Posted on 11/05/2009 1:09:35 PM PST by bs9021
Religion and Families
Allie Winegar Duzett, November 5, 2009
Studies of the past decades religiosity can be boiled into good news and bad news, said Annette Mahoney of Bowling Green State University at a recent Heritage Foundation conference, Religious Practice and the Family: What the Research Says. The bad news is that almost no research has been done on how religion operates when problems are not prevented, she said, adding that the good news is that religion does matter for families.
Mahoney explained that religion tends to help people in maintaining any family relationship, traditional or not, such as being a good single mother. However, she noted, studies over the past century have focused largely on the effects of spirituality on the individual, rather than the effects of spirituality on the family. Science has focused on a spirituality of me instead of a spirituality of us, Mahoney declared.
Mahoney discussed the many links between family and religion that science has been able to establish, all the while pointing out when studies were inconclusive or inadequate for the topic. For example, Mahoney pointed out the established link between religion and motherhood: religion increases womens desire for children, she said, noting that strong religious beliefs seem to make motherhood happen in marriage more often. She also discussed the link between religion and marriage generally, explaining that religious men and women are far more likely to get married, and to get married younger, than men and women who are not religious. However, in areas such as gender role stability or division of household tasks, research is inconclusive when it comes to religions impact on actual behavior...
(Excerpt) Read more at academia.org ...
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One interesting study Mahoney examined was one that showed that conservative Christian parents are more likely to subject their children to mild spankingsbut also to exhibit more warmth toward their children, and give their children more supervision than parents from other parts of the religious spectrum. Likewise, Mahoney said, people even from non-traditional family settings are better parents with stronger familial ties as a result of religion. One example Mahoney cited was that of single mothers; religious involvement results in more positive parenting by low income, single mothers, she asserted.
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No wonder the LRFT wants God removed.
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