The Great Lent Challenge: “Results”

Wow – this is quite late. Here are some basic results, although, as has been pointed out many times, this is far from statistically accurate or in any way a valid experiment.

There were only 7 completed responses to the survey, and the results go something like this:

Background:
5 Female, 2 Male; 6 UK, 1 US; 6 Christians, 1 agnostic (nominally marked as Christian, but neutral in belief in God and neutral in following their prescribed set of beliefs). All but one prayed for more than 25 of the 40 (the one being one of the Christians, not the agnostic)

Prayer:
There was a spread between the different options for what to pray for. The Christians believed that God would answer (although one was unsure it would happen in this timescale). The Christians all felt they had an answer, although only one thought it was “complete”. The agnostic gave it a -1, so not a complete opposite, but worse than a no answer. Interestingly, the number of times people prayed did not seem to have much effect – the person who prayed the least seemed to have one of the more answered prayers.

Changes:
The Christians had no change in their belief in God, but a little more faith in prayer. The agnostic had less faith in God, and less faith in prayer. The Christians would definitely keep praying, whereas the agnostic stayed neutral.

I’ll leave the rest of you to formulate your own opinions on this, as you probably would anyway. Thanks to those who took part (especially those who filled out the survey).

mrBen

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