Survey began on 10/13/2025 and completed on 12/12/25

SHA-256 file fingerprints (tamper check)

If your computed SHA-256 matches the value below, you have the exact same file we published

b5c7104cd7593e915da18ec0197a24e8cf01b6769a6af54b35a605b2272b6611

Spreedsheet downloaded from Google Forms

SBCO Int Nation pastor survey & International survey

Pastor Survey Results With Graphs

International Survey Results With Graphs

Data bases & sending vendor used in survey

National data base of 60,000 pastor emails

Click image to make larger

National data base of 237,000 pastor emails

Click image to make larger

Bulk email vendor for sending

Click image to make larger

Independent studies that support our findings

This peer reviewed study on the Mandela effect found a "highly correleated" level of misremembering amoung participants. The study was unable to provide an explanation for what amounts to a statisical impossiblity.

The study labeled this unusual finding as "Visual Mandela Effect" or VMEs. It was a controlled study with 100 participants and focused on pop culture icons. But the high rate of unified misremembering of pop culture icons and Bible scriptures have the same cause so this study validates our surveys which only focused on Bible changes but had the same type of result.

I compared their findings to mine. Based on the number of participants, the number of questions, and the recorded number of questions that were "misremembered" the same way, I calculated the probabiltiy to be almost identical to our studies. Approx. 10^14 to 1

The Loftus & Pickrell study found that the average amount of misremembering was approximately 25%. Peer reviewed studies and our surveys found unified misremebering as high as 93.5%
This eliminates any possibility that our testimonies can be explained by everyday misremembering

The Wade, Garry, Read, Lindsay study also found that the average amount of misremembering to be approximately 25%. Peer reviewed studies and our surveys found unified misremebering as high as 93.5%

This eliminates any possibility that our testimonies can be explained by everyday misremembering