首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Say one for me: the implicit religion of prayers from the street
Authors:Tania ap Siôn  Owen Edwards
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Institute for Health, Medical Sciences and Society, Glynd?r University, Plas Coch Campus, Mold Road, Wrexham, Wales LL11 2AW, UKt.apsion@glyndwr.ac.uk;3. Department of Psychology, Institute for Health, Medical Sciences and Society, Glynd?r University, Plas Coch Campus, Mold Road, Wrexham, Wales LL11 2AW, UK
Abstract:Within the field of the psychology of prayer, there has been a growing interest in empirical studies concerned with the analysis of the content of ordinary people's private prayers, with a view to providing a more nuanced understanding of the psychological correlates of prayer among those who engage in the activity. One research tradition has focused on the content analysis of intercessory prayer requests left in church-related settings, and it is within this context that the present study is located, examining 417 intercessory prayer requests, collected on the streets by bishops in the Church of England as part of the 2011 “Say One for Me” Lent Prayer initiative. The study was informed by the constructs of implicit religion and ordinary theology, and employed ap Siôn's general analytical framework for intercessory prayer requests. Three types of implicit religion were found to be present in the prayer content: societal consensus, the source of explicit religion, and the effect of explicit religion, and the significance of these results is discussed.
Keywords:implicit religion  psychology  prayer  bishops  Church of England
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号