Few Protestant Churchgoers Read the Bible Daily - Lifeway Research (2024)

Few Protestant Churchgoers Read the Bible Daily - Lifeway Research (1)

By Aaron Earls

Christians say the Bible is God’s Word, but even among Protestant churchgoers only a third spend time reading it every day.

The 2019 Discipleship Pathway Assessment study from Nashville-based Lifeway Research found those who regularly attend Protestant churches are inconsistent in their reading and thinking about Scripture.

The study identifies Bible engagement as one of eight signposts that consistently show up in the lives of growing Christians.

“This research asked churchgoers about many biblical characteristics to see which actions, beliefs and desires are present in the lives of followers of Christ,” said Scott McConnell, executive director of Lifeway Research. “Among them, Bible reading was one of the most predictive of spiritual maturity.”

Regular Bible reading

A third of Americans who attend a Protestant church regularly (32%) say they read the Bible personally every day. Around a quarter (27%) say they read it a few times a week.

Fewer say they only read it once a week (12%), a few times a month (11%) or once a month (5%). Close to 1 in 8 (12%) admit they rarely or never read the Bible.

A 2016 Lifeway Research study found 1 in 5 Americans said they had read all of the Bible at least once. However, more than half said they have read little or none of it.

In the latest study, churchgoers aged 50 to 64 are more likely to say they read the Bible every day (35%) than adults under 50 (30%).

Churchgoers in the western U.S. (37%) are more likely to be everyday Bible readers than those in the Midwest (31%) or South (31%).

Hispanics are the ethnic group most likely to say they read Scripture every day (40%).

Those who attend church four times a month or more (34%) are more likely to read every day than those who attend less frequently (27%).

Evangelical Protestants (36%) and black Protestants (30%) are also more likely than mainline Protestants (20%) to say they read Scripture every day.

“Jesus’ prayer for His followers was that they would be sanctified by the truth of God’s Word,” said McConnell. “It’s not surprising that the lives of those who spend time reading the Bible look more like Christ.”

Impact of regular Bible reading

In a 2016 study of churchgoing Protestant parents, Lifeway Research found regular Bible reading as a child was the biggest factor in predicting the spiritual health of young adults.

The latest survey finds Bible reading as an adult has similar far-reaching effects.

Lifeway Research asked churchgoers if they think about biblical truths throughout the day and if they miss time with God if they go several days without reading the Bible. Responses to those questions are closely tied to how regularly churchgoers read the Bible.

When asked if they find themselves thinking about biblical truths throughout the day, 32% of Protestant churchgoers strongly agree. In total, almost 7 in 10 at least somewhat agree (69%).

Twelve percent disagree and 20% aren’t sure.

Women (33%) are more likely than men (29%) to strongly agree.

Churchgoers 65 and older (27%) are the age demographic least likely to strongly agree, while Hispanics (52%) are the ethnic group most likely to strongly agree.

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Evangelical Protestants (35%) and black Protestants (33%) are more likely than mainline Protestants (18%) to strongly agree.

Among those Protestant churchgoers who say they read the Bible every day, 51% say they find themselves thinking about biblical truths during the day.

For those who read the Bible a few times a week, 32% say the same. That falls to 20% of those who read Scripture once a week to a few times a month and 9% of those who read it once a month or less.

“This is a case in which the action of reading the Bible influences one’s thoughts,” McConnell said. “This mindfulness on God’s truths has additional benefits of influencing other actions and speech.”

A third of Protestant churchgoers (33%) strongly agree they desperately miss the time with God if they go several days without reading the Bible. Almost 3 in 5 at least somewhat agree (58%).

Around 1 in 5 disagree (20%) and 22% neither agree nor disagree.

Women (36%) are more likely to strongly agree than men (30%). Hispanic churchgoers (44%) are more likely to strongly agree than African American (36%) and white churchgoers (31%).

Those 65 and older are the least likely age group to strongly agree they miss the time with God when they go several days without reading the Bible (27%).

Evangelical Protestants (38%) and black Protestants (33%) are more likely to strongly agree than mainline Protestants (19%).

The more regular the Bible reading habit, the more likely churchgoers are to say they miss that time with God.

Among Protestant churchgoers who read the Bible every day, 65% strongly agree. That number is cut in half among those who read Scripture a few times a week (32%). It continues to decline among those who read it once a week or a few times a month (13%) and among those who read it once a month or less (6%).

“One indication that reading God’s Word is beneficial is how much readers miss it after not reading for a few days,” said McConnell. “This fits with the Bible’s own description of itself as being ‘living and effective.’”

Bible engagement is one of eight signposts measured in the Discipleship Pathway Assessment and addressed in Lifeway’s Bible Studies for Life curriculum. For more information, visit DiscipleshipPathwayAssessment.com.

Few Protestant Churchgoers Read the Bible Daily - Lifeway Research (3)

Aaron Earls

@WardrobeDoor

Aaron is the senior writer at Lifeway Research.

