The Iona Institute for Religion and Society, an Irish think tank, recently conducted a survey of religious knowledge. The Irish Times reports the results:
Only 5 per cent, or one in 20, of 15 to 24-year-olds could quote the first of the 10 Commandments when interviewed for a new survey in Ireland.
Almost one-third (32 per cent) could not say where Jesus was born and more than one-third (35 per cent) did not know what is celebrated at Easter.
These are among the findings, published today, of an opinion poll conducted last December and January by Lansdowne Market Research for the (Catholic) Iona Institute and the (Protestant) Evangelical Alliance Ireland group. The survey involved a representative sample of 950 people nationwide.
The poll on Christian teachings found that such knowledge was highest among those over 65 and lowest in the 15-24 age group.
The survey found that only 52 per cent of young people could name Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as the authors of the gospels, while only 38 per cent knew that there were four gospels.
Fewer than half of the 15 to 24-year-olds surveyed (47 per cent) could name "Father, Son and Holy Spirit/Ghost" as the three persons of the Trinity, while only 48 per cent were able to name Genesis as the first book of the Bible. Thirty-eight per cent were aware that there were seven Sacraments, but just 15 per cent knew that "transubstantiation" (whereby bread and wine is transformed into the body and blood of Christ) was the term used to describe what takes place at the Eucharist during Mass.
Only one in 10 of the young people surveyed was able to say that the Immaculate Conception referred to Mary, the mother of Jesus, being free of original sin. In fairness, less than one-third – 32 per cent – of the over-65s got that one right, compared to an average of 19 per cent for the survey as a whole.
David Quinn, director of the Iona Institute, said the findings of the survey indicated that the level of Christian knowledge among young Irish people was "alarmingly low".
David Quinn adds that the results are particularly disappointing because the majority of schools in Ireland are Catholic.
Summary here. (both pdf files)
Meanwhile, on our side of the pond, and, in my mind, related…US Weekly describes porn star Jenna Jameson as a "devout Catholic."