Sign of a misspent youth


How embarrassing.

You know the Bible 90%!

 

Wow! You are awesome! You are a true Biblical scholar, not just a hearer but a personal reader! The books, the characters, the events, the verses – you know it all! You are fantastic!

Ultimate Bible Quiz
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Oh, well…Zeno did much worse.

Comments

  1. says

    Embarrassing, why? Isn’t our comforting stereotype that atheists know the Bible better than believers do? :) After all, reading the Bible seems commonly cited as a reason for becoming atheist…

  2. says

    Nah, it’s a literary work–it’s like really knowing Ovid’s Metaphmorphosis.

    (I got 85% and the same gushing prose–“Wow!” etc. I’ll take it again and deliberately do poorly just to see what they say.)

  3. RyanG says

    96%. I still remember the characters and plot, but a least I don’t remember what order they were in.

  4. says

    100%
    But then the test really did look to be designed to be easy for anyone of modest intelligence, with or without a good memory for Bible trivia.

  5. Damien says

    Damn it, why won’t my info be saved?

    Anyway, 93%. But it’s hardly a great quiz, not with answer choices like
    Donald Trump
    Donald Duck
    Don Knotts
    a Samaritan

  6. Scott Hatfield says

    First contumeliousness, and now piousness! (Jonathan Harris voice) You bibulous, Bible-babbling, bubble-headed booby!

    (Oh….the pain….)

  7. says

    77%, and I went to a Catholic school for fifteen years. I suck.

    In my defense, the Dutch version of the Bible we used messes up names a lot.

  8. says

    Wait a minute!

    “You know the Bible 11%
    Although you do not know a lot of specifics about the Bible, you are interested in learning, and that’s a great place to start! Do a little reading, and then come back and try again, as many times as you like!”

    I deliberately answered every question wrong (unless I got one right by mistake) but I put my gender as male this time. It still shouldn’t be 11%. Interesting.

  9. Chris Ho-Stuart says

    100%. It was pretty superficial. Only one question even gave me pause: the one identifying Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar. The choices:

    wives of David
    the magi who visited Jesus
    friends of Job
    friends of Daniel

    I got it right, but I had to think about it.

  10. BlueIndependent says

    That looks similar to the one you had up a couple months ago, the traitor test first posted on Stranger Fruit. Did anyone ever find out if that was a sick joke or if it was a real?

  11. Azkyroth says

    88%. Heh. And I’ve only gone to church a few times. I went to a couple dozen meetings of Youth Group in 7th grade, but that was mainly because my friend’s dad was the pastor and of course he always went. Closest I’ve ever come to being a real Christian.

  12. says

    Read it and weep. Worst part of it is, not only am I an atheist, I’m an ex-Catholic atheist. We weren’t supposed to read the Bible, without a priest around to explain those unfortunate little passages about the Midianites and such.

    It’s way too easy, though. Sort of a biblical self-esteem quiz.

    You know the Bible 100%!

     

    Wow! You are awesome! You are a true Biblical scholar, not just a hearer but a personal reader! The books, the characters, the events, the verses – you know it all! You are fantastic!

    Ultimate Bible Quiz
    Create MySpace Quizzes

  13. Torbjörn Larsson says

    85 %. But I definitely had to guess on a few of the english book names.

    I also wonder if “no” reading is a wrong answer. :-)

  14. Torbjörn Larsson says

    85 %. But I definitely had to guess on a few of the english book names.

    I also wonder if “no” reading is a wrong answer. :-)

  15. False Prophet says

    I got 98%. I did go to Catholic school, and scored high in religion class despite admitting my atheism and general disagreement with RC doctrine.

    You know, it irritated me that here in Ontario, we still have publicly-subsidized religious education. But now I’m wondering–the best way to turn kids off something is to make it the focus of schoolwork…

  16. Kyle M says

    Reading the Bible isn’t misspent time if you’re a student of literature. You’ve got to know all the allusions and references or else your life becomes very difficult when attempting to interpret a work. Also, there is some good poetry there near the middle.

  17. says

    In answer to Kristine, by deliberately getting them all wrong this time, and also putting myself as an under 18 female who doesn’t read the Bible, I managed to get 7 per cent. Let’s see if anyone can get below that.

