A new poll by the Barna Group found that only 40% of practicing Christians supported the death penalty, and support was even lower among younger Christians. According to the poll released on January 17, only 23% of practicing Christian “millennials” (i.e., those born between 1980 and 2000) agreed with the statement: “The government should have the option to execute the worst criminals.” Without regard to their regular practice of their faith, only 42% of Christian baby boomers (born between 1946 and 1964) and only 32% of millennials agreed with the use of the death penalty. Roxanne Stone, the vice president of publishing at Barna, said, “This parallels a growing trend in the pro-life conversation among Christians to include torture and the death penalty as well as abortion. For many younger Christians, the death penalty is not a political dividing point but a human rights issue.”
A 2011 Gallup poll also found Americans under 30 were more likely to oppose the death penalty than those over 30. The Barna Group poll surveyed 1,000 American adults and had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points.
(J. Merritt, “Poll: Younger Christians less supportive of death penalty,” Religion News Service, January 18, 2014.) See Public Opinion and Religion.
Studies
Feb 16, 2024
![Black History Month Profile Series: Jennifer Eberhardt](https://img.dpic-cdn.org/images/Jennifer-Eberhardt.png?w=300&h=300&q=60&auto=format&fit=crop&dm=1708108018&s=f64cb17266073b2d8f09970bb36bf470)
Black History Month Profile Series: Jennifer Eberhardt
Public Opinion
Nov 06, 2023
![POLL: For the First Time, More Americans Believe the Death Penalty Is Applied Unfairly in the United States](https://img.dpic-cdn.org/images/Gallup-logo.png?w=300&h=300&q=60&auto=format&fit=crop&dm=1668513864&s=dba4c9c09ce109b18a30636860505ec1)