a variation on option #1: Many of the singles in church records are people the church has lost track of, and many of those have married since the church last had contact with them.

    Option #4 seems a dubious interpretation. It is counter to common usage and to the speakers’ implicit meaning.

    For my part, my wife died in October 2018, so the two of us shifted from being two married Latter-day Saints to being one widowed Latter-day Saint. When the conference speakers spoke of a demographic milestone in 2019, I felt trendier than I have ever been.

  2. What, for me, boosts the case for “people we’ve lost track of”: the fact that they said that, outside the United States, the church passed the 50% single threshold in 1992. To me, that not only suggests losing track of people — it suggests that the statistics are warped by unscrupulous missionary practices that focused on baptizing the young and difficult to retain en masse.

  3. On Data Collection and Priesthood–

    A General Authority visiting Hawaii recently gaslit a voice from our priesthood who asked about declining membership. The GA response was that the “church” has always experienced different growth rates, and that membership is still growing–as if to say “the institution is growing strong.” But the question wasn’t about the strength of the institution. The question was asking about lost sheep and broken households. The GA treated the question as collateral-damage-covered-by-insurance.

    I hope the single mothers and widows and fatherless children who are accounted for in the data, are then set apart, and consecrated above the billions laden in our tithed treasury.

    I hope the surveillance and data collection serves the actual Gospel and the membership/body of the Church, instead of the self-sustaining corporate institution.

  4. When I was RSP a decade ago in my Mormon-corridor-adjacent ward, I proactively put together a report on the characteristics of ward members to help the ward council & bishop understand that their mental image of the body of members (which was that messaging and activities were aimed at a population of married couples with children at home) was way off. The bishop was quite surprised when I showed him that more-than-half of ward adults were single.

  5. Coffinberry, Did any of the messaging and activities change? In addition to the general decline of ward community-based activities, we had a bishop some years ago who refused to allow any adults-only ward activities. That policy (all children of all ages invited to all activities) killed any possibility of adult ward members (married or not) without children at home getting to know other adult ward members with children at home. Getting acquainted was limited to those with whom one served in a presidency. We’ve never recovered from that.

    John Mansfield, Record keeping problems resulting from losing track of people also results in distortion in the opposite direction, i.e. some marrieds have divorced or lost a spouse since the church lost track of them. I suspect that group may not be as sizable as the group who were single and married after the church lost track of them, but how would we know?

  6. It was done, in part, to explain why RS activities during my tenure were less directed toward the young-mommy crowd; but there was a small degree of resultant change in ownership Sacrament meeting topics, ministering assignments, and welfare issues were approached. (As a side note, this bishop also let me use a 5th Sunday to address mental illness. I’d say overall he was pretty responsive to his RSP’s concerns.)

  7. Just wanting to point out that saying that someone is married can also be misleading. I have a good friend whose husband is in prison in another state for an extended period. Yes, technically she is married. But in any practical sense, she is single. Are you sure you don’t lose as many as you gain when you try to distinguish those kinds of technicalities?

  8. I figured that most of the “single” members in the church were people of record for whom the church just don’t know that they are married due to losing track of them, or people who are married (the local ward knows it) but the spouse would make it a legal issue should the church make any record of them.

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