In this paper we compare religiosity (denomination, self-declared
religiosity, and religious practice) among the citizens of Croatia and
Serbia. After the dissolution of Yugoslavia, Croatia and Serbia followed
their own specific paths of development, but they still had something in
common, and that was rising religiosity. Thirty years on, this rising
religiosity has found a place in the very tissue of the studied societies.
By interpreting the data from various empirical studies carried out over the
past fifteen years (EVS 2008, 2017, INVENT culture 2021), we would like to
point out the similarities and differences in the rising religiosity of
believers in both countries, as well as in the types of religiosity. The aim
is to identify the trends in religiosity in these societies (an increase or
decrease in the number of believers, the level of religious practice, and
changes in the typology and profile of the practitioners). The conducted
analyses indicate that Croatia is approaching the ?European model? with a
large number of secularized and spiritual believers, but there is also a
?counter-movement? intensifying religious practices. In Serbia, church
religiosity is strengthening, accompanied by a persistently high level of
religious identification without practice.