  18. Jokermage says

    This test isn’t all that accurate. First, it is multiple guess, so if you can eliminate one or two obviously wrong answers you have a better chance of getting the question right. Second, several of the questions don’t require biblical knowledge to answer. The phrase “good samaritan” is fairly common so you could probably get that one without actually knowing the parable itself. Finally, a lot of the questions are fairly easy/well-known. Unless the scores are weighted based on the difficulty of the questions, testtakers will score higher than is actually merited.

  19. chris says

    I agree, it was a poorly designed test. And anyone with a minimal understanding of Western culture would have scored OK. The Samaritan example was one. Moses leading the Israelites out of Egypt, Abraham and his son, and the ancient Methuselah are also familiar allusions. I got 95%, but only because I like to try to understand how they think.

    Also they spelled Strom Thurmond incorrectly. (They put Thurman)

  20. says

    Your link is broken.

    I got 82% (maybe — given that 11%-with-everything-wrong, maybe not) by looking only at the answers, not at the questions.

    It’s a horribly designed test.

    Granted, I test well, but not that well.

  21. says

    I got 100% too, but I’m sure I answered a couple wrong.. or did I?
    I went to Catholic school too, whose library had some books on Hinduism and Greek mythology that led me to atheism by age 13.. I hope those books are still there!

  22. says

    i got 74%. this is surprisingly high as i’ve never studied the bible. i wasn’t raised in a religious environment. i guess it says more about the societies i’ve lived in and how, like it or not, the contents of this book seeps into everyone’s consciousness.

  23. Kat says

    I also got 74%, but I’ve never studied the bible and haven’t set foot in a church (apart from the occasional wedding or funeral) since Sunday School, more years ago than I care to admit! It was a combination of general knowledge and guessing.

  24. darius says

    70% on the original one, 18% on the new one.

    And yeah, the first one is WAY too easy. Intentionally so, from the way it reads.

  25. Morgan says

    Another ex-Catholic atheist, scoring 97%. I know perfectly well that I was chancing my arm for most of the answers, so, yeah…

  26. llewelly says

    The quiz is inconsistent. It asks at the end ‘Do read the bible’, and I answered ‘No.’ (nearly true for last 19 years, since my early teens.) But in the blurb I got:

    You are a true Biblical scholar, not just a hearer but a personal reader!

  27. brtkrbzhnv says

    59%
    I was raised by an atheist in secular Sweden. I’ve only read Genesis and Exodus (to see what it was all about) and a bit of John, in Ancient Greek class – I must say I prefer Plato; at least he’s wrong in an interesting way, rather than a banal and nonsensical one.

  28. Dianne says

    66%. I like to think that if they’d gone another decimal point it would have been 66.6%. I was mostly guessing and/or relying on cultural knowledge. I haven’t read the Bible since high school literature class required me to.

  29. Ian H Spedding FCD says

    90% Those early days teaching the Bible in Sunday School must have had more of an effect than I thought.

  30. Carlie says

    100%, but it was easy. I’ll go try the other. Although it’s mostly abysmal as “literature” (ever try getting through 1 and 2 Chronicles in one sitting?), I think it is important to know about simply because so much of Western culture is based on it. Not just that it’s good to know the enemy, but it helps understanding simple idioms – “Good samaritan laws” and the like. Not that I’d advocate spending as much time on it as I did in my childhood.

  31. Carlie says

    Dang. 21% on the ultimate – I’ve been pwned. However, it is geared much more towards apologetics than actual Biblical knowledge (and that quite arcane).

  32. Michael says

    100% and 29%

    The first one is laughably easy; the second one focuses on the Other Testament, which I don’t know so well. What’s the word to describe recovered Catholics discriminating against recovered Jews? Maybe anti-post-semitism?

  33. says

    I got a 92%, but I think it was more of a test of how closely we pay attention to cultural icons of The Bible than how much we actually read the Bible. I mean, I knew that Luke wrote Acts because I had read the thing, but many of the other questions were written so that elimination of incorrect choices was simple.

    Statisticians who review the design of this quiz would have a hard time finding “external validity.”

  34. snarly says

    I got 90%. My question is, If Donald Trump was a biblical character, which book would he be in?

  35. John Emerson says

    100%. There were a lot of gimmes and joke answers in there. It would be hard for a normally literate person to go below 70%, though I see that Coturnix succeeded. (But the Serbs are all Muslim of course, so who can blame him?)

