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Mental well-being in the religious and the non-religious: evidence for a curvilinear relationship
Authors:Luke William Galen  James D. Kloet
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology , Grand Valley State University , 2224 ASH, 1 Campus Dr., Allendale, MI 49401, USA galenl@gvsu.edu;3. Department of Psychology , Grand Valley State University , 2224 ASH, 1 Campus Dr., Allendale, MI 49401, USA
Abstract:Previous studies demonstrating a positive relationship between religiosity and mental health have sampled from a highly religious general population with little differentiation between weak religiosity and non-religiosity. Church members are typically compared with non-religious unaffiliated individuals, thus confounding belief with group effects (e.g. social support). The present study examined mental well-being, utilising the full range of certainty of belief or non-belief in God. In the first study, we compared church and secular group members on measures of life satisfaction and emotional stability. The second study used a large survey of the non-religious. A curvilinear relationship was found such that those with higher belief certainty (both confidently religious and atheists) have greater well-being relative to those with low certainty (unsure and agnostics). Multiple regressions controlling for social and demographic variables reduced, but did not eliminate this curvilinear relationship. Mechanisms of well-being may involve a confident worldview rather than religious beliefs themselves.
Keywords:religious beliefs  well-being  mental health  personality  non-religious  religiosity  certainty
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