1. The Implicit Image of God: God as Reality and Psychological Well-Being
- Author
-
Ines Testoni, Dora Capozza, Malihe Shams, Emilio Paolo Visintin, and Maria Concetta Carlucci
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Population ,Religious studies ,Implicit-association test ,050109 social psychology ,Affect (psychology) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Religiosity ,Feeling ,Image of God ,Psychological well-being ,medicine ,Anxiety ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,education ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Research has widely demonstrated that religiosity is related to psychological well-being even in situations of severe illness. To assess religious beliefs, explicit measures have generally been used. In this study, we measured the belief that God is reality as opposed to myth or abstraction by using an implicit technique (the Single Category Implicit Association Test). The study was carried out in Italy, where a large majority of the population is Catholic, and the prevailing image of God is that of a compassionate and supportive father. Participants were cancer patients identifying themselves as believers. As expected, the automatic belief that God is reality (vs. abstraction) was related to beneficial outcomes: lower reported psychophysical anxiety symptoms and a weaker use of avoidance strategies to cope with stress. Thus, also, automatic religious beliefs may affect feelings and behaviors.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF