Recent Poll Shows Less Than 50% of Born Again Christians Believe Life Is Sacred

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Do you believe that all life is sacred? According to the American Worldview Inventory 2026 survey conducted by the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, less than 50% of born-again Christians believe in the sanctity of human life. While the study is shocking, The Christian Post defines “sanctity of life” as “the moral and religious belief that all human life is inherently sacred, holy, and possesses an immeasurable worth.”

With merely 44% identifying as Christians believing they will go to Heaven when they die because they’ve repented of their sins and named Jesus their Savior, one overarching question remains: why are so many others not so sure?

Based on a sample from over 2,000 adults collected in January 2026, only 27% of Americans view human life as sacred. 25% believe that thought life might not be sacred, noting: “it has great value because of the human ability to reason or to make a difference in the world,” researchers add.

The ACU researchers' study clarified that “The only people groups for which a majority view human life as sacred were people with a biblical worldview; biblically defined disciples; SAGE Cons [Spiritually Active, Governance Engaged Conservative Christians]; adults who attend either an evangelical or Pentecostal church; and individuals who are consistently pro-life."

Surprisingly, only 57% of American adults believe humans are created in the image of God and need redemption, despite 70% identifying as “Christian.” 52% believe abortion is morally acceptable, and 33% are pro-life.

“The survey also found that 90% of American adults hold syncretism as their dominant worldview instead of Biblical theism.” By definition, syncretism is the blending of distinct, often contradictory beliefs, cultures, and schools of thought to create one compiled system.

 

Since seeing the results, Barna Group, a leading market research firm that specializes in faith, culture, and leadership, raised deep concern for those who claim to profess true Christian faith:

“Even among regular churchgoers or people who say they are deeply committed to their faith,” their objective “is to experience life on their terms, in the quest for control, popularity, comfort, or pleasure.”

“Americans meander through life with a broad assortment of vague religious beliefs and volatile religious behaviors. That religious amnesia has produced a nation where the dominant worldview— adopted by nine out of 10 adults—is Syncretism, not biblical Christianity,” Barna argues. “Dismissing the importance of biblical truth principles and a holy lifestyle has led to tens of millions of regular church attenders settling in as notional Christians—people who embrace the label and the idea of Christianity but refuse to study, meditate, work, and sacrifice in ways that cultivate genuine Christ-like lives.”

Photo Credit: ©Suhyeon Choi/Unsplash

amber ginter headshotAmber Ginter is a teacher-turned-author who loves Jesus, her husband Ben, and granola. Growing up Amber looked for faith and mental health resources and found none. Today, she offers hope for young Christians struggling with mental illness that goes beyond simply reading your Bible and praying more. Because you can love Jesus and still suffer from anxiety. You can download her top faith and mental health resources for free to help navigate books, podcasts, videos, and influencers from a faith lens perspective. Visit her website at amberginter.com.

 

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