Perceived God support as a mediator of the relationship between religiosity and psychological distress

Lloyd, C. and Graham Reid 2022. Perceived God support as a mediator of the relationship between religiosity and psychological distress. Mental Health, Religion & Culture. 25 (7), pp. 696-711. https://doi.org/10.1080/13674676.2022.2116633

TitlePerceived God support as a mediator of the relationship between religiosity and psychological distress
TypeJournal article
AuthorsLloyd, C. and Graham Reid
Abstract

This paper investigated whether perceived God support would mediate the negative relationship between religiosity and psychological distress. 253 Evangelical Christians completed the Patient Health Questionnaire for Anxiety and Depression, the Religiosity Inventory, and the Religious Support Scale. Mediation analyses revealed that perceived God support partially mediated the negative relationship between Evangelical religiosity and psychological distress. This meant that perceived God support could explain some of the negative religiosity-distress relationship. As such, Evangelical religiosity may be related to health benefits through adherents’ sense of support from God, corroborating a divine attachment theory of religion. We argue that God support should be considered as one of the theoretical mechanisms through which religions may be associated with better psychological health.

JournalMental Health, Religion & Culture
Journal citation25 (7), pp. 696-711
ISSN1367-4676
1469-9737
Year2022
PublisherTaylor & Francis
Publisher's version
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
File Access Level
Open (open metadata and files)
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/13674676.2022.2116633
Web address (URL)https://doi.org/10.1080/13674676.2022.2116633
Publication dates
Published09 Aug 2022

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