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Do Americans Really Know Who Evangelicals Are? (New study shows that they have no idea)
The Christian Post ^ | Sep. 04, 2008 | Audrey Barrick

Posted on 09/04/2008 9:21:31 AM PDT by Between the Lines

The word "evangelical" floats around in churches, the media and particularly this year's election but Americans often have no idea what an evangelical is, a new study shows.

As Christians themselves still have a hard time agreeing on what exactly defines an evangelical, Ellison Research asked the average adult American what they believe is an "evangelical Christian." Thirty-six percent of them said they had no idea.

"I'm not sure; all I can think of is Billy Graham," said one 40 year-old woman from Florida who does not attend worship services, in the survey.

"I am not sure, and I am a Christian," said a 55-year-old man from Indiana.

Although Americans who would call themselves evangelical were much more likely to have an actual definition for the word than others, the survey, released Wednesday, found that 14 percent of those self-described evangelicals couldn't guess what an evangelical is.

Evangelical leaders were also asked to provide a definition.

Richard Cizik, vice president for Governmental Affairs at the National Association of Evangelicals, gave a three-fold definition: "(1) the Bible is authoritative (i.e., infallible and inerrant in original autographs) in faith and practice; (2) born-again experience (i.e., a conversion to believe in and follow Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord through rebirth by the Holy Spirit); (3) shares this message of faith with others through evangelism and social witness."

He admitted, however, that even his three-fold test is not perfect.

Dr. Leon Morris from the World Evangelical Alliance described an evangelical as "a gospel man" or woman – someone who makes the Gospel of Christ central to his or her preaching, thinking and living.

Those most unlikely to know the definition of an evangelical were people who attend Roman Catholic worship services, people who do not attend any sort of worship, political moderates, Democrats and independents, according to Ellison Research, which surveyed 1,007 Americans adults. Younger Americans were also less likely to have even a guess.

The most common perception Americans have of an evangelical is that they evangelize. According to the study, 18 percent said an evangelical is a Christian who tries to spread his or her faith. Of those who associated evangelicals with evangelism, some described it as proselytizing and others saw it in a more positive light – telling others about Jesus.

Some Americans defined evangelicals as just a specific type of Christian – whether it's Protestant, born-again, charismatic or spirit-filled, liberal, modern, white, etc. Nine percent held this perception.

"A born again, conservative, fundamentalist Christian," a 22-year-old self-described evangelical man from California responded. "I believe it's a Baptist," said a woman from Nevada.

Another 9 percent said evangelicals are just Christians who are particularly devoted or zealous about their faith (although not to the point of fanaticism), and are totally sold out to their beliefs.

"I think an evangelical Christian is someone who does not waver on their beliefs in the truth of the Word of God (the Bible) and the presence of God in our country," a 35-year-old woman, who attends a non-denominational church and calls herself an evangelical, said. "I believe they are more concerned about what God thinks of them than what the world thinks of them and are willing to say what needs to be said to fight to keep God in our country."

One 22-year-old woman who does not attend worship services and does not know any evangelicals said she believes an evangelical is "one who is very strong with their ideas about their faith and in turn might push those ideas onto others."

In other responses, 8 percent of Americans defined an evangelical as focusing strongly on the Bible, believing in the Bible as God's word and as inerrant, allowing the Bible to guide their lives, and believing in a literal interpretation of the Bible. Older Americans, Protestant churchgoers and political conservatives were more likely to give this response.

Another 8 percent of those surveyed gave a specific theological definition of evangelicalism. They said evangelicals are saved by Christ, saved by grace, believe in a born again experience, and believe in eternal life through Christ, among other theological definitions. At the same time, 2 percent of Americans gave a theological definition that was dramatically off-base.

Six percent of Americans said evangelicals are defined according to their political worldview. These people said evangelicals are conservative, ultra-conservative or radical right, anti-homosexual, Republican, highly involved in politics, etc., according to the survey.

