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80% of Americans Believe in God…But, Here is The Rest of The Story

News discerned differently

When is the next royal baby due?

January 15, 2019  |  READ TIME: 4 minutes
Meghan Markle is having twins, or she’s not. Her baby will be named Victoria, or it will be named Diana, or Albert, or Philip. Her sister-in-law is pregnant with her fourth child, or not.

Now we have more “news”: Meghan is due in late April or early May. Or so we’re told.

Expect much fake news about the royal family in the coming months. And about nearly everything else in the news as well.

Unsurprisingly, only 45 percent of Americans say they trust the mass media. Like nearly everything else today, our opinions fall into political categories: 76 percent of Democrats say they trust the media, while only 21 percent of Republicans and 42 percent of Independents agree.

Fake news can be used to inflame or suppress social conflict. It undermines trust in the media and in government. Fake news aimed at senior adults is such a problem that the FBI has created a web page designed to protect seniors against this threat.

In an age that declares all truth to be subjective, we should not be surprised when our “news” is subjective. This is not just a problem for today–it is an issue that affects eternity.

But in the chaos of our times, there’s a path to the unchanging truth we need today.

What ideology caused 100 million deaths in the 20th century?

According to Pew Research Center, 80 percent of Americans believe in God. That’s the good news.

Here’s the bad news: Nearly a third of Americans say the “deity” in which they believe is not the God of the Bible but “some higher power/spiritual force.” Another 10 percent “do not believe in any higher power/spiritual force.” Only 56 percent of us “believe in God as described in the Bible.”

What our children believe about God is obviously crucial to their souls. As a result, I have written an article for our partner ministry, Christian Parenting, where I discuss some ways parents can help their children trust in the God of Scripture. I invite you to read my column and the outstanding resources on their website.

What we believe about God matters not only to our families but to our world.

According to the Wall Street Journalatheistic Communism was responsible for around a hundred million deaths in the twentieth century. Radical Muslims are convinced they are doing the will of Allah in killing non-Muslims. Persecution of people for their faith is rising around the world.

Conversely, as a Forbes writer notes, religion contributes a great deal of good to our world, even for those who are irreligious.

I believe in the Queen of England

Here’s another aspect of the Pew report: those who believe in the God of the Bible find him to be far more relevant to their lives than those who do not.

When asked about significant aspects of God’s character and activity, the contrast between those who believe in the God of Scripture vs. those who believe only in a “higher power” is dramatic:

  • God “loves all people, regardless of their faults”: 97 percent vs. 69 percent
  • He “has protected them”: 97 percent vs. 68 percent
  • He “knows everything”: 94 percent vs. 53 percent
  • He “has rewarded them”: 87 percent vs. 53 percent
  • He “has power to direct/change everything”: 86 percent vs. 39 percent

Why does this matter?

Believing something doesn’t make it so. Just because I believe in the Queen of England does not require the Queen of England to exist.

However, our faith in God positions us to receive all that God wants to give.

For instance, if I don’t believe God loves me unconditionally, I’m less likely to recognize his grace in my life. If I don’t believe he protects me, I’m less likely to pray for protection. If I don’t believe he is omniscient, I’m less likely to seek his wisdom. If I don’t believe that he rewards my obedience, I’m less likely to work for eternal significance. If I don’t believe he can direct the world, I’m less likely to follow his leadership.

Thus, our faith–or lack of faith–becomes self-fulfilling. We experience God to the degree that we expect to experience God.

How can we experience more of God?

Psalm 13 is David’s plea for help in a hard place. He begins with transparent honesty: “How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me? . . . How long shall my enemy be exalted over me?” (vv. 1-2). He needs help immediately “lest I sleep the sleep of death” (v. 3b).

Despite God’s apparent silence, David continues to pray: “Consider and answer me, O Lord my God” (v. 3a). Why?

Note the tenses of his answer: “I have trusted in your steadfast love; my heart shall rejoice in your salvation” (v. 5, my italics). Then he reverses the order: “I will sing to the Lord, because he has dealt bountifully with me” (v. 6, my italics).

David learned from God’s faithfulness in the past to trust his faithfulness for the future. Because the Lord’s nature does not change (Malachi 3:6Hebrews 13:8), all that he has done, he can still do.

“The issue of faith”

You and I can follow David’s example today. Name a need you need God to meet. Find a time in your experience and/or Scripture when he met it. Ask him to do so again and trust that he hears you and will answer you in whatever way is best.

Your trust will position you to experience your Father’s grace. And your faith will be a powerful witness to a faithless culture.

R. C. Sproul: “The issue of faith is not so much whether we believe in God, but whether we believe the God we believe in.”

Do you?

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Jim Denison, Ph.D., speaks and writes on cultural and contemporary issues. He is a trusted author and subject matter expert in areas where faith and current events intersect. His Daily Article provides leading insight for discerning today’s news from a biblical perspective.
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