Britain's Queen Elizabeth smiles as she greets well wishers on her 90th
birthday during a walkabout in Windsor, west of London, Britain April 21, 2016.
Those who identify themselves as "Christians" but do not
believe in the physical resurrection of Jesus Christ cannot really be
Christians, the former chaplain to Queen Elizabeth II argued.
"As with so many things, the key
is in the definition of terms. Discovering the evidence for the resurrection
having taken place to be wholly compelling is one of the things that makes you
a Christian; ergo, if you haven't, you are not."
Ashenden' comments come after a
recently released ComRes study, conducted among 2,010 British
adults, found that half of the respondents did not believe in the resurrection,
and only 31 percent of "Christian" respondents and 57 percent of
"active Christians" (who attend religious services at least once a
month) agreed that it happened exactly as described in the Bible.
"To ask an adult to believe in
the resurrection the way they did when they were at Sunday school simply won't
do and that's true of much of the key elements of the Christian faith,"
commented Lorraine Cavanagh, the acting general secretary for Modern Church,
which promotes a liberal Christian theology.
At the same time, nine percent of
nonreligious respondents said they believed in the resurrection.
The Bishop of Manchester, the Rt. Rev.
David Walker, suggested that the survey shows that even some nonchurchgoers
"hold core Christian beliefs."
"Alongside them it finds
surprisingly high levels of religious belief among those who follow no specific
religion, often erroneously referred to as secularists or atheists,"
Walker said.
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