Christian Science Monitor: Interfaith America: 'Being both' is a rising trend in the US [View all]
http://www.csmonitor.com/The-Culture/Family/2014/1123/Interfaith-America-Being-both-is-a-rising-trend-in-the-US?cmpid=editorpicks&google_editors_picks=true
KENSINGTON, MD. Jean Tutt was a freshman at Harper College in Palatine, Ill., when she met Brian Saucier. He was not at all her type, she recalls but not because of their different religions. He had long hair and wore a denim jacket with skulls on it; she had more the button-down cardigan style. He was a member of the College Republicans, while she was a fairly uninterested Democrat. Considering all this, the fact that she was Jewish and he was Roman Catholic barely registered.
Then the two got to know each other better. Jean realized she liked Brians sarcastic sense of humor and found him to be incredibly kind. They started dating, and by the time they graduated, theyd decided to marry.
And then, the religions did matter. While they hadnt cared much about their faith differences while dating the attitude still held by the majority of Americans under 35 they wanted to get a better sense of how their mixed family would work before they tied the knot. Neither wanted to convert the standard solution a generation ago when people of different faiths wanted to get married. And neither wanted to drop his or her religious affiliations, which is another typical path today for the rapidly growing number of American interfaith couples.