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Want to understand Black experience? Learn about African American faith, survey finds

RNS

Most religious Black Americans say understanding the role of religion in the lives of Black people is essential for understanding the African American experience, a new Barna Group survey finds.

Four out of five Black adults in the US who have ties to a faith group agree to some extent (41 per cent “strongly” and 38 per cent “somewhat”) that “to understand the African American experience, it is necessary to understand the role of religious faith in the lives of Black people”.

US Georgia Macon First Baptist Church

 In this Sunday, 10th July, 2016 file photo, a parishioner at First Baptist Church, a predominantly African-American congregation, leaves after a worship service in Macon, Georigia. PICTURE: AP Photo/Branden Camp/File photo.

The percentage of religious Black Americans who agree with that statement has grown to 79 per cent today from 71 per cent in 1996.

The findings, released on Thursday, are the second of several planned reports from Barna’s State of the Black Church project. The first, released in January, found that most attendees of Black churches say African Americans generally feel politically powerless, but those worshippers also see Black congregations as a source of comfort and control.

The results are based on responses from some 1,800 Black American adults, including more than 800 who attend a Black church. The California research firm conducted the survey in the spring of 2020.

Half of Black church attendees – defined in the study as African Americans who attend a majority Black church – agree “strongly” that faith is a crucial dimension of the Black experience. Additionally, almost four in 10 (38 per cent) agree “somewhat” about that.

But a larger percentage of Black church attendees – 69 per cent – agree that pastors of Black churches are the Black community’s most important leaders. A lower percentage – 63 per cent – agreed with that statement in 1996.

Not unexpectedly, a higher percentage of Black church attendees (77 per cent) agree in 2020 about the role of these pastors in Black communities. But Barna noted that “perhaps surprisingly,” higher percentages of some young Black church attendees agree “strongly” compared to Boomers.

The study found that Black church attendees tend to have stronger positive views about the Black church than African American adults in general. When asked, “When you hear ‘The Black Church’ mentioned, what is your immediate response?” Black church attendees selected “important” and “safe” most often. But about one-third of the general Black population chose “old-fashioned,” and about one-fifth chose “stifling.”

There was a noticeable drop in the percentage of respondents who said church involvement was “desirable.” While 90 per cent of Black adults agreed with that description in 1996, only 74 per cent agreed in 2020. The question did not specify Black church involvement, but a higher percentage of Black church attendees (94 per cent) said in 2020 that they consider being active in a church to be desirable.

Two-thirds of Boomers (66 per cent) who are Black church attendees say church involvement is “very desirable,” compared to about half of younger Black church attendees (55 per cent Gen Xers, 51 per cent millennials, 46 per cent Gen Zers). All of the generational numbers are lower among the general Black adult population (49 per cent Boomers, 44 per cent Gen Xers, 39 per cent millennials, 41 per cent Gen Zers).

“The data speak to the challenge and opportunity facing Black faith leaders as they steward the influence of their Church communities for a new era,” the research firm said as it announced its second report.

The report was developed by Barna with partners including American Bible SocietyBlack Millennial CaféCompassion InternationalLead.NYC and Urban Ministries Inc.

The findings were based on an online survey, conducted between 22nd April and 6th May, of 1,083 U.S. Black adults and an additional 822 Black church attendees. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.3 percentage points.

The 1996 findings were based on a phone survey of 802 US Black adults and have a margin of error of 3.3 percentage points.

 

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