"Gallup
Poll: Americans Link Faith to Everyday Life"
by Adelle M.
Banks
("Crosswalk.com," March 5, 2003)
WASHINGTON -- Large percentages of
Americans
link faith to their everyday lives, a new poll reveals. But overall,
faithful
Americans acknowledge a gap between what they believe and how they act.
The
findings are part of a new joint effort to examine "The Spiritual
State of
the Union" by the Gallup Organization and the Center for Research on
Religion & Urban Civil Society.
Among the findings: -- 77 percent of
Americans
believe the overall health of the nation depends a great deal on the
spiritual
health of the nation. -- 72 percent said their lives have meaning and
purpose
because of their faith. -- 60 percent said their faith is involved in
every
aspect of their lives.
"You really cannot understand America
if
you do not understand her spiritual underpinnings," said George
Gallup,
who presented survey findings at a briefing Tuesday (March 4). "This
survey makes that point, loudly and clearly."
The joint research effort also has resulted
in a
new national "spiritual index," which was determined to be 74.7
percent
out of a possible score of 100 percent. The index will serve as a
base-line
indicator for future studies. The index has two components, "inner
commitment," which gauges people's connection with God, a higher
power or
divine will, and "outer commitment," which looks at how they
live out
their inner commitment through service to others, their community and
society
in general.
The average score for inner commitment of
the
survey respondents was 79.8 percent and the score for outer commitment
averaged
69.5 percent. Gallup, director of the George H. Gallup International
Institute,
said the index will "measure faith as a change agent." It was
developed by the institute, the Gallup Organization and the research
center at
the University of Pennsylvania.
"The index shows that the American
public
is much more spiritual than perhaps we ever believed possible," said
Byron
Johnson, director of the center. The research also involved an in-depth
look at
Christians, who were found to account for 80 percent of Americans. The
Rev.
Scott Jones, a Tempe, Ariz., pastor involved in that portion of the
research,
noted the differing viewpoints of some Christians on matters of belief,
practice and character. The poll found 76 percent of Christians agreed
completely with the notion that all people, regardless of race, creed or
wealth, are loved by God and therefore they should love all. But just 44
percent said the notion that "God calls me to be involved in the
lives of
the poor and suffering" applies completely to them. "I think
what
that's telling us is that it's easy to believe something," Jones
said.
"It's harder to put it into play."
Some of the other findings regarding
Christians
were that 74 percent believe God is actively involved in their lives, 67
percent find hope from their faith in Jesus Christ during a crisis and 58
percent believe no task is too menial if God calls them to it. Those
percentages reflected Christians who "agree completely" with
those
statements.
Other findings in the general poll reveal
that
more than a third of Americans -- 39 percent -- prefer to call themselves
spiritual rather than religious. Forty-nine percent said they were
religious; 9
percent said they were both religious and spiritual. Two percent said they
were
neither and 1 percent did now know or refused to answer the question.
"Being labeled religious is not as popular as it was, I guess, in
earlier
years," Gallup said.
Spirituality was defined by respondents in
a
number of ways, ranging from belief in God or a higher power to seeking to
be a
good person or reaching human potential. While 80 percent of those
surveyed
described themselves as Christians, 13 percent said they had no religious
tradition and 6 percent said they were non-Christians.
The spiritual index, which researchers hope
will
be announced annually, was based on telephone interviews of 1,509 adults
and
had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage
points.
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