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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PROLIFE who wrote (749043)9/12/2006 10:09:30 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
U.S. is 1 nation under (4 views of) God

Americans differ vastly on the nature of deity, landmark survey finds

September 12, 2006
By Cathy Lynn Grossman
USA Today
September 12, 2006
indystar.com


The United States calls itself one nation under God, but Americans don't all have the same image of the Almighty in mind.

A new survey of religion in the country finds four very different images of God -- from a wrathful deity thundering at sinful humanity to a distant power uninvolved in mankind's affairs.

Forget denominational brands or doctrines or even once-salient terms like "religious right." Even the oft-used "evangelical" appears to be losing ground.

Believers don't see themselves the way the media and politicians -- or even their pastors -- do, according to the national survey of 1,721 Americans, by far the most comprehensive national religion survey to date.

Written and analyzed by sociologists from Baylor University's Institute for Studies of Religion in Waco, Texas, and conducted by Gallup, the survey asked 77 questions with nearly 400 answer choices that burrowed deeply into beliefs, practices and religious ties and turned up some surprising findings:

Though 91.8 percent say they believe in God, a higher power or a cosmic force, they had four distinct views of God's personality and engagement in human affairs. These Four Gods -- dubbed by researchers Authoritarian, Benevolent, Critical and Distant -- tell more about people's social, moral and political views and personal piety than the familiar categories of Protestant/Catholic/Jew or even red state/blue state.

Sociologist Paul Froese says their survey finds the stereotype that conservatives are religious and liberals are secular is "simply not true."

"Political liberals and conservative are both religious. They just have different religious views," he said.

About one in nine respondents has no religious ties at all. The Baylor survey, unlike others, asked people to write in the names and addresses of where they worship, and many who said "none" or "don't know" when asked about their religious identity named a church they occasionally attend.

The paranormal -- beliefs outside conventional organized religion -- is immensely popular. Most people said they believe in prophetic dreams.

"Evangelical" may be losing favor as a way Americans describe themselves. About one in three Americans say they belong to denominations that theologians consider evangelical, but only 14 percent of all respondents in the survey say this is one way they would describe themselves. Only 2.2 percent called it the single best term. Top choices overall: "Bible-believing" (20.4 percent) or "born-again" (18.6 percent).

These are part of the first wave of results from the random survey of Americans who completed and mailed in a 16-page questionnaire. Conducted in the fall of 2005, the survey is a statistically representative sampling of the U.S. by age, gender and race.

The Baylor team will spend two years digging through the findings and releasing reports on subtopics such as civic involvement and volunteerism, then repeat the core questions in fall 2007 to track trends. The research is funded by the John Templeton Foundation.
=========================================================

The '4 Gods':

Authoritarian

(31.4 percent of Americans overall, 43.5 percent in the South)>
• How God is seen: Angry at humanity's sins and engaged in every creature's life and world affairs.
• Believers' traits: Religiously and politically conservative, they want an active, Christian-values-based government and federal funding for faith-based social services. About one-third say God favors the United States in world affairs.

Distant

(24.4 percent overall, 30.3 percent in the West)
• How God is seen: Followers see a cosmic force that launched the world, then left it spinning on its own.
• Believers' traits: This has strongest appeal for Catholics, mainline Protestants and Jews. It's also strong among "moral relativists," those least likely to say any moral choice is always wrong. Less than 4 percent say embryonic stem-cell research is always wrong, compared with 38.5 percent in the authoritarian model.

Benevolent

(23 percent overall, 28.8 percent in the Midwest)
• How God is seen: Sets absolute standards for mankind but is forgiving, like a father who embraces a repentant prodigal son.
• Believers' traits: More than half (54.8 percent) want the government to advocate Christian values. This group draws more from mainline Protestants, Catholics and Jews and mainly sees a forgiving God. More than two-thirds say caring for the sick and needy ranks highest on the list of what it means to be a good person.

Critical

(16 percent overall, 21.2 percent in the East)
• How God is seen: Has a judgmental eye but won't intervene, either to punish or to comfort.
• Believers' traits: Less likely to draw absolute moral lines on issues such as abortion, gay marriage or embryonic stem-cell research.

Source: Study conducted by Gallup and analyzed by Baylor University's Institute for Studies of Religion.



To: PROLIFE who wrote (749043)9/12/2006 10:24:50 AM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Pathetic liberal sissies

winger spin..