Newton Blog
 
 
Belief in Angry God Associated  with Poor Mental Health
Posted by _Ross  Pomeroy_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/blog/author/ross-pomeroy/2013/04/)  at Tue, 16 
Apr 2013 01:47:40 
 
 
Nahum  1:2-8 - 2 The LORD is a jealous and vengeful  God; the LORD is 
vengeful and strong in wrath... 4  He can blast the sea and make it dry up; he 
can dry up all the rivers...  5 The mountains quake because of him; the hills 
melt  away. The earth heaves before him-- the world and all who dwell in it. 
 6 Who can stand before his indignation? Who can confront  the heat of his 
fury? His wrath pours out like fire; the rocks are shattered  because of 
him... 8 With a rushing flood, he will  utterly destroy her 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/blog/2013/04/editor-content.html?cs=UTF-8)  
place and pursue 
his enemies into darkness.

John 3:16 - For God so  loved the world, that he gave his only begotten 
Son, that whosoever believeth  in him should not perish, but have everlasting 
life.


If God exists, is he  (or she, or whatever) inherently benevolent or 
punitive? The two Bible selections above  clearly demonstrate that God can be 
both, but many believers cordon their  perception of the Almighty into a 
singular view. This fundamental  categorization may be more influential than 
one 
might think, as recently  published research demonstrates that how a believer 
conceives of God could  affect his or her mental health.

The findings, _discerned by a  team of psychologists led by Nava Silton of 
Marymount Manhattan College_ 
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23572240?dopt=Abstract) , are  intriguing, 
especially considering that _more_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/147887/americans-continue-believe-god.aspx) _  than 
nine 
out of every ten Americans believe in some sort of  God_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/147887/americans-continue-believe-god.aspx) .





Analyzing a Gallup survey conducted in 2010, the researchers sought to  
determine how one's perception of God -- as punitive, benevolent, or 
indifferent  -- was associated with five different psychiatric symptoms: 
general 
anxiety,  social anxiety, paranoia, obsession, and compulsion. 

Respondents'  characterizations of God were gleaned from their opinions of 
how six adjectives  -- absolute, critical, just, punishing, severe, or 
wrathful -- applied to God. A  numbering system was used to gauge the degree to 
which the subject viewed the  adjective as an accurate descriptor of God 
(very well = 4; somewhat well = 3,  not very well = 2, etc.). In a similar 
fashion, respondents answered queries  designed to measure the five 
aforementioned psychiatric symptoms.

The  researchers found that belief in a punitive God was significantly 
associated  with an increase in social anxiety, paranoia, obsession, and 
compulsion.  Conversely, belief in a benevolent God was associated with 
reductions 
in those  four symptoms. Belief in an indifferent God was not linked to any  
symptoms.

So does this mean that God-fearing individuals are more anxious  because of 
their beliefs, or that individuals who believe in a loving God have  less 
to worry about? Possibly both, say the researchers. But before we delve  into 
that notion, let's get skeptical. 

While the study benefited from a  large sample size and its findings agreed 
with a plethora of previous research,  there are a great many limitations. 
First and foremost, the data was  self-reported, which is susceptible to 
invariable outside influences.  Additionally, the study was cross-sectional, 
meaning that it cannot conclusively  say whether belief in a benevolent or 
punitive God affected the psychiatric  symptoms or vice versa. Moreover, 
diagnosing such symptoms via a self-reported  questionnaire is certainly 
suboptimal. 

Still, the results are quite  provocative. According to the researchers, 
they make sense in light of the _E_ 
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18091193) _volutionary Threat Assessment  
System Theory,_ 
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18091193)  which states that overarching 
beliefs about the 
dangerousness  of the world can influence mental well-being.

"We propose that belief in  a benevolent God inhibits threat assessments 
about the dangerousness of the  world, thereby decreasing psychiatric 
symptoms," the researchers write.

But they also say  that the pendulum can swing to the other side as well.

"Belief in a  punitive God... facilitates threat assessments that the world 
is dangerous and  even that God poses a threat of harm, thereby increasing 
psychiatric  symptomology." 
 
 


_Source:_ (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23572240?dopt=Abstract)   
Silton NR, Flannelly KJ, Galek K, Ellison CG. "Beliefs About God and Mental  
Health Among American Adults." J Relig Health. 2013 Apr  10

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