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September 9, 2002






Barna: Sept. 11 produced little spiritual fruit
___VENTURA, Calif. (ABP)--Last year's terrorist attacks had no lasting impact on America's religious practices, according to pollster George Barna.
___About half of Americans surveyed by the Barna Research Group said their faith was an important resource for helping them deal with events of Sept. 11. One-fourth of all adults said it was the "single most important resource" they have relied on, and 23 percent said their faith was "one of several important resources" that helped them deal with the tragedy.
___Church attendance spiked for several weeks after Sept. 11, but it was a short-lived revival. By November, attendance numbers had fallen back to the same levels as before the attacks.
___Barna found little or no change over the last year in the percentage of Americans who read their Bible regularly (41 percent), attend church (43 percent) or pray (83 percent). The percentage of unchurched Americans remained constant at 33 percent.
___Some theorized that shock from the attacks might serve as a spiritual wake-up call for Americans, leading to a religious revival. But Barna said he could find no statistically significant change in religious belief or practice in the past 12 months.
___Just 12 percent of Americans said the terrorist attacks had any impact on their religious faith. Among "born-again" Christians, 18 percent said the attacks impacted their religious faith.
___"I was among those who fully expected to see an intense spiritual reaction to the terrorist attacks," said Barna, an evangelical Christian. "The fact that we saw no lasting impact from the most significant act of war against our country on our own soil says something about the spiritual complacency of the American public."
___Increased worship attendance after Sept. 11 is explained by a rallying of church members who attend infrequently rather than an influx of new believers, Barna said.
___"What we witnessed was the people who attend once every month or two suddenly returning on a consistent basis for a month or two before falling back into their regular pattern of irregular attendance," he said. "It appears that very few people radically changed their personal agenda and added church involvement to their schedule when previously there had been no such activity."
___Barely half the nation's churches acknowledged or addressed the attacks in any way during the last 12 months, Barna reported. Yet 58 percent of adults attending a Christian church said their religious center has done an "excellent" or "good" job in addressing these matters.

The Baptist Standard


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