« Americans Not Getting Enough Sleep | Main | Have The Rules Changed? »

March 20, 2008

New Research Defines The Concept of Sin

Ist1_3144922_cross It is interesting that on this Easter week we would write to you regarding sin.  What is it? How do you relate to it? The scripture says "without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness [of sin]".  I thought the following might give you some interesting 'filler' for your sermon this weekend.  Personally I always defined sin as a "willful transgression of the known will of God".  How do you define it? Happy Easter!

Results from a new study released from Ellison Research finds that 13 percent of Americans do not believe at all in the concept of sin. But, a majority of Americans (87%), however, do believe in this concept and they include adultery (81%), racism (74%), use of hard drugs (65%), failing to say anything if they're given too much change by a cashier (63%), having an abortion (56%), cheating on their taxes (52%) and homosexual activity (52%) as sin. "Sin" was defined in the research as "something that is almost always considered wrong, particularly from a religious or moral perspective."

One of the biggest differences in whether people believe in the concept of sin is actually not even religious, but political. Among political conservatives, 94 percent believe there is such a thing as sin. But, only 77 percent of political liberals believe in the concept of sin.

Evangelical Christians are far more likely to include numerous behaviors under the definition of sin, and the difference between evangelicals and other Americans is often quite large. For instance, 90 percent of evangelicals believe getting drunk is sinful behavior, compared to 35 percent of all other Americans, and 92 percent of evangelicals believe sex before marriage is sinful, versus 39 percent of all other Americans. Still, evangelicals do not consider all types of behavior sinful — only a minority believe it is a sin to work on the Sabbath, not attend church, drink alcohol, dance, play the lottery, watch an R-rated movie, or not tithe 10 percent of their income to church or charity.

Women tend to have a longer list of what is sin than do men and are more likely than men to include racism, gossip, use of hard drugs, marijuana, adultery, pornography, not reporting income on taxes, abortion, failing to say anything if given too much change, and swearing as sinful behavior.

People under age 35 are less likely than Americans in other age groups to believe adultery, getting drunk, not reporting income on taxes, homosexual activity, pornography, and gossip are sin. At the same time, younger people are more likely than others to say using tobacco and working on the Sabbath are sinful.

Ron Sellers, president of Ellison Research, noted how many inconsistencies Americans show in their answers. "We can see numerous inconsistent patterns of thought and belief throughout the responses," Sellers stated. "For instance over a third of all Americans believe failing to take proper care of their bodies is sinful. Yet far fewer believe tobacco or obesity are sins — even though medical science consistently shows using tobacco and being overweight are two of the most harmful things they can do to their bodies."

Go figure!

Comments

Hey HB, I guess "god" read my journal already. Bummer. Well I do not respond to 1/2 truths never have never will. In any case I really need out of here soon. I wonder how this delay does any of us any good??? Well keep up the good work!

Post a comment

Comments are moderated and will not appear on hblondon.org until they've been approved. While we are eager to facilitate conversation by publishing most comments, we may withhold one from time to time if we deem it offensive, vulgar, overly personal, cynical, disrespectful, irrelevant, redundant or unnecessarily contentious. While we encourage you not to make others' misspellings and grammatical mistakes an issue of debate, please do your best to double-check your spelling, use correct capitalization, and use proper grammar. Finally, please be aware that due to the number of comments received, we are not always able to post a personal response.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In