Updated 09:17 pm.EST, Fri November 20, 2009

Society|Sat, Jul. 25 2009 11:42 AM EDT

Survey: Faith of Blacks Grows Stronger, More Orthodox

By Audrey Barrick|Christian Post Reporter

Blacks remain the most religious ethnic group in America, a new study shows.

  • Ebenezer Baptist
    (Photo: AP / John Amis)
    Olivia Garrison, left, joins hands with Omar Parris, as they link together with fellow congregants while singing "we will overcome" during church service at Ebenezer Baptist Church Sunday Jan. 18, 2009, in Atlanta.

And over the last 15 years, African Americans have grown even more religious and orthodox in their Christian beliefs, according to The Barna Group.

Findings from surveys that included 1,272 African American respondents reveal that blacks today are more likely than they were in the early 1990s to believe that the principles taught in the Bible are totally accurate; to say that their religious faith is very important in their life; to have a biblically orthodox understanding of the nature of God; and to be born again.

African Americans were found to be the most likely ethnic group to consider themselves Christian with 92 percent saying so. Nationally, 85 percent of Americans in general consider themselves Christian. Blacks were also the most likely to be born again Christians (59 percent vs. 46 percent nationally).

Moreover, blacks had the lowest population of unchurched adults and were least likely to be Catholic.

"While the beliefs and behaviors of America's white population have changed little since the early 1990s, the new research underscored that the faith of African-Americans is dynamic, generally moving in a direction that is more aligned with conservative biblical teachings," the Barna report states.

Today, 66 percent of blacks say the Bible is totally accurate in all of the principles it teaches. Only 49 percent of the general U.S. population agrees. Eighty-six percent of blacks say their religious faith is very important in their life while 72 percent of the American public says so.

More than four out of five African Americans also say loving God is the single, most important purpose of their life and that God is the all-powerful, all-knowing, perfect creator of the universe who rules the world. Meanwhile, three out of five in the general U.S. population agree with those statements.

African Americans are markedly more religious when it comes to attending church, participating in a small group, praying and reading the Bible.

Data is based on telephone interviews conducted between January 2007 and November 2008 among nine nationwide random samples of adults. More than 9,000 interviews were conducted.

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  • Wed Jul 29, 2009 12:55 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    UM THE MISTAKE YOU MAKE IN COMPARIN G THE BLACK EXPERIENCE WITH JOB..IS JOB WAS A MAN OF RIGHTEOUSNESS.... AND IM SURE HE BELIEVED IN THE SANCTITY OF LIFE..... YOU CONFUSE CHRISTIANITY WITH ITS OK TO BELIEVE IN EVERYTHING.... WHICH IS TO BELIEVE IN NOTHING

  • Mon Jul 27, 2009 4:40 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    chas, please do not attempt to make the issue what it is not, they were not killed because they were roman catholics they were killed because they fought with those who opposed the expansion of US territory such as in Texas and I am sure when they fought the Indians the goal was not to wipe out only the roman catholic Indians. Granted the KKK did indeed kill roman catholics simply for being roman catholics, but they also killed Jews and Protestants who were either black or sympathetic to the blacks.

  • Chas »
    Mon Jul 27, 2009 3:04 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 3

    As an African American myself, I am thankful to be Catholic and pro-life and pro-traditional marriage. Now that is orthodox.

  • Chas »
    Mon Jul 27, 2009 3:02 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 4

    What believer said is true. Now here is more of the story; Catholics came to Florida, the Carolinas, Lousianna, Alabama and Georgia almost 100 years before Protestants came by way of English settlers.

    The Catholic Church was well represented in the South with the Indians, well before slavery in that area. But then the English Protestants, fleeing from persecution from the Church of England decided to persecute and kill the Catholic missionary monks and Catholic indians. What Irony. Thousands of Catholic missionaries were killed by Colonial Protestants, just for being Catholic.

  • Mon Jul 27, 2009 2:54 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    ihs, perhaps it could be that they came to Christ as a result of adopting the beliefs of the Protestant faith of their owners and opted to stay with those denominations even after slavery was abolished and went on to establish Afro-American congregations within these denominations, plus roman catholics were few and far in between in Southern states during the time of slavery and in some places down south even now.

  • IHS »
    Mon Jul 27, 2009 1:57 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 3

    I am always surprised at the vast number of blacks who are Protestant, considering it was the Protestants who put them into slavery in the US. Short memories, I guess.

    How can you be orthodox when you vote for abortion, which is black genocide on your own people?

    Blacks go to church and then vote for Obama who promotes the killing of the unborn, which is tantamount to genocide of the black race in America. I guess they were really interested in his climate change initiatives or something like that?

  • MGT2 »
    Mon Jul 27, 2009 8:52 am Agree: 5   Disagree: 0

    To jar1961:

    You say, "If these statistics are true then it reveals a deep hypocrisy in analyzing the majority of black Americans who support Obama knowing the policies he endorses."

    The problem you are having is that of confusing cultural conservatism with Christianity. You may not be aware of this, but many conservative Christians are becoming aware that the narrow focus on wedge issues is insufficient to define a Christian.

    The Black experience has taught them that the patient waiting on God while living a life of faith will eventually bring change; more change than any foaming at the mouth and waving of placards ever will. They spent the last eight years suffering under a "Christian" administration.

    King Saul took things in his own hands and was rejected. Job waited on God and received everything.

  • Sun Jul 26, 2009 8:02 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 6

    If these statistics are true then it reveals a deep hypocrisy in analyzing the majority of black Americans who support Obama knowing the policies he endorses.

    Any one who claims to be born again and knowingly supports a man who believes killing a child at the time of birth says what?

    Obama is anti-Christian....he is pro abortion, pro infanticide, anti religious conscience.....

    If that what being "more orthodox" in the black religious community represents.... we could do without that typr of orthodoxy.

  • Sat Jul 25, 2009 7:01 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 2

    Blacks in America have never been likely to be Catholic. On many other continents they are, but here with most of them aliens, till this century, to the industrial northern US where Catholics predominate, they brought their religious heritage with them. In the South, as we all know, that heritage is not Catholic. Barna states it like some kind of news flash when it hass been that way throughout American history.

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