ConferenceTranslational behavioral medicine · January 2025
Chronic stress undermines psychological and physiological health. We tested three remotely delivered stress management interventions among clergy, accounting for intervention preferences. United Methodist clergy in North Carolina enrolled in a partially ra ...
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Journal ArticlePloS one · January 2025
The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of body mass index (BMI), physical activity (PA) level, dietary inflammatory index (DII), and oral contractive (OC) use on C-reactive protein (CRP) levels, and to determine if elevated CRP values refle ...
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Journal ArticleJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion · September 1, 2024
RELTRAD is a major religious taxonomy used by a large number of researchers. Although criticisms have been raised about its utility, improving the algorithm to capture contemporary religious dynamics is important given its widespread use. The present RELTR ...
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Journal ArticleObesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity · July 2024
ObjectiveThis systematic review aims to summarize the current body of evidence concerning the prevalence of obesity among clergy (i.e., the officially designated leaders of a religious group) in the United States.MethodFrom November 2022 ...
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Journal ArticleJ Relig Health · June 2024
Maintaining healthy behaviors is challenging. Based upon previous reports that in North Carolina (NC), USA, overweight/obese clergy lost weight during a two-year religiously tailored health intervention, we described trajectories of diet, physical activity ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Psychology and Theology · March 1, 2024
Recent research has shown Mainline Protestant clergy evidence poor mental health. In accounting for this, research has focused on occupational factors that impact health, with less attention paid to the role of selection into ministry as it relates to heal ...
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Journal ArticleSociology of Religion: A Quarterly Review · January 1, 2024
In this study, we examine the role of spiritual struggles among clergy, in the form of "divine struggle"or feelings of alienation from God and their associations with well-being (depressive symptoms and burnout) among clergy. Drawing from a life-stress per ...
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Journal ArticleReview of Religious Research · January 1, 2024
Seminary students have been found to be at a higher risk of experiencing abuse in childhood compared with the general U.S. population, as well as demonstrate mental health struggles. This study aims to understand how R/S struggles might explain the relatio ...
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Journal ArticleConflict and Health · December 1, 2023
Background: Community Health Workers (CHWs) provide vital services during disease outbreaks. Appropriate burials of those who died from an infectious disease outbreak is a critical CHW function to prevent infection and disease spread. During the 2018 Ebola ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Psychology and Theology · December 1, 2023
COVID-19 and its associated restrictions around in-person gatherings fundamentally unsettled routine ways of doing ministry. In this article, we draw on 50 in-depth interviews conducted with United Methodist clergy in the early period of the COVID-19 pande ...
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Journal ArticleJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion · September 1, 2023
Are religious leaders unusually unhealthy? This question has long occupied scholars interested in the study of religious institutions, and a significant body of research has examined the causes, correlates, and effects of poor health among clergy. In this ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of religion and health · August 2023
The job-demand-control-support model indicates that clergy are at high risk for chronic stress and adverse health outcomes. A multi-group pre-test-post-test design was used to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and range of outcome effect sizes for f ...
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Journal ArticleJ Relig Health · June 2023
Clergy are tasked with multiple interpersonal administrative, organizational, and religious responsibilities, such as preaching, teaching, counseling, administering sacraments, developing lay leader skills, and providing leadership and vision for the congr ...
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Journal ArticleJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion · March 1, 2023
This research examines the social actors and interactions that facilitate seminary students' sense of calling. Drawing from 36 in-depth interviews with first year Masters of Divinity students, we introduce six ideal typical social others who play a formati ...
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Journal ArticleReligious Education · January 1, 2023
The Seminary to Early Ministry (SEM) Study is a mixed-method, prospective study designed to provide high-quality empirical data on student formation in theological education. The study will use a series of surveys and in-depth interviews to track three coh ...
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Journal ArticleReview of Religious Research · December 2022
Background Research has established that salary disparities exist between men and women pastors in the United Methodist Church. However, little work has been done examining the root and trajectories of these diffe ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Psychology and Theology · June 1, 2022
Work-related stress is experienced at a high level in the United States. Clergy are particularly likely to over-extend themselves to act on their sacred call. Sabbath-keeping may offer a practice that is beneficial for mental health, yet many Protestant cl ...
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Journal ArticleJ Relig Health · April 2022
As an occupational group, clergy exhibit numerous physical health problems. Given the physical health problems faced by clergy, understanding where physical health falls within the priorities of seminary students, the ways students conceptualize physical h ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican Journal of Sociology · March 1, 2022
Victor Ray argues organizations are racial structures that legitimate the unequal distribution of resources and stratify the agency of racial groups through organizational processes that treat White identity as a credential and decouple formal rules meant ...
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Journal ArticleInt Psychogeriatr · January 2022
OBJECTIVES: Work in occupations with higher levels of occupational stress can bring mental health costs. Many older adults worldwide are continuing to work past traditional retirement age, raising the question whether older adults experience depression, an ...
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Journal ArticleReview of religious research · January 2022
BackgroundCOVID-19 and its associated restrictions around in-person gatherings have created unprecedented challenges for religious congregations and those who lead them. While several surveys have attempted to describe how pastors and congregation ...
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Journal ArticleReview of religious research · January 2022
BackgroundIn the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, churches in the United States were forced to stop meeting in person and move to remote forms of worship and congregational life. This shift likely impacted congregational finances, which are primaril ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Psychology and Theology · December 1, 2021
Since its inception in the 1960s, research on premature (i.e., pre-retirement) clergy attrition from congregational ministry has focused on identifying the factors that precipitate and mitigate ministry exits, while the rates at which clergy leave the mini ...
