Barna released results from a survey last week that were based on a study they conducted on spiritual gifts. Here were some of the interesting points:
- 68% of Americans who say they are Christian have heard of spiritual gifts (here in the northeast it was 58%)
- Teaching was the most commonly claimed gift, at 9%. Service (8%) and Faith (7%) were next in line
- The gift of leadership was mentioned by just 2%
- Since 1995, the gift of encouragement grew in percentage (from 2% to 6%) and the gift of evangelism shrunk (from 4% to 1%)
- 21% of the gifts mentioned are not actual spiritual gift and included things such as a sense of humor, singing, health, life, happiness, patience, a job, a house, compromise, premonition, creativity and clairvoyance.
I'm surprised that leadership was only 2% but I wasn't surprised to find that evangelism dropped from 4% to 1%. Many Christian leaders will push back against that and say that it should be more. I would agree, but only to an extent.
Apparently there were many more people who claimed to be a leader but did not believe they had the spiritual gift of leadership. I think part of the problem in the Church is that too many people without the gift of leadership are leading in a big way, and too few people with the gift of leadership are enabled to lead in a big way.
