4 in 10 Pastors Believe Obama Is a Christian
By _LifeWay Research_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/lifeway-research/) |
 
    *   Protestant _pastors_ (http://www.christianpost.com/topics/pastors/) 
 overwhelmingly believe that Oprah Winfrey  isn’t a Christian, but 
three-quarters of them say former president George W.  Bush is.

 
Winfrey and Bush, along with Glenn Beck, _Barack Obama_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/barack-obama/)  and Sarah Palin, comprised 
the list that  
_LifeWay_ (http://www.christianpost.com/topics/lifeway/)  Research presented 
to Protestant pastors along  with the question, “Which, if any, of the 
following people do you believe are  Christians?” 
The majority of Americans self-identify as Christian, and Protestant is the 
 largest category of Christian _denomination_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/denomination/) s. With that in mind, 
LifeWay Research set  out to 
examine the beliefs of pastors leading Protestant churches. The national  
telephone survey took place Oct. 7-14 and included 1,000 interviews. 
Winfrey earned the lowest affirmative response, with only 19 percent of  
pastors saying they believe she is a Christian. The other _television_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/television/)  personality on the list, 
Beck, 
earned the  second lowest affirmative response at 27 percent. 
“Most Americans consider themselves Christian and, for many of them, the  
Oprahfication of American spirituality has been a good thing,” said Ed 
Stetzer,  president of LifeWay Research. “Yet, the overwhelming majority of 
Protestant  pastors don’t view Oprah as a Christian.” 
Among the politicians on the list, Bush earned the highest affirmative  
response, with three-quarters of pastors (75 percent) saying they believe he is 
 a Christian. Palin earned the next highest response at 66 percent, and 
Obama  received the lowest affirmative response with less than half of 
Protestant  pastors (41 percent) saying they believe him to be a Christian. 
Four percent of pastors say none of the listed prominent personalities are  
Christians, and 15 percent respond only with “Not sure.” 
“For many people, ‘Christian’ is a box they check on a demographic survey,”
  Stetzer said. “Protestant pastors, however, often have a more detailed 
view –  many apply terms like ‘born again,’ ‘evangelical’ and ‘a changed 
life’ as  synonyms for ‘Christian.’ Thus, their standard is often different 
than the  prevailing view. 
“Using their standard, the majority would not agree that President Obama is 
a  Christian, though he is a mainline Protestant,” Stetzer explained. “And 
it is  likely that Glenn Beck’s Mormonism, widely viewed by Protestants as 
a different  religion rather than a different Christian denomination, 
probably caused many to  indicate he is not a Christian.” 
Overall, more pastors believe the three politicians are Christians than  
believe the two television personalities are, though the characteristics of 
the  pastors themselves do impact their responses. 
Protestant pastors who self-identify as Democrats, politically liberal or  
very liberal, or mainline are more likely to indicate these prominent  
personalities are Christians. For example, 88 percent of those who 
self-identify  
as liberal or very liberal say Obama is a Christian compared to only 31 
percent  of those who say they are conservative and 12 percent of those who say 
they are  very conservative. 
The ages of the pastors also reveal differences. Older pastors are most  
likely to say Winfrey is a Christian, with 46 percent of pastors who are 55 
and  older responding affirmatively, compared to only 30 percent under the age 
of  55. 
Pastors in the 55-64 age bracket are the most likely to say Obama is a  
Christian at 48 percent. Overall, 83 percent of pastors over the age of 55,  
compared to only 74 percent of those under 55, say Obama is a Christian. 
“For many, ‘Judge not’ are the only words of Jesus they know,” Stetzer 
said.  “To those people, it may be inconceivable that Protestant pastors might 
consider  some Christians and others not. Yet Jesus said much more about 
following Him.  Protestant pastors have theological views and beliefs about 
what it means to be  a Christian – and those opinions influence many in 
America, so it’s important to  know what they believe.” 
Methodology: The LifeWay Research telephone survey was conducted among  
Protestant pastors Oct. 7-14, 2010. Churches were selected randomly and each  
interview was conducted with the church’s senior pastor, minister or priest.  
Responses were weighted to reflect the geographic distribution of 
Protestant  churches. The sample of 1,000 provides 95 percent confidence that 
the 
sampling  error does not exceed ±3.2 percent for the total sample. Margins of 
error are  higher in subgroups.

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