Scripture-Haters Rising as Youth Lead the Way in Biblical Apathy: Poll

Bible reading
When it comes to loving or hating the Bible, Americans are split down the middle.

When it comes to loving or hating the Bible, Americans are split down the middle.

A new report released today finds the percentage of Americans who are engaged with Scripture is equal to the percentage who are antagonistic toward the Bible—both at 19 percent. The latest findings are in the American Bible Society’s fourth annual "State of the Bible" survey.

Since 2011, antagonism toward the Bible has risen from 11 percent to 19 percent of those surveyed. During the same period, the percentage considered “Bible friendly” dropped from 45 percent to 37 percent, while those who are “Bible engaged” remained steady. The percentage of those considered neutral toward the Bible, 26 percent in 2014, has remained statistically unchanged.

The report, conducted by Barna Group, details Americans’ beliefs about the Bible, its role in society, its presence in U.S. homes and other information about the best-selling book of all time. As in previous years, the survey found the Bible remains a highly valued, influential force in America. But beliefs about the Bible and its role in society are becoming increasingly polarized—particularly when the data is examined by age group.

Overall, millennials (ages 18 to 29) are driving the shift toward Bible indifference or antagonism. Among millennials, the 2014 survey found:  

  • Nineteen percent believe no literature is sacred (compared to 13 percent of all adults), while 64 percent believe the Bible is sacred literature (compared to 79 percent of all adults).

  • Thirty-five percent believe the Bible contains everything a person needs to know to live a meaningful life, as compared with 50 percent for all adults.

  • While 50 percent of all adults believe the Bible has too little influence in society, only 30 percent of millennials express the same belief. By way of comparison, 61 percent of elders (those ages 68+) surveyed said they believe the Bible has too little influence in society.

  • Thirty-nine percent of millennials never read the Bible, as compared to 26 percent of all adults.

“With four years of data from American Bible Society’s 'State of the Bible' research, we are now able to see trends in attitudes about and behaviors around the Bible,” says Roy Peterson, president and CEO of the American Bible Society. “The increasing polarization in attitudes about the Bible has implications for us as a nation and for our churches and families.”

Busyness remained the most common reason given for not reading the Bible more frequently among those who said their Bible reading decreased. The percentage of Bible readers citing busyness as their top barrier to additional Bible reading grew significantly in the last year, from 40 percent in 2013 to 47 percent in 2014.

The way Americans access the Bible is also changing, according to the survey results. An unprecedented 44 percent of Bible readers surveyed have accessed the Bible on a computer. Still, print versions are far from disappearing from the Bible landscape. Eighty-four percent of Bible readers surveyed said a print version of Scripture is still their primary format.

Peterson, who took the helm of American Bible Society in February, believes there is reason to hope for an upswing in Bible engagement in the future.

“American adults, young and old alike, overwhelmingly recognize a moral decline is taking place in the nation,” he says. “As they seek solutions, we hope they will find the Bible as the guidebook that can reverse the decline and help its readers make sense of life.”

Seventy-four percent of millennials believe morals are declining in America, while 81 percent of all adults affirm this. 

The survey also found:

  • The Bible continues to dominate both mind space and book retail space as America’s undisputed best-seller. 

  • One in seven people reported buying a copy of the Bible in the last year.

  • Seventy-nine percent of Americans identify the Bible as sacred.

  • The Bible is readily available to nearly all Americans, with an average of 4.7 Bibles per household.

  • More than a quarter (28 percent) of all adults read the Bible every day or several times a week, while a quarter (26 percent) never read it.

  • Among Bible readers, the average amount of time spent reading the Bible is 35 minutes.

  • One in four Bible readers (42 percent) felt peaceful after reading the Bible, three in 10 (29 percent) felt hopeful, and 33 percent felt encouraged and inspired.

  • The King James Version is still preferred over any other translation, as 34 percent of all adults read this version the most often.


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