11% of Protestants can't distinguish between Old, New Testaments
Over one-tenth of Protestants cited a New Testament story when asked about their favorite Old Testament passage, according to the results of a new study.
Over one-tenth of Protestants cited a New Testament story when asked about their favorite Old Testament passage, according to the results of a new study.
The American Bible Society has found a shocking drop in Bible reading and engagement. The numbers are certainly discouraging — but what's really going on? And amid the unfortunate statistics, are there any bright spots?
Dan Kimball, founding pastor of Vintage Faith Church in Santa Cruz, California, finds the level of biblical illiteracy today shocking. But what he finds even more horrifying is how so many people believe in a Jesus who's very different from the savior in the Bible. He's hoping to help change that through the ReGeneration Project.
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As bills in several states would require public schools to offer Bible history classes, a new poll revealed that only about one in 10 Americans support the idea of Bible history electives.
President Donald Trump thinks it is "great" that the option of Bible classes are returning to public schools.
More Americans have no religious identity—many have no need for God. This is especially true with the so-called Generation Z.
Legislators at the Iowa Statehouse have introduced a bill that would allow or require schools to teach the Bible as an elective course, but some are opposing it as an "extreme piece of legislation."
As a child, Lauren Green McAfee remembers waking up each day before the sun rose to learn math from her dad before he left for work at 7 a.m. And every time she entered his study, he would always be reading his Bible.
The KGB finally got what it wanted — the separation of church and Bible in the West — with disastrous results.