Meet Those Who “Love Jesus but Not the Church” - Barna Group -- largely orthodox, but they do much less Bible-reading and the like.
Meet the "Spiritual but Not Religious" - Barna Group -- not surprisingly, much less orthodox. The Barna pollsters divide the SBNR into two groups. Though many of the first group identify with some religious tradition - (22% Christian, 15% Catholic, 2% Jewish, 2% Buddhist, 1% other faith) - some of them do not - (6% are atheist, 20% agnostic and 33% unaffiliated). The second group identifies as either atheist (12%), agnostic (30%) or unaffiliated (58%). Of those who claim no faith, 34% claim to be "spiritual".
Each of these two groups is 8% of the US population, with a total of 11% -- about 5% of each of them overlap. They are mainly concentrated in the southeast and the west.
But their political leanings are where it gets interesting: Both groups identify as liberal (50% and 54%) or moderate (33% or 35%), with only a fraction identifying as conservative (17% and 11%). Yes, conservatism and religiosity tend to go hand-in-hand, but this divide is unusually stark. It may be that left-leaning spiritual seekers feel they are without a spiritual home in the church, a place they likely view as hostile to their political attitudes, particularly around hot button—and often divisive—issues like abortion and same-sex marriage.
God is...
[TABLE="class: grid"]
[TR]
[TD]What
[/TD]
[TD]All Adults
[/TD]
[TD]SBNR#1
[/TD]
[TD]SBNR#2
[/TD]
[TD]Prac Xians
[/TD]
[TD]Evangelicals
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Only one
[/TD]
[TD]78
[/TD]
[TD]48
[/TD]
[TD]48
[/TD]
[TD]97
[/TD]
[TD]100
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Omnimax creator and ruler
[/TD]
[TD]57
[/TD]
[TD]20
[/TD]
[TD]30
[/TD]
[TD]85
[/TD]
[TD]100
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]State of higher consciousness
[/TD]
[TD]12
[/TD]
[TD]32
[/TD]
[TD]22
[/TD]
[TD]5
[/TD]
[TD]0
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Everywhere
[/TD]
[TD]65
[/TD]
[TD]42
[/TD]
[TD]41
[/TD]
[TD]92
[/TD]
[TD]98
[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]
"There is only one God", "God is the all-powerful, all-knowing, perfect creator of the universe who rules the world today", "God represents a state of higher consciousness that a person may reach", "God is everywhere"
About half of the SBNR thought that organized religion is a bad thing, and a large fraction believe that all religions teach the same thing. They like to spend a lot of time in the outdoors for contemplation, much like the love-Jesus-but-not-the-church people, and unlike the practicing Xians. SBNR's also like to mediate and practice silence/solitude. Not surprisingly, hardly any of them read the Bible very regularly.