Meta-analyses spanning 83 studies and over 63,000 participants reveal a consistent negative correlation between intelligence and religious belief, ranging from -0.20 to -0.24. Higher cognitive ability links to analytic thinking styles that favor explicit reasoning over intuitive acceptance, leading individuals to question doctrine more thoroughly. The pattern holds across countries, ages, and decades, with non-believers scoring roughly 30 percentile points higher on cognitive assessments. The mechanisms behind this relationship—from enhanced conflict detection to reduced reliance on external frameworks—offer deeper insight into how minds engage questions of belief.
Across decades of psychological research, a persistent pattern has emerged in the data: people who score higher on intelligence tests tend to report lower levels of religious belief. A meta-analysis combining 63 studies found a significant negative association, with a correlation of -0.24, while an updated analysis of 83 studies confirmed the relationship at -0.20 to -0.23. The pattern holds across different ages, education levels, and countries, though it appears strongest among college students and adults rather than younger participants.
Higher intelligence scores correlate negatively with religious belief across 83 studies, showing consistent associations of -0.20 to -0.24 internationally.
The relationship extends beyond simple correlation. When researchers examined 137 countries, they found that IQ and disbelief in God correlated at 0.60, a remarkably strong association. Adults with IQs above 125 proved noticeably less likely to hold orthodox religious beliefs or follow church teachings, and one study measured the correlation between religious attitudes and IQ at -0.498. Non-believers scored roughly 30 percentile points higher on cognitive assessments than believers, with average scores of 119 compared to 98-100.
Several mechanisms appear to explain this pattern. Intelligence correlates with analytic thinking styles, which researchers found partially mediates the relationship with religiosity. In laboratory tasks requiring conflict detection, atheists outperformed religious participants by 0.6 standard deviations.
When people with high dogmatism faced similar challenges, those with low dogmatism exceeded them by 0.60 standard deviations on color-word conflict tasks and 0.29 standard deviations on grammatical reasoning. Religious individuals showed lower performance specifically on tasks requiring explicit logical conflict resolution, not on general reasoning like matrix problems.
Researchers propose that intelligent people may resist conformity more readily, question dogma more thoroughly, and rely less on religious frameworks for self-regulation and control. Analytic thinking styles, which tend to increase with intelligence, appear to undermine intuitive religious beliefs. The findings prove robust across 63,235 participants in large-scale studies, remaining consistent from research conducted in 1964 through recent meta-analyses. The relationship strengthens over time within sibling comparisons, increasing from -0.23 to -0.30, suggesting the pattern reflects genuine cognitive differences rather than demographic artifacts. Compassion and service in scripture also emphasize practical help and justice, offering a different lens on how belief motivates action for others through biblical guidance.








