Majority of Australians believe in God, miracles
December 19th, 2009 - 6:03 pm ICT by ANI ( 2 comments )Sydney, Dec 19 (ANI): A new poll conducted has found that a majority of Australians believe in God or a similar universal spirit, miracles, heaven, life after death and angels.
The findings by a Nielsen poll showed that Aussies are willing to mix and match religious faith with belief in other phenomena.
The research showed that Australians are more religious, with 68 percent believing in God or a universal spirit, and 50 percent saying religion is important or very important in their lives.
But atheists and agnostics also had a strong showing in the national survey of 1000 respondents, taken early this week.
Almost one in four Australians (24 per cent) do not believe in either God or a universal spirit, and 7 per cent are not sure or say they “don’t know’”.
Women have more faith than men, with 56 per cent saying they believe in God and 13 per cent saying they believe in a universal spirit, compared with 43 per cent and 11 per cent of men, respectively.
Most people with faith hold it strongly, with 88 per cent saying they were either absolutely or fairly certain in their belief.
Christianity, generally considered to be on the decline, was still the largest faith, with 64 per cent of believers nominating it as the religion they most identified with.
The next biggest was Buddhism, at 2 per cent, followed by Hinduism and Islam, which each had 1 per cent of believers.
Judaism accounted for less than half of 1 per cent of believers.
But God is not the only thing Australians believe in. They place their faith in a range of other phenomena. For example, 63 per cent believe in miracles, and 53 per cent believe in life after death.
Angels are also popular, with 51 per cent of respondents saying they believe in them, slightly more than the 49 per cent who hold faith in psychic powers such as ESP.
While 56 per cent of people believe in heaven, only 38 per cent believe in hell, and belief in God is much more popular than faith in the devil, with only 37 per cent of respondents believing in Satan.
The findings show women are much more likely to believe in God and other phenomena than men, with the exception of UFOs: while 34 per cent of Australians believe UFOs exist, men are more likely than women to do so.
Thirty-four per cent of Australians believe in UFOs and 22 per cent think witches exist.
Nearly half of the population believe in psychic powers such as extrasensory perception, while 41 per cent believe in astrology.
But the difference between the sexes is stark. Men (32 per cent) were almost twice as likely as women (17 per cent) to say they did not believe in God or a universal spirit, and women were far less likely than men to classify themselves as atheists - 12 per cent of women compared with 20 per cent of men.
The 50 per cent of the population classified as “Christian” were also asked about their specific beliefs in Jesus.
Ninety-four per cent believed he was a real person who lived 2000 years ago. And although 91 per cent believed he was the Son of God, only 72 per cent think the mother of Jesus Christ was a virgin.
Nearly a quarter of us believe the biblical account of the origin of human beings over the Darwinian account taught in schools and universities.
Forty-two per cent of people believe in a wholly scientific explanation for the origins of life and 32 per cent believe in an evolutionary process “guided by God”.
The Anglican Archbishop of Sydney, Peter Jensen, said the poll results showed the religious instinct was universal.
“‘That faith is important or very important to at least half of the population is what we have always suspected - an ‘iceberg effect’ that people may not necessarily speak up about their faith but it is very significant to their lives,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted him as saying.
The fact that the Christian faith was in the clear majority among believers was “no cause for triumphalism”.
“I would reflect rather on why this is not translating into church membership,” he said.
There was no denying that increased numbers of people described themselves as non-believers, but this was no boon to the atheist cause, he said.
“‘The decline of Christian faith does not lead to lack of religious belief; it just opens the way for superstition,” he added. (ANI)
- Superstitious beliefs more common than thought - Oct 30, 2010
- 25 percent of adult Brits have seen ghosts - Mar 04, 2011
- Hindus, Muslims willing to tie the knot outside their religions - Jul 20, 2009
- UK kids as young as 4 to be taught atheism - Mar 30, 2011
- Hindu & Jewish leaders suggest making religion vibrant and challenging - Sep 29, 2010
- Australian distrust of Muslims widespread: Rights report - Mar 21, 2011
- Hindus back Pope's dictum that 'world needs God' - Jan 08, 2011
- Atheists' sex lives better than believers' - May 20, 2011
- Hindus denounce Pope for being offensive to atheists - Sep 17, 2010
- Intuitive thinking may explain greater faith in god - Sep 21, 2011
- Christian faith facing sharp decline in UK, says study - Dec 16, 2009
- World's religions would survive discovery of aliens, suggests survey - Jan 27, 2010
- Indonesian arrested for not believing in god - Jan 22, 2012
- Religion 'can help you live 14 years longer' - Apr 24, 2011
- Hindus laud Vatican for effort in uniting believers & non-believers - Jan 31, 2011
Tags: agnostics, atheists, australians, belief in god, believing in god, buddhism, death and angels, death angels, hinduism, judaism, life after death, miracles, national survey, new poll, nielsen, phenomena, psychic powers, religious faith, respondents, universal spirit
June 6th, 2010 at 11:51 pm
Religious Australians (70%) is decreasing, following England’s good example.
November 12th, 2010 at 9:44 am
The new generations are much more smart. They are intelligent, love sciences and walk side by side with the technological advances. So, there is no way for them to look back at primitive ways ancients conducted their lives fenced by superstition.