Department of Sociology, Baylor University, One Bear Place, Waco, TX, 76798, USA.
J Relig Health. 2022 Feb;61(1):175-202. doi: 10.1007/s10943-021-01334-2. Epub 2021 Jul 17.
Although biblical literalism is one of the most powerful ideological indicators of religiousness in the sociological study of religion, we know very little about its role vis-à-vis mental health. This is a surprising oversight, given the centrality of the Bible to both public and private religious practice in the USA. This study considers whether the belief in biblical literalism is associated with general mental health and anxiety, and whether this relationship is moderated by gender and two dimensions of religiosity: attendance and attachment to God. Data are drawn from the 2010 Baylor Religion Survey (N = 1360). Regression results suggest that stronger beliefs in biblical literalism are associated with better mental health and lower anxiety, but only among women who attend religious services weekly. However, women holding strong literalist views but falling short of weekly attendance norms reported worse mental health. There was no evidence that the relationship between biblical literalism and mental health differed by attachment to God. The implications of these results for the broader study of religion and health are discussed in light of prior research on the "dark side" of religion, recognizing that causal claims cannot be made due to the cross-sectional nature of the data.
尽管圣经原教旨主义是宗教社会学研究中宗教信仰的最有力的意识形态指标之一,但我们对其与心理健康的关系知之甚少。鉴于圣经在美国公共和私人宗教实践中的核心地位,这是一个令人惊讶的疏忽。本研究考虑了对圣经原教旨主义的信仰是否与一般心理健康和焦虑有关,以及这种关系是否受到性别和宗教信仰的两个维度的调节:出席和对上帝的依恋。数据来自 2010 年贝勒宗教调查(N=1360)。回归结果表明,对圣经原教旨主义的信念越强,心理健康状况越好,焦虑程度越低,但这种关系仅存在于每周参加宗教仪式的女性中。然而,持有强烈原教旨主义观点但不符合每周出勤规范的女性报告的心理健康状况较差。没有证据表明圣经原教旨主义与心理健康之间的关系因对上帝的依恋程度而异。鉴于先前关于宗教“阴暗面”的研究,讨论了这些结果对宗教与健康的更广泛研究的意义,认识到由于数据的横断面性质,不能做出因果关系的主张。