Religious Coping With Interpersonal Hurts: Psychosocial Correlates of the Brief RCOPE in Four Non-Western Countries

  • Vitaliy L. Voytenko
  • , Kenneth I. Pargament
  • , Richard G. Cowden
  • , Austin W. Lemke
  • , Ni Made Taganing Kurniati
  • , Andrea Ortega Bechara
  • , Shaun Joynt
  • , Sergiy Tymchenko
  • , Viacheslav V. Khalanskyi
  • , Liudmyla Shtanko
  • , Michal Kocum
  • , Hennadii Korzhov
  • , Maya B. Mathur
  • , Man Yee Ho
  • , Tyler J. VanderWeele
  • , Everett L. Worthington

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Religious coping has emerged as a guiding paradigm for understanding ways in which religion shapes how people adapt to life’s most difficult experiences. Although research on religious coping has advanced substantially over the last two decades, there has been a disproportionate focus on noninterpersonal stressors with samples from predominantly Western societies. In this study, we draw on a relational spirituality perspective to examine religious coping in the aftermath of interpersonal hurts among participants from four non-Western countries. With samples from Colombia, Indonesia, South Africa, and Ukraine (N = 3,244), we examined associations of religious coping (as measured by the Brief RCOPE) with anxiety, depression, perceived posttraumatic growth, and well-being. The general patterns that emerged from the countryspecific analyses of psychosocial correlates indicated that positive religious coping evidenced its strongest associations with indices of positive functioning (i.e., perceived posttraumatic growth and well-being), whereas negative religious coping yielded its strongest associations with indices of psychological distress (i.e., anxiety and depression). Hierarchical regressions for each country indicated that the dimensions of religious coping were incrementally associated with all indices of functioning, over and above variance explained by state forgiveness. Overall, the findings were largely comparable to those of prior research with samples from Western societies.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)43-55
Number of pages13
JournalPsychology of Religion and Spirituality
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • mental health
  • relational spirituality
  • religion
  • religious/spiritual coping
  • spirituality

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Social Psychology
  • Religious studies
  • Applied Psychology

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