DeAngelis Reed T, Acevedo Gabriel A, Vaidyanathan Brandon, Ellison Christopher G
Department of Sociology and Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Office of Institutional Research, Yale University.
J Sci Study Relig. 2021 Sep;60(3):645-652. doi: 10.1111/jssr.12728. Epub 2021 Apr 22.
This research note advances the religious coping literature by testing whether belief in an evil world conditions the stress-moderating role of scripture reading. Hypotheses are tested with original data from a survey of Black, Hispanic, and White American churchgoers from South Texas (2017-2018; n = 1,115). Our findings show that reading scripture for insights into the future attenuates the positive association between major life events and psychological distress, but only for congregants who do not believe the world is fundamentally evil and sinful. For congregants who believe the world is evil, scripture reading the association between life events and distress. Whether scriptural coping is beneficial for mental health could be contingent on a believer's broader assumptions about the nature of the world we live in.
本研究报告通过检验对邪恶世界的信仰是否会影响经文阅读在缓解压力方面的作用,推动了宗教应对文献的发展。我们使用来自南德克萨斯州的黑人、西班牙裔和美国白人教会成员调查的原始数据(2017 - 2018年;n = 1115)对假设进行了检验。我们的研究结果表明,通过阅读经文洞察未来可以减弱重大生活事件与心理困扰之间的正相关关系,但这仅适用于那些不相信世界本质上是邪恶和有罪的信徒。对于那些相信世界是邪恶的信徒来说,经文阅读会增强生活事件与困扰之间的关联。经文应对是否有益于心理健康可能取决于信徒对我们生活的世界本质的更广泛假设。