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When Ian Wyllie and I published Religious Trends last December, the Director of Christian Research, Benita Hewitt, kindly gave us a Christmas present inscribed with the above words. It is a quotation from a famous 18th Century pro-missionary sermon on Isaiah 54:2-3 by William Carey in which he repeatedly used this epigram that has become his most famous quotation. He later founded, in 1792, a missionary society in Benita's home town of Kettering, which in part explains her fondness for the quote.

Originally, the mission was called the Particular Baptist Society for the Propagation of the Gospel amongst the Heathen. Mercifully, it was soon known as the Baptist Missionary Society and since 2000 as BMS World Mission (http://www.bmsworldmission.org ). It is still usually abbreviated to BMS by Baptists such as myself.

What very much interests, and inspires, me in my capacity in Christian Research is the story leading up to the founding of BMS. In addition to his inspiring sermon, Carey published a booklet An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens. (http://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/enquiry/anenquiry.pdf)

This short manifesto comprises five parts. In the first part, he makes a strong theological argument for Christian missionary activity (Matthew 28:18-20) and then he outlines the history of mission from the early Church to his own time. Part 4 deals with objections to sending missionaries and the last part calls for the missionary society to be formed.

However, it was Part 3 that has caught my attention, as there are 26 pages of tables of statistics for every country in the world, giving the nation's area, population and main religions. This is what Christian Research now offers within Religious Trends (http://www.christian-research.org/world-religion/introduction.html). Ours is, of course, better but Carey did not have the resources such as the internet to undertake this research. I expect he spent much time in correspondence and on visiting sources, whereas I did most of the data gathering on the PC I am using to write this blog. It seems that Carey had compiled these figures during the period 1785-1792 when he was a shoemaker and schoolteacher in the village of Moulton, Northamptonshire, and pastor of its local Particular Baptist church.

What an excellent example is Carey’s Enquiry of an evidence-based strategy! Carey kept a chart of the world on the wall in front of his workbench so that as he made and repaired shoes, he would weep over the millions who were not following Jesus and for the Gospel that could save them.

In our churches, it is clear that those with leadership and clear vision are most likely to grow. Many of the success stories we hear about have as part of their strategy a programme to soak the neighbourhood with prayer. Perhaps we should soak our neighbours with our tears as well.

Today, William Carey would surely and gladly pay his £30 membership to study Religious Trends, but I believe he would still weep.

Written by Michael Hudson

 


Research Manager

We are still looking for a Research Manager to join our team at Christian Research.

£30 - £35k + competitive benefits package

The prime purpose of the role is to manage research projects from the initial brief through to reporting and follow up.

You must be fully experienced in quantitative and qualitative research methods, and possess good project management skills.

You will also be required to deputise for the Director on occasions.

You will be an excellent communicator, both in writing and orally, able to report findings in a clear and concise way.  In addition, your interpersonal skills must enable you to manage a small team of staff, clients and suppliers alike – building and maintaining good relationships.

You will be a pro-active self-starter with the ability to work alone.

The post is based in Swindon.

If you have the expertise for one of these challenging full-time roles, visit www.biblesociety.org.uk/jobs for a job description and application form.

If you have a heart for and understand the way the church works and the language it uses, you could be just the person we want to recruit!


Is the church greying?

Posted by: IanWyllie in General

Tagged in: Social , Research , Quantitative , Church

The age distribution of the church in developed countries is becoming skewed towards the elderly because it is economically rational for potential believers to delay participation in religious activities till they are older. Such is the the claim of a paper by Papyrakis and Selvaretnam, who are economists at the University of East Anglia and St Andrews respectively.

However, empirical evidence, drawn from the same data sources Papyrakis and Selvarentnam used shows that people do not become more religious as they age Marion Burkimsher from the University of Geneva wrote recently "the pattern we see today in western Europe of older people being more religious than younger people is effectively a relic of older generations being more religious in the past and then maintaining their level of religious participation over time." This report is available here

The authors claim that their cost benefit model explains not only the changing age distribution of religiosity, but also the historic reduction in overall levels of observance in the developed world. Their analysis uses a three period model (young, old and afterlife), and allows for members of a population to become religious during the young period, or the old period, and to change their decision at the boundary between the young and the old period. The model uses a number of variables, including the probability that heaven or hell exists, the social and spiritual benefits of religious observance, and the time, and hence income lost, that results from participating in religious activities.

