ASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP) -- While the majority of churchgoers desire to
honor Christ with their lives and even profess to think on biblical
truths, a recent study found few actually engage in personal reading and
study of the Scriptures.
"Bible engagement" is one of the eight
attributes of discipleship identified in the Transformational
Discipleship study conducted by LifeWay Research. The study produced the
Transformational Discipleship Assessment, which measures an
individual's spiritual growth in each of these areas of development.
The
survey found 90 percent of churchgoers agree that "I desire to please
and honor Jesus in all I do," and 59 percent agree with the statement:
"Throughout the day I find myself thinking about biblical truths." While
the majority agree with both statements, there is a significant
difference in the strength of agreement. Nearly two-thirds of
churchgoers (64 percent) strongly agree with the first statement, but
only 20 percent strongly agree with the second.
However, when asked how often they personally (not as part of a church worship service) read the Bible:
-- 19 percent respond "every day."
-- 26 percent say a few times a week.
-- 14 percent say they read the Bible "once a week."
-- 22 percent say "once a month" or "a few times a month."
-- 18 percent say "rarely/never."
"Bible
engagement has an impact in just about every area of spiritual growth,"
said Ed Stetzer, president of LifeWay Research. "You can follow Christ
and see Christianity as your source of truth, but if that truth does not
permeate your thoughts, aspirations and actions, you are not fully
engaging the truth.
"God's Word is truth, so it should come as no
surprise that reading and studying the Bible are still the activities
that have the most impact on growth in this attribute of spiritual
maturity," Stetzer said. "As basic as that is, there are still numerous
churchgoers who are not reading the Bible regularly. You simply won't
grow if you don't know God and spend time in God's Word."
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