Wednesday, March 19, 2025

New Report from the National Survey of Religious Leaders Documents the State of America’s Clergy

“You can’t understand American religion without understanding its leaders.”

Mark Chaves

Sociologist, Duke University

Clergy in America constitutes a significant resource for helping journalists, academics, clergy, and lay people deepen their knowledge about religious leaders in 21st-century America. It takes a deep dive into the state of clergy in America, from their demographic make-up to their health and well-being, from their religious beliefs to their attitudes about depression, from their involvement with politics to the challenges of pastoring amidst declining institutional commitment.


Key findings from Clergy in America include:

Almost all clergy endorsed a medical approach to treating depressive symptoms, signaling potential for greater collaboration with medical professionals to address mental health needs. Read more here.

For Catholic and mainline Protestants, more clergy would encourage a hypothetical person with cancer to pursue palliative care than to hope for a miracle cure. For Black and evangelical Protestants, it’s the opposite. Read more here.

Religious leaders are — perhaps surprisingly — a remarkable fulfilled group, though mainline Protestant clergy express lower levels of satisfaction than their peers in other groups. Read more here.

Whether it provides headlines for today’s religion news cycle, context for stories on a wide array of subjects, or information for scholars and religious leaders to use in their own teaching and writing, Clergy in America provides a comprehensive and trustworthy resource for unpacking who clergy are, what they believe, and what they practice.

The NSRL in Brief

  • Nationally representative survey of clergy who serve congregations

  • Includes clergy from across the religious spectrum

  • Conducted between February 2019 and June 2020

  • 1,600 participating clergy, 890 of whom were their congregation’s primary leader; results mentioned above refer only to these primary leaders

  • Funded by the John Templeton Foundation

The full report is available here.

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