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Relationship between religion and obsessive phenomena
Authors:Dr Craig J Gonsalvez  Alex R Hains  Gerard Stoyles
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia;2. Illawarra Institute for Mental Health, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract:The study examined the relationship between religion and symptoms of psychopathology, particularly obsessive‐compulsive (OC) and scrupulosity symptoms. Religious affiliation, religiosity variables (strength of faith, religious application, the beliefs about God's nature), and cognitive factors (e.g., obsessive beliefs) were studied as predictors of OC and scrupulosity symptoms in 179 non‐clinical participants. The main groups (Catholic, Protestant, and no religion) were not different with regard to measures of wellbeing or symptoms of general psychopathology (depression, anxiety, and stress), but were different with regard to OC symptoms. Consistent with cognitive theory, OC beliefs strongly predicted both OC and scrupulosity symptoms, even when general levels of psychopathology were controlled. Religion bore a less major but significant association with OC phenomena. Religious affiliation (being Catholic) was associated with higher levels of OC symptoms, and higher levels of personal religiosity (strength of faith) were associated with higher levels of scrupulosity.
Keywords:Clinical/counselling psychology  cognitive processes  cognitive theory  obsessive‐compulsive disorder  religion
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