Vast Majority Of Americans Believe In God

The resting place of threads that were very valid in 2004, but not so much in 2024. Basically this is a giant historical archive.


Post Reply
User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

Vast Majority Of Americans Believe In God

Post by Kollyvas »

http://directionstoorthodoxy.org/mod/ne ... le_id=7535

For Almost All Americans, There Is God
CBS News


(CBS) A new CBS News poll shows that almost all Americans believe in God or some higher power and more than half pray often and consider religion an important component of their daily lives.

Eighty-two percent of poll respondents said they believe in God, with nine percent saying they had faith in some sort of higher power or spirit. Doubt about the existence of God was highest in the "young" demographic as well that of political independents, those living in the West, people who live in big cities and men.

Fifty-nine percent of Americans indicated that they pray often and 40 percent said they attend weekly services. Religious observation also seems to have an effect on political preferences. Half of those who said they attend religious services almost every week approve of President Bush's job performance. However, a significant percentage of those who are less and non-observant of a religion disapprove of the job Mr. Bush is doing.

AMERICA'S RELIGIOUS ACTIVITIES

Pray Often
59%

Attend Services Nearly Every Week
40%

Attend Less Often
39%

Never Attend Services
20%

Say Religion Is Very Important In Their Daily Lives
59%

Say Religion Is Not At All Important
13%

For those who make religion a priority, 47 percent think it is more important to adhere to religious traditions while 46 percent think it is more important to be engaged spiritually.

This poll was conducted among a nationwide random sample of 899 adults, interviewed by telephone April 6-9, 2006. The error due to sampling for results based on the entire sample could be plus or minus three percentage points. Error for subgroups may be higher.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

75% Of Americans Believe Jesus Christ Rose From The Dead

Post by Kollyvas »

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/2006/Ap ... Easter.htm

75% Believe Jesus Rose from the Dead
Survey of 1,000 Adults

April 10-11, 2006

Did person known to history as Jesus Christ actually walk the earth?

Yes 83%
No 6%
RasmussenReports.com


Do you believe that Jesus Christ was the Son of God who came to earth to die for our sins?

Yes 78%
No 13%
RasmussenReports.com


Do you believe that Jesus Christ rose from the dead?

Yes 75%
No 14%
RasmussenReports.com



April 15, 2006--As Christians around the world celebrate Easter, 83% of Americans believe that the person known to history as Jesus Christ actually walked the earth. A Rasmussen Reports holiday survey found that 6% disagree.

The survey also found that 78% believe Jesus "was the Son of God who came to earth to die for our sins."

Seventy-five percent (75%) believe the central claim of the Easter celebration, that Jesus Christ rose from the dead. Fourteen percent (14%) say the Resurrection did not happen.

African-Americans are somewhat more likely to believe these claims about Christ than other Americans. Those who earn more than $100,000 a year are a bit less likely to believe. There is very little difference on these questions by age.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

57% Of Americans Will Attend Church For Easter

Post by Kollyvas »

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/2006/Ap ... ration.htm

57% Attend Church for Easter
Survey of 1,000 Adults

April 14-15, 2006

Attend Church to celebrate Easter?

Yes 57%
No 35%
RasmussenReports.com


Family Meal to celebrate Easter?

Yes 74%
No 20%
RasmussenReports.com


Easter Egg Hunt?

Yes 39%
No 57%
RasmussenReports.com


New Clothes for Easter?

Yes 17%
No 81%
RasmussenReports.com



April 16, 2006--Fifty-seven percent (57%) of Americans say they will attend a Church service to celebrate Easter this weekend. A Rasmussen Reports national opinion survey found that 35% will not attend Church and 8% are not sure.

Seventy-four percent (74%) will celebrate with a family meal, 39% with an Easter Egg hunt, and 17% will buy new clothes for Easter.

A separate survey found that 75% believe that Jesus Christ rose from the dead, the central claim of the Easter celebration, .

Women are more likely than men to attend Church. Upper income Americans are a bit less likely to do so.

Younger people and those who are married are more likely to have an Easter Egg hunt.

Younger people are also more likely to buy new Easter clothes than their elders. Twenty-six percent (26%) of those under 30 will buy an Easter outfit. Only 8%of those over 65 will do the same.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

Church, A Way Of Life In Dixie

Post by Kollyvas »

http://directionstoorthodoxy.org/mod/ne ... le_id=7616

Following Easter services Truck driver Randy Spence of Van Buren, Arkansas exits the mobile chapel at a truck stop in Rochelle, Illinois Transport for Christ, a trucker-focused ministry, knows how different and how hard a life it is. Church a way of life in Dixie
The Washington Times

By Jennifer Harper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Chaplain Jay LeRette preaches his Easter sermon inside a mobile chapel at a truck stop in Rochelle, Illinois April 16, 2006. Transport for Christ, a trucker-focused ministry, knows how different -- and how hard -- a life it is. For more than half a century it has reached out to truckers looking to worship in a strange town or wrestling with more serious crises. Photo taken April 16, 2006. REUTERS/John Gress
Southern folks seem to have a monopoly on that good old time religion.