“Especially during election time, we often hear about evangelicals in connection with candidates, or with political or social issues. Yet Americans usually don’t define ‘evangelicals’ by their voting habits or politics," said Ron Sellers, president of Ellison Research. "There’s at least some basic understanding among the American population that evangelicals are defined by religion rather than by politics, even if many people don’t really know just what that religious definition is."

In a more negative light, 5 percent said evangelicals are simply fanatical about their beliefs; and 4 percent didn't provide a definition but more of a criticism such as evangelicals being hypocritical, bigots, stupid, manipulative, etc.

Criticism came mostly from men, unmarried Americans, political liberals and people who did not attend worship services.

A 41-year-old man from Pennsylvania who said he knows an evangelical very well labeled an evangelical as "a psycho who thinks that their way is the only way."

Another man said evangelicals are "extremists with very small brains, so other ideas and perspectives can’t fit in there."

Four percent believed evangelicals are simply close-minded about religion. They don’t like people who believe differently, they believe they’re the only ones who are right, or they are rigid and intolerant, surveyed Americans said.

Also, 3 percent believed evangelicalism focuses on money rather than God. These Americans said evangelicals worship money, use religion for profit, preach about money a lot, or are always asking for money.

Another 3 percent said evangelicals want to impose their beliefs or standards on others, they forcibly convert people (although exactly how they supposedly do this was not clarified), they want to run things, or they’re always in your face.

"Evangelicals are defined every which way, and that is among the people who even attempted to define them," Sellers commented. "When the media reports something about ‘evangelical leaders’ like Rick Warren or James Dobson, or describes a political candidate as meeting with an evangelical group, or polls likely voters and reports that evangelicals are backing a particular candidate, many Americans honestly don’t have the faintest notion of just who belongs to that group that is being described, while others are completely off-base in their assumptions of who the report is describing.”

Researchers said the most important thing to take away from the study findings "is that almost half of Americans could not give a definition of 'evangelical' that had any substance to it – and that doesn’t even include the ones who gave a definition that few experts would say has any accuracy." They also pointed out that many Americans do not know evangelical Christians very well. A previous study showed only 35 percent of all Americans said they actually know an evangelical Christian very well and one-third said they have never known an evangelical at any point in their lives.


TOPICS: Current Events; Evangelical Christian
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 09/04/2008 9:21:31 AM PDT by Between the Lines
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To: Between the Lines

Evangelical usually denotes a Protestant or Christian. The article is informative however, people should be learning about the Obama’s 20year excursion into Black Liberation Theology and his continued relationship with those who practice it. BLT is very close to Marxism.


2 posted on 09/04/2008 9:36:45 AM PDT by yoe ( Socialism/Marxism with Obama/Michelle - another twofer!)
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To: Between the Lines

Jesus wept.

IMO, the above verse applies here.

MM


3 posted on 09/04/2008 9:37:34 AM PDT by MississippiMan
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To: Between the Lines

The real issue is that the Dinosaur media has no idea who Evangelical Christians are!


4 posted on 09/04/2008 9:45:31 AM PDT by Prov1322 (Enjoy my wife's incredible artwork at www.watercolorARTwork.com! (This space no longer for rent))
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To: Between the Lines
I'm a Catholic, I know what Evangelical means. Catholics can be Evangelicals in a loose translation -- teaching the Gospel (which we do at EVERY Mass), adhering to the Gospel (which we're taught as part of the Catholic Catechism).

In a more specific way it pertains to Protestant opposition to the institutional authority of the Catholic Church. Evangelicals stress salvation by personal conversion to faith in the atonement of Christ. Catholics believe that salvation through faith in Jesus Christ's atoning sacrifice is a journey whereby we grow and nurture an informed conscience.

The Catholic Church is a community of people journeying from this life to Life everlasting. Growth in conversion brings the community of Catholics closer to Jesus through studying Scripture, the lives of the Saints, Fathers of the (Early) Church, the Catechism of the Catholic Church and attending the Sacrifice of the Mass and Eucharist as often as possible. And reading and studying the Encyclicals sent to the Church by the Popes.

