From: utzoo!decvax!yale-com!leichter Newsgroups: net.religion Title: "Gallup Poll Finds Image of Jesus Somewhat Murky" Article-I.D.: yale-com.1187 Posted: Tue Apr 5 10:43:06 1983 Received: Wed Apr 6 02:01:44 1983 >From the New York Times, 3 Apr 83, page 15. Americans hold strong beliefs about the spiritual and ethical mission of Jesus, but they diverge on many specific questions of His nature and significance, according to a new Gallup poll. A somewhat inconclusive pattern of results emerged from interviews with 1,509 Americans. While 42 percent said they believed Jesus as God in the form of a man, 62 percent expressed "no doubts" about the teaching that He would return to earth. Three-fourths agreed with the idea that Jesus was alive in heaven, but nearly three-fifths did not know that He delivered the Sermon on the Mount. The Gallup organization says the sample of 1,500 is usbject to a margin of error of two to three percentage points. Other results... [:] two out of three Americans think Jesus was divine in some form, and two-thirds held that a person must accept Jesus to gain eternal life. Nine of 10 said they had been influenced by Jesus as a moral and ethical tea- cher.... The report notes widespread commitment...[contrasting with]...unorthodox beliefs. ... [A] third believed ... everlasting life [attainable] without accepting Jesus, and nearly a fourth thought it possible to be a "true Christian" without believing Jesus was divine.... The report also underscores the apparent "low level of biblical knowledge".... [W]hen asked to name the Gospels, 46% were able to name all four, while 43% could name none. Nonetheless, 57% ... said they followed Jesus's example "very" or "fairly" closely. The poll was done for the Robert Schuller Ministries. Mr. Schuller is a television evangelist in Garden Grove, Calif. -- Jerry decvax!yale-comix!leichter leichter@yale