The South contains eight of the top 10 states with the most frequent churchgoers in the nation, according to a Gallup Poll analysis of more than 68,000 interviews conducted in the past two years.

"That's no surprise," said Southern historian Eugene Genovese. "Before the Civil War, it'd be hard to say the South was churchgoing, but certainly in the 20th century, churchgoing has remained much stronger here, as has Christian orthodoxy."

It is a close race in the South.

Truck driver Ted Gaines of Elyria, Ohio, cries as he prays with Chaplain Jay LeRette (R) inside a mobile chapel at a truck stop in Rochelle, Illinois April 16, 2006. (John Gress/Reuters)
With 58 percent saying they attend religious services once a week or almost every week, Alabama, Louisiana and South Carolina residents are tied in first place -- followed by Mississippi at 57 percent, Arkansas and Utah tied at 55 percent, North Carolina and Nebraska tied at 53 percent and Tennessee and Georgia tied at 52 percent.

The national average is 42 percent. There is a wide range between the highest and lowest numbers, however -- a difference of 34 percentage points between the top three and bottom two states.

"There's a way in which churchgoing is woven into the fabric of life," said Wilfred McClay, an evangelical Anglican and a humanities professor at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. "When you move down here, one of the first things people ask is 'Where do you go to church?' In parts of the South, you still feel you're in a kind of Christendom.

"Plus the red state/blue state divide is not as pronounced here. There are blue-state people here who are strong churchgoers. This is a world where the normative assumptions are Christian and evangelical."

Of the Southern states, Virginia has the second lowest reported church attendance rate (44 percent), which is still above the national average, according to Gallup analyst Frank Newport.

Such findings are supported elsewhere. Church and churchgoing is at the very heart of the traditional South.

"Those visiting or moving to the South, especially the more traditional rural areas, would do well to respect the religious traditions of the area," notes the text of "Southern Culture," oit.vgcc.edu/hum122/TOC2.htm, which contains facts and history compiled by historians from the Vance-Granville Community College in Henderson, N.C.

"Sunday mornings are for going to church, not mowing the lawn, going shopping (the stores won't be open anyway), or buying liquor or beer ... If someone in the grocery line finds out you're new in town and asks you to his/her church, go ahead and say yes, and enjoy the experience. Southern hospitality surely shows itself best in the willingness of the people to share what is most important to them: their faith," the site notes.

Mr. Genovese, a Catholic living in Atlanta, noted Roman Catholicism "is growing by leaps and bounds in Georgia. That's mostly immigration but that does include conversions. The Catholic Church in Georgia has quadrupled since we came to Atlanta 20 years ago."

"Plus, the recruitment of priests in Georgia is very strong. The young priests here tend to be more traditional."

Sunday morning may not be so popular up North, though.

"At the other end of the spectrum, the data makes it clear that reported church attendance is lowest in New England states -- New Hampshire (24 percent), Vermont (24 percent), Rhode Island (28 percent), Massachusetts (31 percent) and Maine (31 percent.) The only slight exception is the New England state of Connecticut (37 percent)," Mr. Newport added.

Nebraska led the Midwestern states in weekly or almost weekly church attendance (53 percent). Among the most populous states, Texas led at 49 percent, followed by Illinois (42 percent), Florida (39 percent), New York (33 percent) and California (32 percent).

The District of Columbia stood at 33 percent.

A small minority of Americans simply don't go to church. Overall, only 16 percent of the respondents nationwide said they "never" attend.

The analysis found that 31 percent said they went to church once a week, 11 percent almost every week, 13 percent once a month, 27 percent "seldom" and 2 percent did not answer the question.

The poll of 68,031 adults was conducted from January 2004 through March 2006 in the 48 contiguous states, with a margin of error of plus or minus one percentage point.

Recent academic research reveals some potential benefits of church.

In a wide ranging analysis of 1990 census data, Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist Jon Gruber found last year that frequent churchgoers have an average 9 percent higher income than those who sit home on Sunday. He also found less chance of being on welfare and divorced among the group.

A University of Pittsburgh study of actuarial death rates released April 3 found that weekly church attendance can increase life expectancy up to three years.

•Julia Duin contributed to this report.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

Post Reply