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NEW DATA | The Belief-Behavior Gap That's Shaping American Christianity
March 3, 2026

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Belief Without Obedience? What the Latest Theology Data Reveals About America
Most Americans say they believe in Jesus.Most say they believe in the resurrection.
Many say the Bible matters. So why doesn’t it look like it? The latest State of Theology report from Lifeway Research surveyed over 3,000 U.S. adults and revealed something both encouraging and concerning: belief in Christian concepts remains surprisingly high — but discipleship appears surprisingly thin. Let’s walk through what the data reveals — and what it means for the Church.
1. Jesus Is Popular — The Bible, Less So
One of the most striking tensions in the data is this:- 65% of Americans believe the bodily resurrection of Jesus actually happened.
- Yet only 49% believe the Bible is 100% accurate in all it teaches.
- Nearly half believe religious truth is not objective.
It used to be you could talk about God but not Jesus.Public figures referencing Jesus are often celebrated today in ways that would have drawn backlash a decade ago. Faith language is more acceptable culturally. But when conversations move toward exclusivity (“Jesus is the only way”) or biblical authority, resistance rises quickly. There’s a growing disconnect between admiration for Jesus and submission to Scripture.
Now you can talk about Jesus — just don’t talk about the Bible.
2. Truth Is Personal — Not Objective
The study found:- 65% say God accepts the worship of all religions.
- 46% agree religious belief is not about objective truth.
- “Jesus is great for you.”
- and “Jesus is Lord over all.”
3. Church Without Commitment
Another revealing category centered on church participation:- 63% say personal or family worship is a good substitute for church attendance.
- Only 33% believe every Christian has an obligation to join a local church.
- Even among evangelicals, only 45% affirm that obligation.
- Shepherding and accountability
- Mutual care
- Shared mission
- Doctrinal protection
4. We Think We’re Pretty Good
On sin and human nature, the data is sobering:- 66% believe most people are good by nature.
- 74% say everyone is born innocent in the eyes of God.
- Only 38% of evangelicals agree that even the smallest sin deserves eternal punishment.
5. Cultural Convictions Are Still Divided
Some findings were higher than expected:- 65% say God created marriage to be between one man and one woman.
- 49% say abortion is a sin (though that number has declined since 2022).
- 57% say hell is a real place of eternal punishment.
- 54% believe people should be able to choose their gender regardless of biological sex.
6. Revival and Retreat at the Same Time
David Kinnaman of Barna Group has described this moment as the Church being in “revival and retreat” simultaneously. That description fits. There are encouraging signs:- Belief in the resurrection remains high.
- Many affirm biblical authority.
- Hell and judgment are not widely dismissed.
- Objective truth is questioned.
- Church commitment is weakening.
- Sin is minimized.
- Scripture is sidelined.
So What Now?
If people believe Jesus rose from the dead, that’s not a small thing. That’s a foundation. But belief without obedience leads to nominal Christianity. The data doesn’t suggest hostility toward Christianity as much as it suggests confusion about Christianity. That means:- We must clarify the exclusivity of Christ.
- We must teach a robust theology of sin and grace.
- We must rebuild a biblical understanding of church membership.
- We must disciple beyond decision moments.
It may simply be under-discipled. And that changes how we respond.








