Religion and behavioral procrastination: Mediating effects of locus of control and content of prayer

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Abstract

Religion is a significant predictor of self-regulatory processes. Procrastination has been described as the very essence of self-regulatory failure. In this study, we examined the relationship between religiousness and procrastination, with locus of control and styles of prayer playing mediating roles. These relationships were tested using data from 196 students. We applied the Centrality of Religiosity Scale, Levenson’s Locus of Control Scale, the God Control Scale, the Content of Prayer Scale, and the Behavioral Procrastination Scale. The results showed that: God control fully mediates the effects of ideology and intellect on procrastination; internal control fully mediates the effect of public prayer and religious experience on procrastination; and passive style of prayer was a mediator in the relationship between centrality of religion and procrastination. Our findings suggest that religious people may give up internal control, believing that their matters are in God’s hands. Being subject to God’s power provides them with a replacement form of control, which reduces problems of self-regulation.

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Zarzycka, B., Liszewski, T., & Marzel, M. (2021). Religion and behavioral procrastination: Mediating effects of locus of control and content of prayer. Current Psychology, 40(7), 3216–3225. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-019-00251-8

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