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An empirical investigation of the relationship between religious beliefs, irrational beliefs, ... |
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Bianca MACAVEI & Mircea MICLEA
Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
Abstract
The present studies have experimentally investigated the relationship
between religious beliefs and negative emotions. We found that the mere
association of a chain of negative events with the presence of a
merciful and omnipotent spiritual being induced less worry and sadness
and increased hope in the future than when the same events were
presented alone. The former religious attitudes may intensify the
impact of the actual religious beliefs in the generation of positive
emotions. We also found that the meaning-making process induced by the
religious beliefs is an implicit, tacit rather than an explicit
inferential process. Also, subjects who (1) unconditionally accept
themselves, (2) hold less self-downing beliefs (negative global
self-evaluation) and (3) have more religious beliefs tend to experience
lower levels of emotional distress under normal, non-traumatic
circumstances. Also, participants who believe in the love and
forgiveness from God tend to endorse less self-downing beliefs (one of
the proximal causes of depression). Limits and implications for future
research and practice are discussed.
Keywords: religious beliefs and values, negative emotions, irrational beliefs
Pages: 1-16
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