
In the Market with Janet Parshall Hour 2: News and Views
Nov 4, 2025
Dr. Adam Rasmussen, Dean at Arizona Christian University, discusses a revealing survey on American worldviews and the shifting definitions of sin that are creating societal turbulence. He highlights how these changes contrast with biblical morality. Todd Nettleton from The Voice of the Martyrs shares harrowing stories of faith from persecuted Christians, emphasizing the necessity of ongoing prayer for those facing life-threatening situations. They explore the impact of anti-conversion laws in India and the plight of Christians in Nigeria, urging listeners to engage and advocate.
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Biblical View Of Sin Is Now A Minority
- Fewer than one in five U.S. adults hold a consistently biblical view of sin across multiple behaviors.
- This gap signals widespread confusion and ambivalence about what counts as sin.
Culture Shapes Church Views On Borderline Sins
- Many Americans split on borderline sins like abortion, sexual fantasies, and tax cheating, with about half calling them wrong.
- Self-identified Christians often mirror these mixed results rather than showing near-uniform rejection.
Demographic Growth Drives Moral Shift
- Growing demographic segments (Gen Z, the nones, certain ethnic groups) often reject biblical morality, driving cultural change.
- If the church fails to proclaim biblical truth, these shifts accelerate social turbulence.





