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Haunted Houses and Meaningful Conversations

Thursday October 30, 2008   ~   15 Comments

hauntedhouse.jpgWhile we survey on a lot of serious topics here at LifeWay Research, we thought we would mix it up a little with a question touching on a topic that comes up during Halloween (or, as we call it around my office, Reformation Day). The topic: "haunted houses."

The belief that such places exist seems to be widespread (just watch the cable shows to catch the ghosts therein). Many churches have seen this as an opportunity, planning their own "house," calling it (subtly) "Hell house."

It is very interesting to me that people are still quite superstitious and regularly report a high level of belief in things such as haunted houses. (Of course, secular people would consider me superstitious for being an evangelical.)

On to the research...

As part of another project, we surveyed 1580 Americans with the following question: "I would be willing to spend the night in a house that was widely reported to be haunted." We were interested in the fear level that people have towards the "haunted," much like there are tribes throughout the two-thirds world who fear a hex or a curse.

Overall, 44 percent agreed they would be willing to spend the night. However, a remarkable high 47 percent disagreed. In other words, almost half of the random Americans we surveyed would be unwilling.

A few interesting results standout:

54% of males either somewhat or strongly agreed they would be willing to spend the night while only 34% of females agreed.

Interestingly, the age group most agreeable to spending the night in a "haunted house" -- those age 65 or older with 51% indicating they would do so. The age group least likely to do so was the 25-34 year olds with only 38 percent agreeing with the statement.

African Americans (72 percent) and Hispanics (53 percent) were disagreeable to the idea with 38% of Caucasians indicating they would not be interested in spending the night.

Region of the country seemed significant in that those in the south were significantly less likely than those in other region to "agree":

-South - 39 %
-Midwest - 46 %
-Northeast - 47 %
-West - 49 %

Marital status, education level, and income did not seem to influence a person's response to the question. But age, gender, culture and region all appear important when answering this question. Feel free to share your theories in the comments.

It is remarkable to me that so many are afraid. Perhaps we are more like the hex-fearing tribe in the two-thirds world than we like to admit. Anthropologists tell us that superstition is a universal trait and (like religion) it is found in almost every culture.

OK, since it's Halloween here is a polling question for my blog readers (with a small twist on the question): If you knew a house in your neighborhood was widely reported to be haunted, would you be willing to spend the night there? Post your votes (yes/no) and your comments on why or why not in the comments section. And, how would you deal with its reputation as a believer in your community? Is there a way to help people who believe in the supernatural (but respond in fear) to instead know the one who conquers fear, death, hell, and the grave? How do we (or can we) move from superstition to meaningful conversation?

[If you are interested in more (serious) research on church and culture, check out LifeWay Research's subscription email newsletter at www.lifewayresearch.com/insights. It is a twice monthly email with first release research with practical ministry application tips. Today's email introduces data and analysis on what Americans said when asked if they agreed with the following statement: I believe it is possible to communicate with someone after they are dead.]

Disclaimer: LifeWay Research, Ed Stetzer, the trustees of LifeWay, Thom Rainer, Johnny Hunt, and other people walking by the building today in no way endorse, promote, or believe in Halloween, haunted houses, and other things associated with this holiday that churches call everything but the H-word. Also, no animals were harmed in the writing of this blog post. And, it was made with recycled electrons.

Posted on October 30, 2008 at 8:25 PM   ~   15 Comments

Tagged with: culture, gospel, halloween, haunted, research

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15 Comments

By David Drake on October 31, 2008 11:15 AM

No! I would not spend the night there! Not because I am superstitious but because I am a wimp! I also dont like the dark and corn fields...This is why we live in the city: Street Lights!

Then again maybe that is a spriitual problem on my part :).

D

By Lisa on October 31, 2008 11:30 AM

No way, no how, never.

By JT on October 31, 2008 11:39 AM

Ok, Ed, would you do it? I'm not so sure I would.

By Ed StetzerAuthor Profile Page on October 31, 2008 11:40 AM

David, I have lost all respect for you.

JT, I have.

Ed

By Dana R. on October 31, 2008 11:47 AM

No - I'm not too interested in spending the night in a strange place period. I do believe there are evil spirits in this world and if they are the cause of the "hauntings", I would definitely not want to be around.

By M. David on October 31, 2008 12:01 PM

Yes and no. Yes, in the fact that I would not be scared of it. No, in the fact that I would prefer not to promote the superstition aspect of it.

I am curious about what others have to say regarding "hell houses?" I have been on staff at a church that has hosted one and can say that 100's of people did accept Chrsit each year as a result of the ministry. That being said, I always questioned the ethic/moral side of it and wondered if hell houses were really something that a church should be associated with?

By David Drake on October 31, 2008 12:09 PM

Ed,

it helps me empathize with others in my ministry to other urban dwelling wimps!

D

By Kay on October 31, 2008 12:23 PM

NO WAY!
I don't even like scary movies, much less "haunted houses".

By Larry on November 1, 2008 1:22 PM

Having spent at least one night in a building inhabited by Ed Stetzer I can say a "haunted house" wouldn't scare me at all.

By irreverend fox on November 1, 2008 9:29 PM

Ed,

sure, why not? “I ain’t afraid of no ghosts�!

I think a very much related question would be..."what do we as Reformed/Baptist/Evangelicals believe about so called haunted houses?"

a. nothing

b. they might very well be haunted by ghosts.

c. they might very well be a place were demonic activities are more manifestly experienced.

in other words…can demons "haunt" a house and be confused as ghosts?

that would be an interesting question and one which (like all other issues in the SBC) could literally rip our Convention into a billion fragments forever!

By Craig on November 2, 2008 7:12 AM

Thanks for the humor Ed. And no I wouldn't. They are just creepy places.

By Kevin Sanders on November 2, 2008 8:27 AM

Do I get money or food for sleeping there? If so, sure!

By Keith Rowley on November 2, 2008 4:49 PM

I agree with Dana R. and
irreverend fox on the demonic being something to consider here. There seems to me to be strong biblical evidence for demons existing and "living" in certain places. So I would want to make sure I was very spiritually prepared before I spent the night in a "haunted house" also I would not do so alone.

Also as a good postmodern I acknowledge the possibility of things existing which science cannot ever explain. Maybe not ghosts per say by things beyond the realm of science. So those would need to be considered as possible explanations for haunted houses.

By irreverend fox on November 2, 2008 9:37 PM

I do think we ought to utterly rule out the possibility of any ghosts, in a house or not.

When a person dies they enter into heaven or hell...and both are forever (heaven by grace, hell by choice).

There are no ghosts. So such houses are either nothing or for some reason have demonic activities going on.

By Ed StetzerAuthor Profile Page on November 3, 2008 7:28 PM

Kevin,

I would pay you.

Foxy,

A good clarification.

Ed

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