Posted on 12/20/2006 3:25:55 PM PST by Sopater
(Ventura, CA) Even though George Barna has been conducting national public opinion surveys for a quarter-century, surprises emerge each year from those studies. The California-based researcher traditionally ends each year by identifying some of the unexpected and most significant findings of the passing year. Barna released his list of the twelve most noteworthy results of 2006, and described a few themes that ran through this years surveys.
Noteworthy Outcomes
Barna selected the following dozen outcomes as the most significant findings of 2006.
| For related information, see the January 10th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the January 23rd Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the Februrary 20th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the March 6th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the June 19th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the January 10th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the September 11th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the August 28th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the September 30th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the April 18th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the November 27th Barna Update click here |
| For related information, see the March 27th Barna Update click here |
Patterns That Were Visible
George Barna noted that there were four themes that consistently emerged from the various surveys his firm conducted throughout the year.
First of all, noted Barna, Americans are very comfortable with religious faith. Most adults and even teenagers see themselves as people of faith. Toward that end, they have definite opinions about religion, they possess well-honed beliefs, and invest substantial amounts of their time, money and energy in religious activities. Faith and spirituality remain hot issues in peoples lives. The mass media, through news and feature stories, also play a role in keeping spiritual issues in the forefront of peoples minds. Barna identified some of the most prolific news stories of the year that involved religion: the role of evangelicals in the mid-term elections, Hollywoods pursuit of the Christian audience, scandals concerning priests and ministers, the shooting of five Amish school children and their communitys response, the internal politics of the Episcopal Church, and the controversy involving Muslims and the Pope.
Second, he continued, people do not have an accurate view of themselves when it comes to spirituality. American Christians are not as devoted to their faith as they like to believe. They have positive feelings about the importance of faith, but their faith is rarely the focal point of their life or a critical factor in their decision-making. The fact that few people take the time to evaluate their spiritual journey, or to develop benchmarks or indicators of their spiritual health, facilitates a distorted view of the prominence and purity of faith in their life.
Barnas third theme was that if peoples faith is objectively measured against a biblical standard of how faith is to be practiced, Americans are spiritually lukewarm. Very limited effort is devoted to spiritual growth. Most Americans experience accidental spiritual growth since there is generally no plan or process other than showing up at a church and absorbing a few ideas here and there. Even then, few people have a defined understanding of what they are hoping to become, as followers of Christ. Barna attributed much of this to the numerous distractions common in most peoples lives.
Finally, the bestselling author of nearly 40 books contended that the most intriguing blip on the radar screen is the growth of various converging movements of deeply spiritual people who are departing from the conventional forms and communities of faith. The Revolutionary community which incorporates divergent but compatible groups of people who are seeking to make their faith the driving force in their life is reshaping American faith in ways which we are just beginning to understand. Few researchers and journalists are tracking the behavior and beliefs of those nascent segments.
The Future of American Faith
When asked what he saw on the horizon regarding Americans faith, Barna described findings from some research currently in process related to the future of faith. He listed three general patterns he expects to gain prominence in the coming years.
Diversity. There will be new forms of spiritual leadership, different expressions of faith, and greater variety in when and where people meet together to be communities of faith. Ecumenism will expand, as the emerging generations pay less attention to doctrine and more attention to relationships and experiences. Barna predicted that there will be a broader network of micro-faith communities built around lifestyle affinities, such as gay communities of faith, marketplace professionals who gather for faith experiences, and so forth.
Bifurcation. Barna expects to see a widening gap between the intensely committed and those who are casually involved in faith matters. The difference will become strikingly evident between those who make faith the core of their life and those who simply attach a religious component on to an already mature lifestyle.
Media. Spiritual content and experiences will be increasingly related to the use of media. New technologies that will gain market share over the coming decade will significantly reshape how people experience and express their faith, and the ways in which they form communities of faith.
During the past year Barna formed a company (Good News Holdings) with a group of media professionals to approach the faith community not only with facts and figures drawn from research but also with stories and imagery conveyed through media. Asked why he took this new approach, he stated that the job of a servant of God is to be an obedient missionary. Its important to go where the people are whom you wish to reach with your message, and then to communicate that message through the language and symbols that they understand, he explained. The typical American spends roughly twenty times more hours each week engaged with media than involved with all forms of traditional religious activity. In our society there is a false barrier between those two worlds, and were trying to bridge the gap.
To read more about faith and media, and how Good News Holdings is approaching this dimension, click here for a new article on spiritainment by George Barna. www.goodnewsholdings.com/?p=16
Research Details
The data in this report are from a series of national surveys conducted by The Barna Group during the past 14 months with random samples of various population groups. Among those sample groups were adults (age 18 and older); teenagers (ages 13 through 18); tweeners (ages 8 through 12); and Protestant church Senior Pastors. Each survey included a minimum of 600 respondents, with most of the studies incorporating more than 1000 randomly-sampled, qualified individuals.
Born again Christians are defined as people who said they have made a personal commitment to Jesus Christ that is still important in their life today and who also indicated they believe that when they die they will go to Heaven because they had confessed their sins and had accepted Jesus Christ as their savior. Respondents are not asked to describe themselves as born again.
Evangelicals meet the born again criteria (described above) plus seven other conditions. Those include saying their faith is very important in their life today; believing they have a personal responsibility to share their religious beliefs about Christ with non-Christians; believing that Satan exists; believing that eternal salvation is possible only through grace, not works; believing that Jesus Christ lived a sinless life on earth; asserting that the Bible is accurate in all that it teaches; and describing God as the all-knowing, all-powerful, perfect deity who created the universe and still rules it today. Being classified as an evangelical is not dependent upon church attendance or the denominational affiliation of the church attended. Respondents were not asked to describe themselves as evangelical.
Revolutionaries were classified on the basis of meeting 11 specific criteria. They have a clear sense of the meaning and purpose of their life; describe their relationship with and faith in God as the top priority in their life; consider themselves to be "Christian"; read the Bible regularly; pray regularly; deem their faith to be very important in their life; contend that the main objective in their life is to love God with all their heart, mind, strength and soul; describe God as the "all-knowing, all-powerful being who created the universe and still rules it today"; have made a personal commitment to Jesus Christ that is important in their life today; believe that when they die they will go to heaven only because they have confessed their sins and accepted Jesus Christ as their savior; and say that their faith in Christ has "greatly transformed" their life.
The Barna Group, Ltd. (which includes its research division, The Barna Research Group) is a privately held, for-profit corporation that conducts primary research, produces media resources pertaining to spiritual development, and facilitates the healthy spiritual growth of leaders, children, families and Christian ministries. Located in Ventura, California, Barna has been conducting and analyzing primary research to understand cultural trends related to values, beliefs, attitudes and behaviors since 1984. If you would like to receive free e-mail notification of the release of each new, bi-monthly update on the latest research findings from The Barna Group, you may subscribe to this free service at the Barna website www.barna.org
© The Barna Group, Ltd, 2006.
Excellent sobering report.
Thanks much.
Five of the highest-profile Christian leaders Rick Warren, Joel Osteen, James Dobson, Tim LaHaye and T.D. Jakes were unknown to a majority of the population. Most of those leaders were also unknown to most born again Christians.
That's one of the good signs. Dobson's the only one I'm likely to pay any heed to at all.
Barna's reputability is un-earned. He words questions in such a way as to elicit shocking data. If you don't believe in his interpretations, for instance, he reports you don't believe in the bible.
... for instance, his concept of "house church" has absolutely nothing to do with ancient house churches or with the Asian phenomenon of house churches in oppressive society. All he means is that people pray or read scripture together in each others' homes at some time during the weak.
bump
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