The model under discussion (Click to enlarge
The model under discussion (Click to enlarge

The paper claims implicitly that its results hold true for all religions although it uses explicitly Christian language throughout "Regular church attendance remains very high in countries such as Nigeria, Pakistan, and El Salvador...", and the statistics that are referred to in the section of the paper where the authors present limited empirical evidence for their claims all relate to Christianity. However evidence is emerging which suggests that the decline in attendance which they report has, at least in the UK ceased, and in fact is rising in some denominations (as they acknowledge is true for the Pentecostal community) and is beginning to rise in other denominations.

Church Attendance 2001-2009 (click to enlarge)
Church Attendance 2001-2009 (click to enlarge)

Dr Papyrakis, of the School of International Development at UEA said: “Many religions and societies link to some degree the cumulative amount of religious effort to benefits in the afterlife. We show that higher life expectancy discounts expected benefits in the afterlife and is therefore likely to lead to postponement of religiosity, without necessarily jeopardising benefits in the afterlife." However because their model considers the decisions of hypothetical individuals, and the effect of the increased life expectancy which is found in developed countries relative to less developed ones, the paper cannot without further work define an end state for the religious community, or even the age distribution which one would expect to find. Were the findings of this paper true, it would be expected that in developed countries the age at which people first become religiously observant would be likely to show a marked skew towards the older generations. However several studies show that this is not the case as a report from the Barna Group, a leading US research organisation shows: "The current Barna study indicates that nearly half of all Americans who accept Jesus Christ as their savior do so before reaching the age of 13 (43%), and that two out of three born again Christians (64%) made that commitment to Christ before their 18th birthday. One out of eight born again people (13%) made their profession of faith while 18 to 21 years old. Less than one out of every four born again Christians (23%) embraced Christ after their twenty-first birthday. Barna noted that these figures are consistent with similar studies it has conducted during the past twenty years."

It would also be expected that where there was a significant disutility to practicing a religion for reasons of persecution, for example the early church or early non-conformist communities in England that religious participation (either among the young or the old), would be suppressed, and this paper makes this point. In illustration of this argument they cite a paper: "e.g. in the early Christian Church), these costs are particularly high (see Bruce, 1993 for a discussion) and may hence discourage religious participation." However examination of Bruce's work shows that he argues that the economic model for restriction of church growth is flawed:

"The early Christian Church had very high start-up costs: Christians were persecuted, and some were used as lion feed. The early English Quakers were persecuted but thrived ... At this point in the argument it is enough to note that there appears to be no universal connection between 'costs' and adherence."

Dr Papyrakis' said in conclusion: “To increase overall attendance, religious establishments should aim to reduce any discomfort of entry to religious newcomers, both old and young. This may involve making information about the organisation easily accessible to them and helping new-comers to follow religious activities without feeling lost or uncomfortable." He went on to suggest that emphasising the socio-economic and spiritual benefits that religious observance brings would counterbalance the negative impact of life expectancy on religiosity. As conclusions these are substantially anodyne. It makes intuitive sense for any Christian church to do all he suggests, but his conclusions are so general that it is difficult to attach them to the findings of his model. His conclusions also fail to take account of the fact that the demographics of many developed countries are such that there is an increasing proportion of elderly people in the population, and as such even if churches are perfectly representative of the population there would be a skewed age distribution within them.

 


Do you believe in hell? - if so, it might be affecting your outlook on a wide range of issues, or so suggests a recent paper by Professor Treisman, Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of California. In the paper he shows that, at a regional level in Europe and parts of Asia, differences in the level of fear of the consequences of possible future events, such as nuclear war, swine flu, may be partly explicable by the strength of belief in hell held in that region. Commenting on his research Professor Treisman said: 

“Some previous research has found that people who are more afraid of nuclear war are less likely to save. Others have speculated that fearfulness might predispose people to support authoritarian government, but I have not seen any systematic evidence of this. I do find using survey data from Europe that, even controlling for the level of economic development, in countries where people are more fearful the average levels of happiness and life satisfaction are lower.” 

