Abstract
Although people have used religion to justify aggression, evidence suggests that greater religiousness corresponds with less aggression. We explored two explanations for the religion-aggression link. First, most major religions teach self-control (e.g., delaying gratification, resisting temptation), which diminishes aggression. Second, most major religions emphasize compassionate beliefs and behavior (i.e., perspective taking, forgiveness, a broader love of humanity) that are incompatible with aggression. We tested whether self-control and compassion mediated the relationship between religion and aggression (direct and indirect) in a longitudinal study of 1,040 adolescents in the United States. Structural equation analyses revealed that self-control and compassion together completely mediated the religion-aggression relationship for both types of aggression. Aggr. Behav. 41:608-621, 2015.
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Shepperd, J. A., Miller, W. A., & Smith, C. T. (2015). Religiousness and aggression in adolescents: The mediating roles of self-control and compassion. Aggressive Behavior, 41(6), 608–621. https://doi.org/10.1002/ab.21600
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