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Night Owl CD-ROM (NOPV9) (Night Owl Publisher) (1993).ISO
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STATS.TXT
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1993-05-08
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Shopping For A Custom-Made God
Time magazine recently described the phenomenon of Americans
searching for religious truth as "shopping for a custom-made God"
(5 April 1993, p. 45). This seems to be an appropriate description.
Some looked to a messiah in Waco, some look to the eastern
religions of the New Age and Mind Sciences, while others find
solace in preparing themselves for becoming a god one day as they
believe God has become God ■ Mormonism.
The Time magazine observed that in their search for a comfortable
God, "Americans who leave religious institutions do not necessarily
abandon religious faith. Even most dropouts say they believe in
God; though one-third also believe in reincarnation, ghosts and
astrology."
Even those who claim to be "Born Again" are not necessarily firmly
grounded in the truths of the Bible. In his book which provides a
statistical analysis of religious beliefs in America, George Barna
cites several fascinating statistics which are based on a national
survey.
In chapter four he states, "The Devil, or Satan, is not a living
being but is a symbol of evil." Then, asking that segment of his
survey respondents who have identified themselves as being "Born
Again", he states, "Do you agree strongly, agree somewhat, disagree
somewhat, or disagree strongly with that statement?"
The "Born Again" population reply with 32 percent agreeing
strongly, 11 percent agreeing somewhat and 5 percent did not know.
Thus, of the total number responding, 48 percent either agreed that
Satan is only symbolic or did not know!
Should it then be surprising that a few pages later Barna would
receive some very startling responses? His next question,
"Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, and others all pray to the
same God, even though they use different names for that God."
Again, the respondents were asked to agree strongly, agree
somewhat, disagree somewhat or disagree strongly.
Of that population surveyed who identified themselves as "Born
Again," 30 percent agreed strongly, 18 percent agreed somewhat and
12 percent did not know. That is a total of 60 percent! ("What
Americans Believe", pp. 206, 212).
The rapid spread of the cults in America and around the world can
be attributed in part to the deterioration of the Christian church
and its lax emphasis on the fundamentals of the faith.