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Journal ArticleTrials · December 2021
IntroductionLike many helping professionals in emotional labor occupations, clergy experience high rates of mental and physical comorbidities. Regular stress management practices may reduce stress-related symptoms and morbidity, but more research ...
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Journal ArticleInternational journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology · July 2021
The Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) is a widely used, reliable, and ecologically valid method for inducing acute stress under controlled conditions. Traditionally, the TSST is administered with staff physically present with participants, which limits the p ...
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Journal ArticleChildren and Youth Services Review · September 1, 2020
Introduction: There are many orphaned and separated children (OSC) in the world and caregivers play a crucial role in raising them. Frameworks on employee mental health incorporate elements of both enjoyment/difficulties and values (i.e., hedonic and eudai ...
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Journal ArticleJ Relig Health · June 2020
Studies of caregivers of orphans and vulnerable children (OVC) rarely examine the role religion plays in their lives. We conducted qualitative interviews of 69 caregivers in four countries: Ethiopia, Kenya, Cambodia, and India (Hyderabad and Nagaland), and ...
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Journal ArticleTransl Behav Med · February 3, 2020
Weight-loss maintenance is essential to sustain the health benefits of weight loss. Studies with lower intensity intervention supports under real-world conditions are lacking. This study examined changes in weight and cardiometabolic biomarkers among Spiri ...
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Chapter · January 1, 2020
This chapter argues that, contrary to commonly accepted views, megachurches enjoy a long history in Protestantism. That history can, for example, be traced to the sixteenth century Huguenot architect Jacques Perret who revealed the early Protestant vision ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Positive Psychology · November 2, 2019
The VIA Classification of Character Strengths has broken important ground for measuring character strengths across cultures. Because the VIA Classification is a closed system of abstract strengths, however, it is unknown how end-users engage strengths in p ...
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Journal ArticleSocius · January 1, 2019
This study extends social-psychological research on social networks and mental health by examining cross-gender differences in social integration and depression among United Methodist clergy in North Carolina. Using data from the fifth wave of the Clergy H ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of racial and ethnic health disparities · October 2018
AimSophisticated adjustments for socioeconomic status (SES) in health disparities research may help illuminate the independent role of race in health differences between Blacks and Whites. In this study of people who share the same occupation (Uni ...
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Journal ArticleNonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly · February 1, 2018
Past research reveals mixed results regarding the relationship between gender and charitable giving. We show gender plays a significant role in giving but only when considered alongside marital status and religion. Using the 2006 Portraits of American Life ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Prev Med · September 2017
INTRODUCTION: This study sought to determine the effect of a 2-year, multicomponent health intervention (Spirited Life) targeting metabolic syndrome and stress simultaneously. DESIGN: An RCT using a three-cohort multiple baseline design was conducted in 20 ...
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Journal ArticleAnnals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine · August 2017
BackgroundMetabolic syndrome (Met-S) has a robust concurrent association with depression. A small, methodologically limited literature suggests that Met-S and depression are reciprocally related over time, an association that could contribute to t ...
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Journal ArticleReview of Religious Research · March 1, 2017
In this study we examine how the process of relocation affects the mental health of United Methodist clergy and the extent to which relocation is associated with changes in clergy perception of the workplace environment and feelings of self-efficacy. We an ...
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Journal ArticleSocius · January 1, 2016
Are people less likely to attend large churches? Using nationally representative data, I find a negative relationship between size and the probability of attendance for Conservative, Mainline, and black Protestants and for Catholics in parishes larger than ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Social History · March 1, 2015
The dominant view of megachurches claims they represent a new religious form, born in the United States in the 1970s and 80s. Contrary to this position, this research demonstrates that megachurches enjoy a long history in Protestantism. An important exampl ...
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Journal ArticleSocial Networks · January 1, 2015
With data from the Clergy Health Initiative Longitudinal Survey, we look for interviewer effects, differences between web and telephone delivery, and panel conditioning bias in an "important matters" name generator and interpreter, replicated from the U.S. ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics · January 1, 2015
Farmland conservation policies typically use zoning and differentiated taxes to prevent urban development of farmland, but little is known about the effectiveness of these policies. This study adds to current knowledge by examining the impact of British Co ...
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Chapter · January 1, 2012
In the past, research on social stratification focused primarily on the independent contributions of race, socioeconomic status (SES), and gender to status attainment. However, contemporary research in the field recognizes that race, SES, and gender intera ...
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Journal ArticleResearch in the Sociology of Work · January 1, 2012
Purpose - To assess the following question: Do large Protestant congregations in the United States exert social and political influence simply as a function of their size, or do other characteristics amplify their influence? Methodology/Approach - Using th ...
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Journal ArticleJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion · March 1, 2011
According to the General Social Survey, the combined rate of weekly and monthly attendance at religious services in Canada has declined by about 20 points from 1986 to 2008. Approximately half of this decline stems from the increase in the proportion of pe ...
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Journal ArticleJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion · 2010
In a recent article, Chaves (2010) argues that much of the work in the sociology of religion is susceptible to the religious congruence fallacy–the tendency to assume consistency between religious beliefs and one’s attitudes and behaviors across situations ...
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Journal ArticleJournal of Social and Personal Relationships
We argue perceived support is best conceptualized as more a measure of how an individual appraises their situation rather than a true reflection of how much support they receive. To test this theory, we used survey data from the Clergy Health Initiative Pa ...
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