  36. says

    100%. The only place I really hesitated was in remembering which book comes after Colossians.

    snarly:

    I got 90%. My question is, If Donald Trump was a biblical character, which book would he be in?

    Gorging himself and shagging a harem girl at Nebuchadnezzar’s banquet in the Book of Daniel, maybe?

  37. Dawn says

    The first time around I got 100%. Lessons of a misspent childhood and a brush with a fundie life. Then I intentionally answered every one wrong, and still got 7% correct…I guess you get credit for answering your age range and whether you read the bible or not, even if you lie.

  38. Theo Bromine says

    False Prophet prophesied: You know, it irritated me that here in Ontario, we still have publicly-subsidized religious education. But now I’m wondering–the best way to turn kids off something is to make it the focus of schoolwork…

    You may have a point, but if you (or anyone else) is interested in participating in the campaign to end Ontario’s funding of Catholic schools, go to:

    http://secularalliance.ca/cspe/

    [I too got 100% on the first test, no doubt due to the several years of serious (lay) studies in late teens/early twenties which preceded my gradual slide into atheism. (I gave up on the 2nd test, but I suspect I would not have done better than 70-75%.) It’s a Good Thing for atheists to know *about* the bible, beyond just being able to quote contradictions (most of which Christians have been taught to rationalize away). Many Christians have been taught that if the atheist heathen would “just read the bible” they would immediately become Christians.]

  39. says

    Yes, the first quiz is pretty easy, although I guess I must have paid some attention in catechism and during all of those readings during 25 years’ worth of mass attendance.

    The second quiz, however, is a tour de force of Bible trivia, including exact verse citations, Latin translation, and plenty of minutiae. Not my strengths, that’s for sure, but also a rather weak test of meaningful Bible knowledge.

    I agree with the comments that Bible knowledge is extremely useful in predominantly Christian western society, as background in an English-speaking culture strongly influenced by the King James translation (that’s right, kids, Paul didn’t write his epistles in English and Jesus’s language was melgibsonese), and for self defense against the Bible-thumpers who keep trying to invade science labs and public school classrooms.

  40. MAJeff says

    I, too, scored 100%. My mother would be so proud….

    I only scored 87%, but my mother would be proud seeing as how she cried more when she finally accepted I’m an atheist than she did when she found out I’m gay.

  41. says

    97%

    But some of those questions were pretty much “gimmes”

    Joshua said, “As for me and my house, we will serve the _____.”

    turkey

    establishment

    wine

    Lord

    or

    Isaiah said, “For to us a child is born, to us a _____ is given.”

    cloak

    raven

    son

    task

    I think anyone with a 6th grade English reading comprehension, should be able to get those two (and a couple others).

  42. hoary puccoon says

    88% I’m a biblical scholar!!! I’m so flattered, I might start going to church again. Which I suspect was the objective of the folks who designed the test.

  43. K. Engels says

    Re: Post #69

    I knew the right answer when I took the quiz, but one could argue that both ‘son’ and ‘task’ could be reasonable answers for the Isaiah question. With the ‘task’ being some kind of ‘divine’ mandate to raise the child.

  44. says

    100%. Of course, as noted, some of the answers were absolute gimmes. Others weren’t accurate – the flood? “the waters prevailed upon the earth a hundred and fifty days”, which wasn’t one of the choices, but you can guess which answer they wanted. The other quiz I got 43% with significant guessing. The two seemed to take in both extremes: one is really mostly testing cultural knowledge and the other details – unless how many fish is somehow meaningful to theologians. One is like knowing the broad outlines of LOTR, and the other like knowing who Gimli’s great-grandfather was because you memorized the appendices.

  45. TheBowerbird says

    100%. That actually nauseated me due to it brining to mind the fact that when I was a fundy I read the entire bible cover to cover. That said, I bet that even given some of the easy answers on this, many Christians would be unable to hit 100%, as most that I know haven’t even read their bible, save for cheesy excerpts chosen by their pastors/ayatollahs.

  46. says

    87%/43% – at least in the hard one I still remember hearing about most of the stuff it is asking about.

    brtkrbzhnv: Ironic, given that John begins with something sort of taken from Greek philosophy …

    The Ridger: I always wonder about such numbers myself. Assuming naturalism (duh), the number came from somewhere in the author’s head … where did it come from?

