Poll: most Catholics who attend Mass weekly support gay marriage, women priests

Poll: most Catholics who attend Mass weekly support gay marriage, women priests 2016-09-30T16:01:56-04:00

Details:

American Catholics agree 68 โ€“ 23 percent, with little difference between more observant and less observant Catholics, with Pope Francisโ€™ recent observation that the Church has become too focused on issues such as homosexuality, abortion and contraceptives, according to a Quinnipiac University national poll released today (October 4).

Support for the Popeโ€™s observation is strong among men, women and all age groups, the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe-ack) University poll finds.

American Catholics support same-sex marriage 60 โ€“ 31 percent, compared to the 56 โ€“ 36 percent support among all U.S. adults.

More devout Catholics, who attend religious services about once a week, support same- sex marriage 53 โ€“ 40 percent, while less observant Catholics support it 65 โ€“ 26 percent.

Catholic women support same-sex marriage 72 โ€“ 22 percent, while Catholic men support it 49 โ€“ 40 percent. Support ranges from 46 โ€“ 37 percent among Catholics over 65 years old to 64 โ€“ 27 percent among Catholics 18 to 49 years old.

Catholics like their new Pope: 36 percent have a โ€œvery favorableโ€ opinion of him and 53 percent have a โ€œfavorableโ€ opinion, with 4 percent โ€œunfavorable.โ€

โ€œAmerican Catholics liked what they heard when Pope Francis said the Church should stop talking so much about issues like gay marriage, abortion and contraception,โ€ said Maurice Carroll, director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute.

โ€œMaybe they were just waiting for a Jesuit. Overwhelmingly, across the demographic board, Catholics โ€“ men and women, regular or not-so-regular church-goers, young and old โ€“ have a favorable opinion of Pope Francis.โ€

American Catholics support 60 โ€“ 30 percent the ordination of women priests. Those who attend religious services about once a week support women priests 52 โ€“ 38 percent, compared to 66 โ€“ 25 percent among those who attend services less frequently.

There is almost no gender gap.

Support for women priests grows with age, from 57 โ€“ 32 percent among Catholics 18 to 49 years old to 68 โ€“ 28 percent among those over 65 years old.

Read it all.ย 

Iโ€™m not a statistician, but Iโ€™d take all this with a considerable grain of salt. The sampling size for Catholicsโ€”fewer than 400โ€”is relatively small.


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