The Institute on
Family Studies released a study Thursday which found that couples who
attend worship services together or when only the man attends services
are happier than couples in which neither partner or only the woman
attends.
Titled "Better Together: Religious Attendance, Gender, and Relationship Quality,"
the study was authored by W. Bradford Wilcox, director of the National
Marriage Project at the University of Virginia and Nicholas H.
Wolfinger, professor in the Department of Family and Consumer Studies
and Adjunct Professor of Sociology at the University of Utah.
"Seventy-eight percent of men and women in couples who regularly go
to services together, or where only the man attends regularly, report
that they are 'very happy' or 'extremely happy,' after adjusting for
differences in race, age, education, marital status, region, and other
factors," read the study.
"By contrast, 67 percent of men and
women in relationships where neither partner attends are happy, and just
59 percent of people in couples where only she attends regularly report
they are very happy.
Clearly, shared attendance and his attendance are
linked to higher self-reported relationship quality."
Regarding
why relationships are highly rated when only the man attends worship,
Wilcox and Wolfinger attributed that to the content of the services.
"Our
findings suggest that men's religious attendance is particularly
beneficial to their relationships, perhaps in part because churches,
synagogues, mosques, and temples are some of the few institutions in
American life that devote sustained attention to encouraging men to
invest in their families," continued the study.
The research drew
from the 2006 National Survey of Religion and Family Life, which had a
sample space of approximately 1,600 adults aged 18-59.
This is not
the first time that Wilcox has presented research finding a connection
between healthy relationships and worship attendance.
In 2008,
Wilcox found that married church-going Americans were more likely to
describe themselves as "very happy" than Americans who did not attend
church regularly.
For that study Wilcox drew upon the General
Social Survey, the National Survey of Families and Households, and the
National Survey of Family Growth.
He also drew critique from Tom
Flynn, editor of Free Inquiry, who told CNS News back in 2008 that there
may have been an issue with correlation and causation.
"That may
reflect the fact that males who are settled in their lives and highly
socialized are both more likely to succeed in their marriages and more
likely to attend church," asserted Flynn.
"Once again, it may mean
that folks who have their lives together tend to avoid substance abuse,
practice good health habits, and go to church."
Others have
pointed to research done by entities like the Barna Group, which found a
high rate of divorce and relationship issues among religious groups
like evangelical Protestants.
Wilcox and Wolfinger address this
matter near the beginning of "Better Together," arguing that the studies
showing this do not factor in religious practice but only nominal
affiliation.
"But these studies do not give us the full picture:
religious affiliation is less important than regular religious
attendance when it comes to predicting divorce," read the study released
Thursday.
"Indeed,
sociologist Charles Stokes finds that nominal evangelical Protestants
are more likely to divorce than the average married person, whereas
churchgoing evangelicals are less likely to divorce."
No comments:
Post a Comment