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Canterbury, England • Three out of 10 British children have next to no understanding of the Bible and their parents aren't that knowledgeable, either.

A survey released Friday by the Bible Society, founded in 1804 to spread knowledge about the Scriptures, said most British boys and girls ages 8 to 15 years old did not know that Adam and Eve, Noah's ark or Jesus' birth were rooted in the Bible.

More than a third of the 800 children surveyed did not know that David and Goliath and the story of the Good Samaritan were Bible tales.

One in 10 mistakenly thought the story about King Midas and Icarus was in the Bible.

But not just children are Bible ignorant.

Nearly half the 1,100 British parents surveyed failed to identify Noah's ark as a story from the Bible. More than a third thought a Harry Potter subplot was or might have come from the Bible.

The Bible Society published the research to mark the launch of its "Pass It On" campaign, which aims to encourage parents to keep the Bible alive by passing its stories on to their children.

In a foreword to the report, Richard Chartres, the Anglican bishop of London, said sharing Bible stories "is as vital now as it has ever been." He added: "There is work to be done."