Democratizing access to the best data on religion since 1997
US RELIGION
US RELIGION

Statistics on Beliefs Topic:



Scroll to Demographic Pattern Section:

Age
Education
Gender
Region
Religion
Worship attendance

View all Statistics on Beliefs Topics

Search Beliefs Statistics


Belief in Satan - Belief Statistics Topic

Q23a. In your opinion, does each of the following exist? The Devil/Satan (DEVIL)
Results weighted by WEIGHT (Baylor Religion Survey, Wave II (2007) - Instructional Dataset)


Belief in Satan by Age

 18-2930-3940-4950-5960-6970+TotalMissing
Absolutely not9.5%
25
12.6%
40
11.3%
38
12.8%
38
13.2%
27
12.8%
23
12.0%
191
0
Probably not16.7%
44
14.8%
47
14.9%
50
16.8%
50
8.8%
18
16.8%
30
15.0%
239
0
Probably20.1%
53
21.7%
69
18.5%
62
19.5%
58
20.1%
41
16.2%
29
19.5%
312
0
Absolutely53.8%
142
50.9%
162
55.2%
185
51.0%
152
57.8%
118
54.2%
97
53.6%
856
0
Missing83912915560
Total 100%
264
100%
318
100%
335
100%
298
100%
204
100%
179
 
1598

Belief in Satan by Education

 No high school diplomaHigh school graduateSome collegeTrade/technical/vocational trainingCollege graduatePostgraduate work/degreeTotalMissing
Absolutely not5.2%
6
10.1%
45
8.1%
35
11.4%
19
18.1%
38
22.2%
44
11.9%
187
5
Probably not13.8%
16
11.9%
53
12.5%
54
12.7%
21
17.6%
37
25.8%
51
14.8%
232
6
Probably24.1%
28
17.7%
79
23.1%
100
18.7%
31
17.6%
37
16.2%
32
19.6%
307
4
Absolutely56.9%
66
60.3%
269
56.4%
244
57.2%
95
46.7%
98
35.9%
71
53.7%
843
15
Missing8197296865
Total 100%
116
100%
446
100%
433
100%
166
100%
210
100%
198
 
1569

Belief in Satan by Gender

 MaleFemaleTotalMissing
Absolutely not15.1%
114
9.2%
78
12.0%
192
0
Probably not17.4%
131
12.8%
108
14.9%
239
0
Probably20.0%
151
19.1%
161
19.5%
312
0
Absolutely47.5%
359
58.9%
497
53.5%
856
0
Missing2135560
Total 100%
755
100%
844
 
1599

Belief in Satan by Region

 EastMid-WestSouthWestTotalMissing
Absolutely not16.2%
57
8.0%
30
8.0%
41
17.8%
64
12.0%
192
0
Probably not19.1%
67
14.3%
54
9.6%
49
19.2%
69
15.0%
239
0
Probably23.1%
81
23.1%
87
14.9%
76
18.6%
67
19.5%
311
0
Absolutely41.6%
146
54.6%
206
67.5%
344
44.4%
160
53.6%
856
0
Missing7132214560
Total 100%
351
100%
377
100%
510
100%
360
 
1598

Belief in Satan by Religion

 Evangelical ProtestantBlack ProtestantMainline ProtestantCatholicOtherNoneTotalMissing
Absolutely not2.1%
11
0.0%
0
9.6%
30
3.8%
13
24.4%
30
54.3%
95
11.6%
179
13
Probably not5.8%
30
4.3%
3
20.4%
64
17.5%
60
25.2%
31
25.7%
45
15.1%
233
5
Probably14.3%
74
4.3%
3
27.1%
85
28.4%
97
12.2%
15
11.4%
20
19.1%
294
14
Absolutely77.8%
404
91.4%
64
43.0%
135
50.3%
172
38.2%
47
8.6%
15
54.2%
837
13
Missing1131711451015
Total 100%
519
100%
70
100%
314
100%
342
100%
123
100%
175
 
1543

Belief in Satan by Worship attendance

 Less than once a yearOnce or twice a yearSeveral times a year1-3 times a monthAbout weeklyWeekly or moreTotalMissing
Absolutely not28.1%
137
11.8%
19
8.8%
15
5.5%
10
4.1%
4
0.6%
3
11.9%
188
5
Probably not26.1%
127
24.8%
40
15.8%
27
9.3%
17
5.1%
5
4.8%
23
15.1%
239
1
Probably23.0%
112
26.1%
42
28.1%
48
26.2%
48
26.5%
26
6.7%
32
19.5%
308
5
Absolutely22.8%
111
37.3%
60
47.4%
81
59.0%
108
64.3%
63
87.9%
421
53.5%
844
10
Missing15846217774
Total 100%
487
100%
161
100%
171
100%
183
100%
98
100%
479
 
1579

Notes

This file contains all of the cases and variables that are in the original 2007 Baylor Religion Survey, but is prepared for easier use in the classroom. Changes have been made in two areas. First, to avoid confusion when constructing tables or interpreting basic analysis, all missing data codes have been set to system missing. Second, many of the continuous variables have been categorized into fewer categories, and added as additional variables to the file.

The Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion (ISR) received a major three-year grant from the John M. Templeton Foundation, to conduct a nationally representative multi-year study of religious values, practices, and behaviors, with a specific focus on consumption of religious goods and services. Using a host of new survey items that improve upon previous work, the study will yield new data to more systematically explore and better understand what sometimes appears to be an ambiguous relationship between trust, civic engagement, and religion. In partnering with the Gallup Organization, we believe this cutting-edge study has the potential to generate data that may well cause scholars to rethink our currently used measures of religious commitment or devoutness, as well as various theories linking the influence of religion to civic engagement, spiritual capital, and many other important social and behavioral outcomes.

Our Sponsors

Our Affiliates

US RELIGION
WORLD RELIGION
DATA ARCHIVE
RESEARCH
TEACHING
CONGREGATIONS
ABOUT
© 2023 The Association of Religion Data Archives. All rights reserved.