  47. says

    If you get 101% you get to send one e-mail to god. You actually get his e-mail address. No promises he will respond though.

  48. craig says

    I know absolutely nothing about the bible, and I got 78 percent.

    The trick is to remember who Don Knotts was.

  49. says

    77% Thought I would do better than that. Oh well – This post reminds me of a couple quotes:
    It ain’t those parts of the Bible that I can’t understand that bother me, it is the parts that I do understand.
    Mark Twain
    We need more atheists and nothin’ will get you there quicker than reading the bible.
    Penn Jillette

  50. says

    100% on the one PZ linked to here, and 61% on the “Bible Quiz of Greater Ultimacy”. But my apostasy is quite recent. :-)

  51. natural cynic says

    Those hours spent in Sunday School finally paid off!
    100% [I did kinda guess on about 2 and I picked up on the raining for 40 days & nights]

  52. says

    Yikes, I got 93%, despite having read the Bible only once, twenty years ago.

    Then again, I learned a lot of paraphrased Bible stories in Catholic CCD classes as a kid, plus I know that pizza probably wasn’t invented 2000 years ago.

  53. Tatarize says

    Heh. The Luke wrote Acts question threw me for a loop. I’m like, what none of those people wrote Acts. Oh, wait, don’t some Christians think it was Luke for a couple poppycock reasons. Fine, Luke.

    I got 80%. I suck. Wasn’t raised religious. Kind of depressed I didn’t do better. Where the hell did I leave that Bible! It might be out in with the junk out back. Last place I saw it.

  54. Patrick says

    I’m an atheist but there is nothing to be embarasseed about if you know are familiar with one of the most important texts in Western history, and that has real literary, poetic and historical value.

  55. Michael Hopkins says

    I got really, really lucky: 100%

    There is a clear error in the quiz: the Deluge lasted longer than 40 days and nights, that was the length of the rain.

  56. Kagehi says

    I freely admit once picking one up. Well, also reading bits of it, but mostly recently as people point stuff out, and I still got 79%. Bets on how few “Christians” can even manage that…

  57. says

    100%

    I wasn’t that impressed with the quiz. It was pretty superficial. I’ll have to go check the other quiz linked here in the comments.

  58. Scott Hatfield says

    Isn’t it interesting that so many skeptics here are eager to see how they do on a test of Bible knowledge, but the run-of-the-mill believer has virtually no interest in assessing their scientific literacy?

    Makes my job (high school teacher) kinda frustrating.

    SH

  59. says

    77%. Not bad for a Quaker who was raised Episcopalian. But you have to admit that any book that starts off with two naked people and a talking snake has something going for it.

  60. Desert Donkey says

    64% I only live in this culture. Haven t been to church for anything but an event (wedding, funeral, etc) since I was 10…. which would be 40 years. But really, Whale and Jonah are taught by Disney fer cryin out loud, and Charlton Heston ran around on my television every Easter weekend when I was a youngster. You cant really escape this stuff.

  61. fyreflye says

    87%!
    Actually, pretty bad since I once earned a 10 year perfect attendance pin from the Trinity Presbyterian Church Sunday School and was chosen at 17 to preach the yearly Junior Sermon to the full congregation. Of course I just recycled the same line of bullshit I’d been hearing every Sunday of the preceding decade but it was judged by many the best sermon they’d heard in years. Just goes to show…what?

  62. Don says

    In my experience, atheists tend to know more about the bible than Christians. Also, many answers were easy to infer from the questions themselves. Ergo, my result of 82% doesn’t seem that strange.

  63. Faithful Reader says

    The Bible has provided us with powerful metaphors and allegory for over 2000 years; much of Western literature depends upon it. Knowing your Bible references is no more an admission of foolishness or belief than knowing your Greek or Nordic mythology. It deepens your ability to understand and enjoy the civilization in which you live.

  64. Ba'al says

    93% which is not bad for an atheist raised by parents who were atheists. Perhaps being a Canaanite fertility deity as well as a professor of life sciences helped a little.

  65. says

    Yet another 100% score–yet another evangelical childhood to blame. Like Brian, I’d be curious to see how atheists and agnstics fre on this quiz as compare to self-professed Christians.