    Methodology:
    The online survey of 2,500 Protestant churchgoers was conducted Jan. 14–29, 2019. Respondents were screened to include those who identified as Protestant or non-denominational and attend religious services at least once a month. Quotas and slight weights were used to balance gender, age, region, ethnicity, income and denominational affiliation. The completed sample is 2,500 surveys. The sample provides 95% confidence that the sampling error does not exceed plus or minus 2.0%. Margins of error are higher in sub-groups.

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    Few Protestant Churchgoers Read the Bible Daily - Lifeway Research (2024)

    FAQs

    How many Protestants read the Bible? ›

    Share this chart:
    Religious traditionAt least once a weekSeveral times a year
    Mainline Protestant30%12%
    Mormon77%3%
    Muslim46%11%
    Orthodox Christian29%13%
    8 more rows

    How many Christians read the Bible every day? ›

    A survey from 2021 found that 11 percent of Americans read the Bible daily.

    Why do Protestant bibles have fewer books? ›

    Following the Protestant Reformation, Protestants Confessions have usually excluded the books which other Christian traditions consider to be deuterocanonical books from the biblical canon (the canon of the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox churches differs among themselves as well), most early ...

    What did Martin Luther say about reading the Bible? ›

    Luther read the Bible through at least twice every year. He said, “If you picture the Bible to be a mighty tree and every word a little branch, I have shaken every one of these branches because I wanted to know what it was and what it meant.”( Luther's Works, vol. 54, 165.)

    Do Protestants read the Holy Bible? ›

    This is reflected in the practice of many Protestant Christians upon reading the Bible. It is also reflected in the focus of church services on the sermon, when the minister or pastor explains a Bible passage and how it applies in the daily life of the Christian.

    What percentage of Catholics read the Bible? ›

    For example, a recent survey by the Pew Research Center found that 70% of Catholics say they read the Bible at least once a week. This is more than Evangelicals read their Bibles.

    Are you supposed to read the Bible daily? ›

    Reading the Bible on a regular and consistent basis has several benefits. First, the Bible shows us God's character and provides us God's revelation of himself to his people. In each section of the Bible, we see God's holy, unchanging, faithful, gracious and loving character.

    Who has memorized the entire Bible? ›

    Tom Meyer (Bible Memory Man)

    Do evangelicals read the Bible? ›

    In their individual and corporate worship practices, evangelicals expect the Bible to provide guidance for their daily life (Guhin, 2020; Malley, 2004). This expectation drives evangelicals to look for relevance in scripture and to fill interpretive gaps between text and application (Bielo, 2009; Luhrmann, 2012).

    What books did the Protestants remove from the Bible? ›

    Protestant Canon

    In the 16th century, Martin Luther argued that many of the received texts of the New Testament lacked the authority of the Gospels, and therefore proposed removing a number of books from the New Testament, including Hebrews, James, Jude, and the Book of Revelation.

    Why was the book of Mary removed from the Bible? ›

    The Gospel of Mary is an early Christian text deemed unorthodox by the men who shaped the nascent Catholic church, was excluded from the canon, and was subsequently erased from the history of Christianity along with most narratives that demonstrated women's contributions to the early Christian movement.

    How many books did Martin Luther remove from the Bible? ›

    Martin Luther removed seven books from the Bible because he believed they did not align with his understanding of biblical doctrine. His decision questioned the canonicity and inspiration of these books, creating a lasting impact on the Protestant Bible.

    What version of the Bible do Lutherans follow? ›

    English Standard Version (ESV, Word-For-Word)

    Our national church body, the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod has chosen the ESV as its official translation.

    Do Lutherans believe in a literal interpretation of the Bible? ›

    Luther identified that the Scriptures had one sense, the literal or natural sense. This did not mean that he was a complete literalist. For example, he stated that figures of speech are meant to be taken figuratively.

    Why did Martin Luther change the Bible? ›

    Luther's vernacular Bible broke the domination and unity of the Roman Catholic Church in Western Europe. He had claimed Holy Scripture to be the sole authority, and through his translation every individual would be able to abide by its authority, and might nullify his or her need for a monarchical pope.

    What percentage of people read the Bible? ›

    While 77% of U.S. adults have a Bible, the percentage of adults who are “Bible Users” – people who read the Bible on their own outside of a church setting at least 3-4 times a year – dropped 11 percentage points to 39% in 2022.

    What 7 books did the Protestants remove from the Bible? ›

    specifically, "The Wisdom of Solomon," "Judith," "Tobit," "The History of the Dragon" [Bel and the Dragon], "The History of Susanna," "The Maccabees," and "The Wisdom of Sirach." For we judge these also to be with the other genuine Books of Divine Scripture genuine parts of Scripture.

    Which Bible has more books Catholic or Protestant? ›

    So the Protestant Bible is sixty-six books and the Roman Catholic Bible is eighty books. But here's the simple truth: the Protestant Bible did not remove these fourteen books. It's very much the opposite. The Roman Catholic Church added the Apocrypha to the canon, and it didn't do so until 1546.

    Is the King James Bible Protestant or Catholic? ›

    Do Catholics use the King James Bible? Protestant Christians translated the King James Bible for Protestant Christians. Catholics do not use the King James Bible in Mass, though there are no restrictions on them reading that version of the Bible. The early Catholic translation is called the Douay-Rheims translation.

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