Most and Least Bible-Minded Cities in America Barna Research Group
The Top Bible-Minded Cities in 2017
For the second year in a row, Chattanooga, TN (50%) is the most
Bible-minded city in America. In fact, since 2013, Chattanooga has won
every year with the exception of 2015, when it was runner up to
Birmingham / Anniston / Tuscaloosa, AL. This year, those very same
cities in Alabama take the second spot (49%), very close behind
Chattanooga. Roanoke / Lynchburg, VA (48%) take the third spot, then
it’s back to Tennessee again, with the Tri-Cities area (48%) coming in
at fourth place. The South continues to represent well with Shreveport,
LA (47%) taking fifth place. In fact, the next five are also located in
the Southern “Bible belt.” Charlotte, NC: (46%), Springfield, MO (46%),
Little Rock / Pine Bluff, AR (44%), Knoxville, TN (44%), Greenville /
Spartanburg / Anderson, SC / Asheville, NC (44%) wrap up the top 10 most
Bible-minded cities in 2017.
The Least Bible-Minded Cities in 2017
At the other end of the spectrum, Albany / Schenectady / Troy,
NY (10%) is the least Bible-minded city in America—also for the second
year in a row. The New England area takes second and third positions,
with Boston, MA / Manchester, NH (11%) as the runner-up, and Providence,
RI / New Bedford, MA (12%), a previous least Bible-minded city in
America (2013, 2014, 2015), close behind. Cedar Rapids / Waterloo, IA
(14%) is the only Midwest city in the top five, slightly ahead of
another NY state contender, Buffalo (14%). The East coast and the West
make up the remainder of the top 10 spots, including Las Vegas, NV
(14%), San Francisco / Oakland / San Jose, CA (15%), Hartford / New
Haven, CT (16%), Salt Lake City, UT (17%), then back to NY again with
the biggest city in America, New York, NY (17%) sliding into tenth
place.
What Is a Bible-Minded City?
Each year, Barna and American Bible Society rank the nation’s
top media markets based on their level of Bible engagement. Individuals
considered to be Bible-minded are those who report reading the Bible in
the past week and who strongly assert the Bible is accurate in the
principles it teaches. This definition captures action and
attitude—those who both engage and esteem the Christian scriptures. The
rankings thus reflect an overall openness or resistance to the Bible in
various U.S. cities. Nationally, only 25 percent of the population is
considered Bible-minded.
About the Research
The data reported in this research are based upon telephone and online interviews with nationwide
random samples of 76,505 adults conducted over a 10-year period, ending
in April 2016. The maximum margin of sampling error associated with the
aggregate sample is ±0.4 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.
Respondents who report reading the Bible within the past seven days and
who agree strongly in the accuracy of the Bible are classified as
“Bible-minded.”
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