Survey Says: Don’t Read Into It

As you may have heard, a recent study by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion and Public Life found that the majority of those affiliated with a religion do not believe their religion is the only way to salvation. This includes 57 percent of evangelicals who say that many religions can lead to eternal life.

It’s amazing to me how quickly this study has become fodder for evangelical outrage over relativism, particularly here in Dayton. To the collective gasps of their congregations, pastors are misrepresenting the study’s findings by making claims like, “most Americans are universalists” or “a majority of evangelical Christians no longer believe Jesus is the only way to eternal life” or “most Christians think all paths lead to God.” I’ve heard the study used to support everything from buying more Christian apologetics books to sending kids to private Christian high schools and colleges.

Such a reactionary response fails to factor in the inexact science of polling and what may simply be a more nuanced view of pluralism among religious people.

The Actual Question: How would you answer it? 

First of all, we’ve got to look more carefully at the actual question that was asked of those taking the survey. Here it is:

Question: Which of the following statements comes closer to your own views, even if neither is exactly right:
a) My religion is the one true faith leading to eternal life
b) Many religions can lead to eternal life

Now, how would you answer that question?

Personally, I’d prefer there be an Option C that states: “Religion itself has no saving power, so no religion (including my own) leads to eternal life.”

But there is no Option C. So, given the circumstances, I’d probably choose Option B, simply because it is more open-ended. I think that people of all religious traditions are loved by God and that God is capable of using religion to draw people to Himself, even if that religion is not Christianity.

Furthermore, considering the fact that  in this survey, Protestants and Catholics were separated into different “religions,” many people may have confused “religion” with “denominational affiliation.” In fact, a LifeWay study to be released in the fall used more specific wording, asking Protestant churchgoers whether a person can obtain eternal life through “religions other than Christianity.” That survey found that only 31 percent agreed “strongly” or “somewhat.”

Of course, I would also prefer an Option C in that survey as well.

A More Nuanced Approach to Religious Pluralism

I suspect that the Pew Research Center’s survey simply reveals the fact that Americans, including evangelicals, have a more nuanced approach to religious pluralism. This, I think, is a very good thing.  It would mean that evangelicals are moving away from a one-size-fits-all approach to the gospel to one that appreciates the scope of God’s love for the world. It would mean that evangelicals are perhaps finding a “middle way” between traditional exclusivism on the one hand and outright universalism on the other.

The bottom line is that the yes-or-no, black-or-white nature of a survey doesn’t really lend itself to the complexity of this important issue. Even the question, “Do you think Jesus is the only way to salvation?” fails to factor in the dynamic nature of the Trinity, especially as it concerns those who have never heard the name of Jesus to begin with.

My feeling is that the survey should not be taken too seriously, and it certainly should not be used to try to sell more apologetics curriculum to an “increasingly relativistic evangelical community.” There was plenty in that survey regarding evangelical attitudes toward homosexuality, conservative politcs, science, and abortion to keep the Religious Right happy for a while...(but that's for another post!)





kristen
Comment
Re: Survey Says: Don’t Take Me Too Seriously
Reply #1 on : Wed July 02, 2008, 15:37:24
i would love to participate in these surveys. :)
Comment
Misrepresenting?
Reply #2 on : Fri July 04, 2008, 13:55:38
How is it "misrepresenting the study's findings" to say that a "majority of evangelical Christians no longer believe Jesus is the only way to eternal life" if the study found that "57 percent of evangelicals ... say that many religions can lead to eternal life"?

LifeWay's question with "more specific wording" is also searching more specifically for a particular answer.

Tim
11,352 days
Comment
Misrepresentation
Reply #3 on : Sat July 05, 2008, 21:16:59
Tim - I think it could easily misrepresent the actual opinions of those being surveyed because 1) the question is too vague and limited (it did not even refer to Jesus, so concluding that Christians do not believe Jesus is the only way is misleading), and 2) it did not distinguish between religion and denominational affiliation.
Comment
Answering the poll question
Reply #4 on : Fri August 08, 2008, 01:07:02
Question: Which of the following statements comes closer to your own views, even if neither is exactly right:
a) My religion is the one true faith leading to eternal life
b) Many religions can lead to eternal life

I agree with you that I would probably choose Option B, simply because it is more open-ended. If we were sitting together and talking about it, I would want to know (before answering one way or the other) how the questioner defines "eternal life." Not all Christians understand that in the same way, so I'd want to be clear what I'm being asked.

I agree with you, too, all people (I'd say "all" and not limit it to "all people of all religious traditions") are loved by God. Yes, even if that religion is not Christianity. Wouldn't this HAVE to be the case if we believe, as we read in the Bible, that "God is love"? We aren't told "God loves Christians" but that God IS love. That sounds pretty big to me, big enough to include ALL God's children. I am a mother and cannot ... absolutely cannot ... imagine loving only my children defined somehow as "good" children. Why wouldn't God love all of them?

I found your (and your blog) through the Emerging Women blog and left a comment on your post "Community: Wherever You Happen to Be" located here (for easy access back to it):

This is the comment I left for you:
"I'll check out your blog, too, because I want to tell you I am in Chattanooga ... close enough for you to share our gatherings and talk freely among those of like mind. You would be very welcome. (Do you like 'coincidences'? The word verification string of letters starts with "tn
" for Tennessee!)"

I like that you are a "doubter, questioner, contrarian who jokes about postmodernism." I think we'd get along famously. I'd rather not post my cell phone number online, though I'd be happy to send it to you in an email: emerging dot paradigm at yahoo dot com. Here are a couple of the face-to-face group discussions (I also have an online book club), and both meet NORTH of town (Chattanooga), easier to reach from Dayton:

Tuesday, August 19 at 7:00 pm
to discuss Burger's Daughter, a novel by Nadine Gordimer (all reading the same book)
http://bellanovella.blogspot.com/2008/07/burgers-daughter-by-nadine-gordimer.html

Thursday, August 21 at 6:00 pm
to share any book on politics (this month's topic ... each month is a different topic ... 4 of the 5 of us would be labeled "liberal")
http://alternativebookclub-abc.blogspot.com/2008/07/time-off-july.html

For the record, my affiliation is United Methodist, though I would never, ever try to change YOU. (Neither would the other women in the groups.) Donna, who belongs to a Christian Church called Disciples of Christ, started a group to discuss "coexisting" by trying to understand other religions:
http://chattanoogacoexistclub.blogspot.com/

I would be happy to take you to any of these meetings and introduce you around, if you are interested. I hope to hear from you, one way or the other (and you may leave a comment on a blog, if you don't want to email me). I would very much like to meet SOMEONE ELSE who "stubbornly believes that if she reads every book on the planet she will be able to unlock the secrets of the universe." Yah, books! I'm reading as fast as I can ... as you can tell by looking at my blog listing books reviewed:
http://bonniereviewsbooks.blogspot.com/

BTW, my photo is on my blogs, if you are interested.

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