What does a "non-denominational" Protestant believe?

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A Christian denomination is simply a group of churches which have agreed to work together (in over-simplified terms). Some denominations have very rigid structures, others not so much. They tend to share some degree of theological beliefs, but even within a denomination there may be a wide variance.

A non-denominational church, by contrast, simply does not belong to such a group.

It's quite analogous to retail chains. Some retail chains maintain very strict control over their various retail outlets, ensuring that branding is the same everywhere, that customer service is the same everywhere, etc. Cracker Barrel comes to mind.

Some chains maintain a very loose control, allowing franchisees to set cleanliness standards, customer service standards, etc. Phillips 66 comes to mind.

Then you have one-off, mom-and-pop stores, which have no corporate or franchise oversight at all, and they do whatever they wish. They may have the same standards of service and products as some chain stores, but not by mandate.

So asking what a non-denominational protestant believes, is a lot like asking what a non-chain store is like: It's all over the map.

Pretty much the only thing that non-denominational protestants all believe, is that they are not Catholics.

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As a non-denominational Protestant myself, I will admit that our independent-mindedness makes it more or less impossible to predict what a particular individual will believe. However, if you would like to know what the hypothetical "average" non-denominational Protestant believes, then that is totally possible.

The Hartford Institute for Religion Research has done some research, but mostly concerning the demographics and practice of non-denominational congregations, and not as much about beliefs per se. From their 2010 survey of 437 congregations across the country:

Which label comes closest to describing the theological outlook of the majority of your regularly participating adults?

  • 45% Evangelical
  • 20% Fundamentalist
  • 14% Pentacostal
  • 11% Charismatic
  • 3% Missional
  • 2% Moderate
  • 0.7% Seeker
  • 0.3% Liberal
  • 0.3% New Age
  • 3% Other

Barna is of course a great resource for these types of statistics. Among non-denominational Protestants:

  • 75% self-identify as "Born Again" 3
  • 60% believe "good works cannot earn a person salvation, but that salvation is a gift of God through the atoning death of Jesus Christ" 3
  • 67% are "absolutely committed" to Christianity 3
  • 70% believe "The Bible is totally accurate" 3
  • 59% believe Christians "must tell faith to others" 3
  • 48% believe "Satan is real" 3
  • 79% say faith has transformed their lives 4
  • 60% of pastors do not hold a seminary degree 5
  • 30% of pastors endorse Calvinism 5

TL;DR - A non-denominational Protestant is probably an Evangelical Protestant, and is somewhat more likely (compared to the average American Christian) to hold "traditional" Protestant beliefs about the Bible and Christianity.

Possibly related:
What is the difference between Evangelical and Protestant?
What is the difference between Protestantism and Evangelicalism?

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