University of Florida.
J Res Adolesc. 2019 Jun;29(2):390-401. doi: 10.1111/jora.12437.
We examined the extent to which beliefs in a loving God and punitive God correspond with self-reported behavior in an online, longitudinal survey involving three waves of data collection, each separated by 6 months. Adolescents (N = 760) reported the extent to which they believed in a loving God and a punitive God (Times 1 and 3) and reported their engagement in benevolent (helping and forgiveness) and aggressive behavior (Times 2 and 3). Participants strongly endorsed a loving God but not a punitive God. In addition, belief in a loving God corresponded with reports of less aggressive and more benevolent behavior, whereas belief in a punitive God corresponded with more aggressive and less benevolent behavior.
我们通过一项在线纵向调查研究考察了对慈爱上帝和惩罚上帝的信仰与自我报告的行为之间的关联程度,该调查涉及三个数据收集阶段,每个阶段之间相隔 6 个月。研究对象为青少年(N=760),他们报告了自己对慈爱上帝和惩罚上帝的信仰程度(第 1 次和第 3 次),并报告了他们在仁慈行为(帮助和宽恕)和攻击行为(第 2 次和第 3 次)方面的参与程度。参与者强烈认可慈爱上帝,但不认可惩罚上帝。此外,对慈爱上帝的信仰与较少的攻击行为和更多的仁慈行为相关,而对惩罚上帝的信仰则与更多的攻击行为和更少的仁慈行为相关。