Salvation for Catholics is not a "one time" conversion, but a daily conversion. It's not about the individual and what he or she thinks, it's about the community and the passing down of Tradition and informing a person's own conscience what the Church teaches through Scripture and Tradition (including writings of Church Fathers, the Catechism, Encyclicals, etc).

That's why the Bishops can speak of an "unformed" (not un-informed) conscience of someone like Pelosi, Biden, Kennedy, or Kerry when they proclaim their support of Abortion. Each of them can inform her/his conscience by returning to the Faith and reading Scripture and the works which define our Traditions. As Catholics we have stated that we will be subject to the Church and the Magisterium and hold fast to the Traditions.

I recall being told that at the Youth Rally in Denver, someone asked Pope John Paul the Great if he was saved. He stopped and turned to the girl who asked and replied: "I don't know yet, I'm not dead." THAT embodies the "journey to salvation through faith in the Sacrifice of Jesus Christ."

5 posted on 09/04/2008 9:59:12 AM PDT by HighlyOpinionated (The Number of the Beast:"six hundred threescore six." Barack Hussein Obama can translate:"Lucifer.")
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To: yoe
"Evangelical usually denotes a Protestant or Christian"

Whats the difference between a Christian and a protestant? And whay call non Catholics protestants?

6 posted on 09/04/2008 2:34:13 PM PDT by guitarplayer1953 (Psalm 83:1-8 is on the horizon.)
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To: guitarplayer1953

I’ll answer your second question — essentially Protestants are those who have rebelled against the authority of the Apostolic Church. The Orthodox and Orientals or Assyrians are not Protestants for that reason. Among the protestants groups, the Anglicans and Lutherans WERE close to Apostolic teachings (many of the sub-groups among those are still in Apostolic teachings but not the entire groups), while Baptists, Presbyterians, Methodists, Wesleyans, Mormons, Assembly of God, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Anabaptists, Calvinists, Arminians, etc. aren’t.


7 posted on 09/05/2008 12:59:29 AM PDT by Cronos ("Islam isn't in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant" - Omar Ahmed, CAIR)
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To: Between the Lines
Watch Rush in a few minutes tonight on Fox News replayed on ON THE RECORD at 3:00 am.
8 posted on 09/05/2008 1:01:18 AM PDT by Yosemitest (It's simple, fight or die.)
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To: guitarplayer1953
need to add in -- yes, I'd consider most Protestant people from various groups as Christians. I do have doubts about some sub-sub-groups or new-fangled religions like Unitarians, Universalists,Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses etc.

While I do have a lot of misgivings about, say, Baptist or Assembly of God teachings, I will agree that they are generally good people and their beliefs, to a part, are Christian.
9 posted on 09/05/2008 1:03:57 AM PDT by Cronos ("Islam isn't in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant" - Omar Ahmed, CAIR)
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To: Between the Lines

Shoot, I have no idea.

The term has morphed so much and is claimed by such a wide range of folks I consider it useless.


10 posted on 09/05/2008 3:21:45 AM PDT by Gamecock (Sarah Palin brought me out of the Religion Forum.)
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To: Prov1322

I don’t think so. I don’t think there is a firm definition or a firm theology. I watch the Evangelicals here start church after church, some thrive, some dry up and die but it is the differences that they have between themselves in what Evangelical is that keeps them splitting again and again.

One plus is that abandoned buildings get refurbished with volunteer labor so when that particular church dies it is easier for the landlord to rent.


11 posted on 09/05/2008 7:29:45 AM PDT by tiki (True Christians will not deliberately slander or misrepresent others or their beliefs)
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To: Cronos

I do not know of any church that has Protestants in their name. So how are they like non denominationist protestants?


12 posted on 09/05/2008 3:23:39 PM PDT by guitarplayer1953 (Psalm 83:1-8 is on the horizon.)
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