_The Christian Post_ (http://www.christianpost.com/)  > _U.S._ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/u-s/) |Mon, Aug. 15 2011 07:52  PM EDT
Bible Interpretation Influenced by Education of Fellow Worshippers, Study  
Says
By _Fionna Agomuoh_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/fionna-agomuoh/)  
| Christian Post  Contributor
 


 
A study reveals that how one interprets the bible may be linked,  not to 
their own education, but to the _education_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/education/)  of their fellow worshippers.
 


The study, conducted Baylor University sociology doctoral student Samuel  
Stroope and derived from data from the U.S. Congregational Life Survey, 
details  that those who have greater contact with church members that went to 
college are  less likely to interpret the Bible word-for-word, regardless of 
their own  education level. 
Stroope explains that others are influenced by witnessing college educated  
people discuss the bible in an analytical fashion as opposed to a literal  
fashion. 
"When you go to Sunday school and everyone is talking about the cultural 
and  historical background of a passage and its literary genre - a way of 
reading  often learned in college -it's likely to rub off on you," he said his  
research. 
The research piggybacks off of another recent study, which revealed that  
people become more religious as their level of education increases. 
The original study, conducted by Sociologist Philip Schwadel from the  
University of _Nebraska_ (http://www.christianpost.com/region/nebraska/) 
-Lincoln discovered that for each year of  education a person has, their 
likeliness 
to attend religious services increases  by 15 percent and their likeliness 
to read the Bible increases by 9 percent.  
Stroope says his study delves into the social dynamic of congregations  
influencing how people read and interpret Scripture. 
Schwadel says his research also details that religious Americans of high  
education "are opposed to what may be perceived as religion being forced on  
secular society." 
“We have to be very careful about making assumptions about what a person  
believes, and how they practice, or how the role of faith and spirituality 
may  play in their life simply based on the term they use to identify 
themselves,” he  said. 
Somewhat ironically, Stroope's research concludes that those of high  
education impose their beliefs on others a lot more than they may realize. 
Stroope will present his research the Association for the Sociology of  
Religion's 73rd annual conference in Las Vegas on August  20.

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