Only 6 percent of Americans possess a biblical worldview, according to a new survey.
The study,
which was released last week out of the recently launched Cultural
Research Center based at Arizona Christian University, is called the
American Worldview Inventory and is the first of what will be an annual
report from veteran researcher George Barna, who is the CRC research
director.
The survey asked 51 worldview questions that examined both what people believe and how they conduct their lives.
Approximately
one-fifth of those who attend evangelical Protestant churches espouse a
biblical worldview, as do one-sixth of those who attend charismatic or
Pentecostal churches (16%), the survey found. The numbers were much
lower for those among mainline Protestant churches, 8 percent, and
Catholics, 1 percent.
"Born again Christians — a segment defined
in part by their acceptance of scriptural exhortations regarding sin,
grace, and salvation — were three times more likely than average to have
a biblical worldview (19%). However, the fact that not quite one out of
five born again adults holds a biblical worldview highlights the
extensive decline of core Christian principles in America over the last
several decades," the report said.
What are known as "notional"
Christians — Americans who identify as Christian but do not profess to
know Christ personally as Savior — comprise 54 percent of the U.S.
population. Very few of them, just one-tenth or 1 percent, hold a
biblical worldview.
“A quarter-century ago we had as much as 12% of the adult population holding a biblical worldview,” Barna notes in the report.
“Since
that time, we have seen a steady reduction in the incidence. The
current level — just 6%, which is literally half of the level when we
started measuring this — is the lowest yet.”
He added: “If you
truly believe something, you integrate it into how you live, and your
lifestyle reflects those beliefs. As a result, our worldview research
always balances examining both what we believe to be true with how we
translate such beliefs into action."
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