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Biblical Worldview among Adults Remains at 4% as Generational Crisis Grows More Severe

March 26, 2026

According to the latest research from Dr. George Barna and the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University (ACU), only 4% of American adults currently hold a biblical worldview — the same critically low number we saw in 2023. While the overall percentage has held steady, a deeper look at the newest report reveals something far more sobering.

Even among the small group known as “Integrated Disciples” — those with the highest level of biblical alignment — there are still massive gaps between what people believe and how they actually live. The study examines worldview across eight key categories, and the results are eye-opening.

Americans fare somewhat better in areas like Purpose and Calling (19% full alignment) and Faith Practices (16%). But alignment drops sharply in core theological areas such as God, Creation, and History (just 7%), and it hits rock bottom in Family and the Value of Life — where only 5% of all U.S. adults show full biblical alignment. Even more alarming: among Integrated Disciples, only 49% are living out biblical convictions on marriage, family, and the sanctity of life. In other words, many who claim to think biblically still struggle enormously to apply it consistently — especially in the very areas that shape the next generation.

To explore what this means for the church and our culture, ACU President Len Munsil joined Family Research Council Senior Fellow and guest host Jody Hice on Tuesday’s “Washington Watch.”

When asked about the importance of a biblical worldview, Munsil offered a clear definition: “Very simply, it’s thinking and living like Jesus. It’s taking what Scripture tells us as to how we should live our lives, how we can think about what happens in the world and the circumstances of life, and then applying biblical truth to every aspect of the way that we go through life.”

He went on to summarize this understanding in one word: discipleship. “We’re talking about not just somebody coming to faith in Christ,” he emphasized, “but actually learning how to walk out that faith over the course of a lifetime.”

Munsil explained that Arizona Christian University conducts the annual American Worldview Inventory in partnership with Dr. Barna. “[I]f you follow the work of Dr. Barna over decades, you know that we’ve been watching … the percentage of Americans who are thinking and living biblically as they go through life” — a percentage that has declined “precipitously” over time. “Just in the 1990s,” he recalled, “the number was 12% — about one in eight Americans. And then in recent years, it had dropped first to 6% and then to 4% in 2023. So … maybe that’s some good news that it hasn’t further declined since 2023, which was post COVID, but still, over three decades, it’s a third of what it was then.”

Yet rather than dwelling on the past, Munsil turned the focus to the future — and what he described as far more concerning: “the percentage drops with each generation.” Among Baby Boomers and Gen X, about 7% hold a biblical worldview. That number falls to just 2% for Millennials — 1 in 50. And for Gen Z (ages 18–22), it plummets to a staggering 1% — only one in 100 — of Americans who “are thinking and living biblically.”

Munsil warned: “We’re seeing a generational decline that is very significant.”

The newest study doesn’t just measure beliefs — it examines whether people are actually living them out. “We see huge gaps even in the church,” Munsil noted, “even among those who are integrated disciples, which is the highest level of biblical worldview. … We struggle to actually live out that which we believe biblically.” And in the critical category of family and the value of life, “even among integrated disciples … less than half — 49% — are actually living out their commitment to family and the sanctity of life.”

Hice responded sincerely, stating, “I’ve heard this before. I’ve seen some of it. And I still, every time I hear it, it just is like a dagger in the heart.” He asked the question on many minds: “Where are we going?” Even merely considering Gen Z, it’s “just horrifying to think about what are their children going to be like and what are they going to believe? … [W]hy is this percentage so low in the church? What’s happening?”

“It’s fairly simple,” Munsil explained, observing that people are shaped far more by the culture they consume than by a weekly sermon. “[I]f you’re going through life and you’re taking in … dozens of hours every week of bad messaging from social media — from the music that you listen to, from the television shows or the movies that you watch … and then you want to offset that by going and sitting in church on Sunday and getting a 30-minute message, that’s going to be very difficult to do.”

“And so,” he continued, “it’s a factor of what are the influences? What are the things that are hitting us constantly with messaging? And frankly, we’re not doing enough. … [W]hatever we’ve been doing as the church, and I’m speaking broadly as the body of Christ, has not been working or we would not have these kinds of declines.”

Hice noted that this points to Christians having “succumbed to a secular culture,” adding that a single 30-minute sermon — even when it’s strong — is rarely enough, especially if it doesn’t directly address biblical worldview issues. He then asked the crucial question: “What needs to happen on a national scale for us to move the needle here?”

For Munsil, the greatest opportunity lies with the youngest generations. “[T]he place that we can move the needle the furthest and the most is with young people, especially with children,” he argued. Citing Barna’s decades of research, he reminded listeners that a person’s worldview is largely formed by age 13. That makes children and teens the most fruitful focus for churches, Christian schools, and homeschool families.

Hice voiced the deep concern many feel: “[W]hen you say [with] Gen Z we’re looking at 1%, that says to me we are on the verge. We are just this far away from a total disappearance of biblical worldview values in that entire generation. And that’s horrifying to me.” Munsil agreed and issued a clear call to action: Christians must “pour biblical truth into them in ways that will stand the test of time as they come up against a very aggressively secular culture that … is lying to young people about who we are, where we came from, and … what the meaning of life is.”

“We’ve got to do better at reaching young people,” he concluded. “[F]or those of us who are older, what we have to do is pour into institutions, into Christian schools, and we have to make sure that our churches are focused on children’s ministry much more than they typically are if we’re going to see a turnaround in future generations — which I not only believe is possible, I think is likely to happen.”

Sarah Holliday is a reporter at The Washington Stand.



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