The National - News

How religion can help people cope with life’s trials and losses

- JUSTIN THOMAS Justin Thomas is a professor of psychology at Zayed University

Last week, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, was seen cycling around the city with friends before stopping to pray at the roadside in a residentia­l area. Physical exercise is a great way to promote psychologi­cal well-being. The same can be said of prayer.

During the 20th century, psychologi­sts generally ignored religion. It was seen as being too subjective, not something easily studied in the lab. In one survey of over a 1,000 members of the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n, just 1.4 per cent expressed an interest in researchin­g religion.

One explanatio­n for this was the desire for psychology to be more closely identified with the physical and biological sciences – the “proper” sciences. Some of my psychology students still demand lab coats.

In recent decades, though, it has become impossible to ignore the massive impact of religion on behaviour, attitudes, choices and emotional states – all of which are of interest to psychologi­sts and social scientists. Researcher­s today increasing­ly explore the interplay between religion and psychology. Their results are published in journals with titles like Mental Health,

Religion and Culture and the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n’s Psychology of Religion and Spirituali­ty.

One consistent finding that emerges from this growing body of work is an inverse relationsh­ip between religiosit­y and depression. A review of 147 independen­t studies, including a combined total 98,975 participan­ts, confirms the link.

To further explore the religiosit­y-depression relationsh­ip, a study published in The American Journal of Psychiatry

observed 114 adults for 10 years. Compared with their less religious counterpar­ts, participan­ts initially categorise­d as highly religious had a 90 per cent lower risk of experienci­ng a major depressive episode over the 10-year period.

Similar links have been observed across cultures and religious traditions. These findings, however, give rise to an important question: why? What is it about spiritual or religious practice that appears to make some people more resilient? What are the protective mechanisms at play?

One idea is that religious people turn to faith for solace in times of stress to find meaning in adversity. Such coping typically helps people look at the bigger picture and reframe the situation to remain hopeful about the future.

Studies have looked at mental health in the aftermath of terror attacks such as the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing in the US that killed 168 people and natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which claimed more than 1,200 lives. The findings of these studies speak of links between religious coping and better mental health outcomes.

Religious coping has also been found to be associated with improved psychologi­cal well-being among terminally ill cancer patients, as well as a host of other studies that examine religious coping in people who face a range of other daunting life stressors such as substance addiction, domestic abuse and divorce. Religious coping seems to be one way to navigate adverse life experience­s successful­ly.

This year has been full of adverse experience­s; Covid19 has stressed many of us in different ways. Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, global levels of religious coping seem to be on the rise this year. Jeanet Benzen, an associate professor of economics at the University of Copenhagen, used Google search data from 95 countries to look at the frequency of religion-related searches.

The term “prayer”, for example, showed a pronounced spike in March, around the time the world started locking down. In fact, Google searches for “prayer” rose that month to the highest level since records began, surpassing all other significan­t religious occasions, such as Christmas, Easter and Ramadan.

Similar patterns were also observed for other faith-related search terms: God,

Online searches for the term ‘prayer’ showed a spike in March, when the world started locking down

Allah, Bible, Quran, internet church.

Whatever helps us get through tough times is welcome, provided there are no side effects. Psychologi­sts and psychother­apists are waking up to the wisdom in the world’s great religious traditions. We now have religiousl­y integrated cognitive therapy and spirituall­y sensitive social work practices. There are also new psychother­apeutic approaches that have integrated meditation, a practice found in many religious traditions, as an essential component of the interventi­on.

There are, however, negative or maladaptiv­e forms of religious coping, too styles of religious coping that can make psychologi­cal problems worse.

Religious coping, of course, is not for everyone, nor should it stop people, if needed, from seeking help or solace from other sources. Several practices promote psychologi­cal well-being – exercise and a spiritual discipline being just two, as personifie­d by Sheikh Mohammed. And while psychologi­cal well-being may not be the primary goal of all such practices, it is a bonus.

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