Professor Treisman’s study used existing data from the Eurobarometer series of opinion polls for Europe and the Asia Europe study, which performs a similar function across Asia and Europe to construct his index of fear, which is statistically reasonably robust. However these studies did not ask directly about belief in hell so their results, at a country level had to be associated with the World Values study which, in 2000 did ask about belief in heaven and hell. Because the World Values study used a different set of participants to the other studies, this means that the association between fear and belief in hell can not be explored at the level of individual subjects, and makes the overall findings of the research less certain.

Professor Treisman himself says “I should emphasize that it remains a conjecture that needs to be confirmed by further surveys. Why would belief in hell correlate with a greater predisposition to fearfulness? One possibility is that belief in divine retribution creates a general sense of anxiety that manifests itself with regard to particular dangers. Another is that belief in hell is associated with the belief that people are naturally evil, at least to some extent, and that therefore one should anticipate harm from others.” 

One feature of this research which is important to developing a fuller understanding of the implications would be to know what proportion of people who believe in hell in Europe are actively practicing Christians. If belief in hell is a partly culturally determined phenomenon, then for the purposes of interpreting the findings, it would be important to find out find out whether people who were actively practicing Christians and believed in hell were more or less fearful than those people who had a culturally determined belief in hell, but did not practice Christianity. 

Direct link to NBER's paper download site:  http://www.nber.org/papers/w16838

Download a draft of the paper from Professor  Treisman's site: here

Read the Wall Street Journal's blog on the paper: here 


Christian Research is recruiting

Posted by: IanWyllie in General

Tagged in: Research

Two new jobs in Christian Research

For both, the posts are based in Swindon and the closing date is 17 April 2011.

If you have the expertise for one of these challenging full-time roles, visit www.biblesociety.org.uk/jobs for a job description and application form.

If you have a heart for and understand the way the church works and the language it uses, you could be just the person we want to recruit!

Research Manager

£30 - £35k + competitive benefits package

The prime purpose of the role is to manage research projects from the initial brief through to reporting and follow up.

You must be fully experienced in quantitative and qualitative research methods, and possess good project management skills.

You will also be required to deputise for the Director on occasions.

You will be an excellent communicator, both in writing and orally, able to report findings in a clear and concise way.  In addition, your interpersonal skills must enable you to manage a small team of staff, clients and suppliers alike – building and maintaining good relationships.

You will be a pro-active self-starter with the ability to work alone.

Research Assistant

C. £17k + competitive benefits package

The main purposes of the role are to support the Director and Research Manager, to act as the first point of contact for Christian Research and to develop our secondary research capabilities.

This work will include providing project support, developing and running desk research and working on the content of our websites.

You will use clear and concise writing skills in the production of briefs, proposals, reports and writing publications for members.

You must demonstrate that you have good interpersonal skills, along with the ability to multi-task, prioritise, and organise.

 


Nearly one in three Britons believe they have a guardian angel watching over them, according to research we have just commissioned. Details of the research, conducted for us by ICM, are at the bottom of this blog.

It showed that 31% believed in angels, with 17% saying they are not sure. A further 5% - or one in 20 - told us that they believe they have seen or heard an angel, with 29% saying they think a guardian angel is watching over them.

The research showed the London region has the highest levels of belief in angels at 40%, with the North East scoring the lowest at 17%. People in the London region also scored the highest for belief in a guardian angel watching over them, at 37%, compared to 22% in Scotland and the North East.

