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Review article

https://doi.org/10.34075/cs.56.3.2

Does religion make you healthy? Conclusions from empirical religious psychology

Johannes Panhofer ; Department of Practical Theology, Universität Innsbruck, Innsbrück, Austia


Full text: croatian pdf 156 Kb

page 376-388

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Full text: german pdf 230 Kb

page 376-388

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Abstract

Self-care wants to perceive one's own needs and aims to maintain one's own physical and mental health. Whether religion and spirituality are sources of (mental) health and personal well-being or rather a risk, is highly controversially discussed. On the one hand individual experiences and on the other ideological trench warfare, shape the dispute. This paper sets the discussion on an “objective” basis by presenting evidence-based conclusions from various studies. So the rediscovery of the healing power of religion and spirituality becomes visible. Nevertheless, mindfulness is necessary and certain criteria are required so that religion can develop its healing power. But the evidence-based studies make visible: religiousness in different cases and psychical situations is not the same! We have to find out when, where and why religiousness has a constructive or destructive effect.

Keywords

religious psychology; mental health; resource; healthful factors; risk factors

Hrčak ID:

265754

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/265754

Publication date:

30.11.2021.

Article data in other languages: croatian german

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