The Role of Religious Comfort and Strain on Social Well‑Being among Emerging Adults in Poland: Serial Mediation by Meaning Making Processes
Artykuł naukowy w czasopiśmie recenzowanyCzasopismo: Journal of Religion and Health (ISSN: 0022-4197)
Współautorzy: Dariusz Krok Małgorzata Szcześniak
Rok wydania: 2024
Strony od-do: 1-20
Streszczenie: Religious struggles tend noticeably to influence the sphere of social well-being in emerging adulthood, as individuals modify their religious beliefs and practices, form personal identity patterns, and rediscover new life purpose and values. The aim of the current study was to investigate whether meaning-making and meaning in life (presence and search) can serially mediate the hypothesized links between religious comfort vs. strain and social well-being. Self-report measures of religious struggles, meaning-making, meaning in life, and social well-being were completed by 368 emerging adults (aged 18 to 29, 52.2% female). The serial mediation analysis showed that the relationship between religious comfort vs. strain and social well-being was mediated by meaning-making and the presence of meaning but not by a search for meaning. These results suggest that religious struggles may represent unique aspects of developmental, spiritual processes in emerging adulthood with implications for social well-being.
Słowa kluczowe: Religious comfort · Religious strain · Meaning-making · Meaning in life · Social well-being
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10943-024-02102-8
Cytowanie w formacie Bibtex:
@article{1,
author = "Beata Zarzycka and Dariusz Krok Małgorzata Szcześniak",
title = "The Role of Religious Comfort and Strain on Social Well‑Being among Emerging Adults in Poland: Serial Mediation by Meaning Making Processes",
journal = "Journal of Religion and Health",
year = "2024",
pages = "1-20"
}
Cytowanie w formacie APA:
Zarzycka, B. and Dariusz Krok Małgorzata Szcześniak(2024). The Role of Religious Comfort and Strain on Social Well‑Being among Emerging Adults in Poland: Serial Mediation by Meaning Making Processes. Journal of Religion and Health, 1-20.