More detailed summaries of the results and the data tables are available for download here

These are interesting findings for us, and have made us think about conducting a more comprehensive research study on the subject of angels. We wonder exactly what people believe about angels, and where they get their knowledge from? We're also interested to find out more from the one in twenty who say that they have had an experience of an angel. A few people have started to contact us already to let us know, so we've produced a simple set of questions to help us understand this fascinating subject:

1. When did you experience an angel (year, month, day, time of day – as well as can be remembered)?

2. Where did you experience an angel (location – town/city, but also type of place – church/bedroom/hospital/etc)?

3. What was happening immediately prior to your experience of an angel (what were you doing, how were you feeling)?

4. Please describe the angel as best you can

5 How did you feel when the angel arrived?

6. Describe exactly what happened – did the angel say or do anything, what was your response, etc.

7. How did you feel after encountering the angel?

8. Did anyone else see or hear the angel?

9. Who have you told about this experience, and what was their response?

10. Have you ever seen an angel again?

If you, or anyone you know, has experienced an angel please let us know about your experience - either by email or post. Many thanks.


ICM interviewed a random sample of 1038 adults aged 18+ via online between the 15th – 16th December 2010. Surveys were conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults.ICM is a member of the British Polling Council and abides by its rules.(Further information at www.icmresearch.co.uk)

 


The 27th British Social Attitudes Report reveals that the British public is now less sympathetic towards people claiming benefits than at any time since Margaret Thatcher left office and the proportion of those who think the Government should redistribute income has fallen by around a third since the end of her premiership. Around one-quarter (27%) of people think that the Government should spend more on benefits and just one-half believe the state should ensure that everyone can enjoy a decent standard of living.

 

The Social Attitudes study, which the National Centre for Social Research has published annually for almost 30 years, concludes that while the British public is still concerned about the gap between rich and poor this is not matched by support for welfare and redistribution. The findings suggest that the Coalition Government's plans to reform and cut back on the benefit system are in accord with the current public mood.

 

Penny Young, chief executive of the National Centre for Social Research, said of the findings: ‘Attitudes have hardened over the last two decades, and are more in favour of cutting benefits and against taxing the better-off disproportionately.’

 

More details can be purchased from:

 

http://www.natcen.ac.uk/media/606967/nat british social attitudes survey summary 9.pdf

This article appeared in our December edition of Research Brief


Only one in ten adults in the UK believes that the birth of Jesus is the most important part of Christmas. Even fewer (one in 20) young people aged 25-34 are likely to put the religious significance of Christmas first, which is in contrast to one in five of the over-60s.

These findings come from a survey for the Children’s Society which, paradoxically, found that a substantial majority (86%) think the season has become too commercialised. It is clear from the research that fears of impending Government cuts and more austerity to come are being felt by families this year: a substantial proportion (60%) of people with children in the survey said they were likely to cut back on spending this Christmas. There was further evidence that there may be a move away from materialism as only 3% said that ‘giving and receiving presents’ was of primary importance to them.


To find out more use this link:

http://www.childrenssociety.org.uk/whats_happening/media_office/latest_news/22582_pr.html

 

This item above was included in our December Research Brief. Since writing it, The Children's Society were kind enough to send Christian Research a full copy of the results from this research, and we are able to share some more findings here.

In the research people were given a list to chose from and could only pick one option as the most important thing about Christmas. 67% chose 'spending time with family and friends'. This doesn't surprise me at all. In fact, in some ways it is a surprise that 10% opted for 'its religious meaning' instead. It's also interesting to note that only 3% chose 'giving or receiving presents' and yet so much time, energy and expense goes into this every year. We really ought to be redressing the balance onto the things that are most important to us.

The research shows that 52% are likely to make cutbacks in their overall spending this Christmas. The detail of the research shows that it is the 'middle England families' that are most likely to be feeling the pinch. The respective number for 35-44 year olds was 64%, for C1C2 socio-economic groups was 59%, and those with children 60%.  This sector of the population is often called the 'sandwich' generation - caring for increasingly elderly parents, whilst still supporting adult offspring. The rise in tuition fees will, of course, add to the pressures.

Although only 10% agreed 'I am prepared to go into debt this Christmas so that my family enjoys and makes the most of the festive season, agreement was a little higher with those of lower socioeconomic groups and those with children.

Respondents were asked to what extent they agreed with the statement 'people still associate Christmas with its religious meaning'. 44% agreed. Rather surprisingly, the highest agreement came from 16-24 year olds and single people (both 48%). The region with the highest agreement was London, where 62% agreed.



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