The relationship between religion and anxiety: a study among Anglican clergymen and clergywomen.
Jackson, Chris
The 20-item anxiety scale proposed by the Eysenck Personality
Profiler (EPP) was completed by 1,148 Anglican male clergy and 523
Anglican female clergy during their first year in ordained ministry. The
data demonstrate that male clergy recorded higher scores on the index of
anxiety than men in general. Female clergy recorded lower levels on the
index of anxiety than women in general. These findings are consistent
with the findings from earlier studies that male clergy tend to project
a characteristically feminine personality profile while female clergy
tend to project a characteristically masculine personality profile.
**********
The relationship between religious faith and anxiety has for a long
time been of interest both to theologians and to psychologists. On the
face of the matter, Christian theologians and certain psychological
theories seem to propose diametrically opposed hypotheses about the
relationship.
On the one hand, biblical theology may seem to suggest that
religious people who put their faith in God should show a lower level of
anxiety or worry. For example, the Psalmist in the Old Testament
promises that those who dwell in the shadow of the most high will live
without fear (Psalm 91, RSV).
You will not fear the terror of the night,
or the arrow that flies by day,
or the pestilence that stalks in the darkness,
or the destruction that wastes at noonday.
In the sermon on the mount in Matthew 6, Jesus teaches his
followers that faith displaces anxiety.
Do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will
drink, nor about your body, what you shall put on.... Look at the birds
of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet
your heavenly Father feeds them.
Certainly, according to this theological perspective, the
hypothesised relationship is a negative correlation between religion and
anxiety.
On the other hand, certain psychological theories may seem to
suggest that religious people who put their faith in God should show a
higher level of anxiety or worry. For example, Freud construed religion
as an attempt to resolve the father-child conflict. Religion was
presumed to be an outgrowth of insecurity and God a personification of
the father image who ultimately would provide for the needs of his
children and punish them for their misdeeds. Freud (1957) attributed
religion to a person's basic insecurity and religion was therefore
considered to be a prime symptom of neurosis. Certainly, according to
this psychological perspective, the hypothesised relationship is a
positive correlation between religiosity and anxiety.
Empirical studies in the psychology of religion have so far failed
to resolve this divergence of opinion. On the one hand, it is far from
difficult to identify studies which report a positive association
between religion and anxiety, including Wilson and Miller (1968), Hassan
and Khalique (1981), and Luyten, Corveleyn and Fontaine (1998). On the
other hand, it is equally easy to identify studies which report a
negative association between religion and anxiety, including Williams
and Cole (1968), Sturgeon and Hamley (1979), Hertsgaard and Light
(1984), Morris (1982), and Peterson and Roy (1985). A third group of
studies failed to find any association at all, either negative or
positive between religion and anxiety, including Heintzelman and Fehr
(1976), Fehr and Heintzelman (1977), Frenz and Carey (1989), and Gilk
(1990).
One interesting development of this line of enquiry is to examine
the levels of anxiety within a particular group of people who can be
reasonably considered to be particularly committed to religion. From
Galton's (1872) pioneering study on the efficacy of prayer,
ordained clergy have been identified as representing just such a group.
Unfortunately, empirical studies concerned with assessing anxiety among
clergy also generate conflicting results.
On the one hand, there is one set of studies which report that
people in ordained ministry are more anxious than people in the general
population. For example, Wilson (1974) administered the 16PF (Cattell,
Eber, & Tatsuoka, 1970) to 100 Roman Catholic priests in the United
States. The results showed that these Roman Catholic priests score
higher on the factor Q4 and are more worried, tense, and anxious than
men in general. Similar results were reported by Scordato (1975) who
administered the 16PF to 129 seminary persisters in the United States,
by Stewart (1990) who administered the 16PF to 54 Protestant ministers
in the United States, and by Musson (1998) who administered the 16PF to
441 male Anglican clergy in the Church of England.
On the other hand, there is a second set of studies which report
that people in ordained ministry are less anxious than people in the
general population. For example, Pallone and Banks (1968) administered
the 16PF to 21 Seventh-day Adventists from a seminary in North America.
The results showed that these Seventh-day Adventists score lower on the
factor Q4 and are more relaxed and calm. Similar results were reported
by Nauss (1972b) who administered the 16PF to 242 graduating seminarians
from Springfield, Illinois, and by Godwin (1989) who administered the
16PF to 252 new staff applicants for the Campus Crusade for Christ in
the United States.
At the same time, there is a third set of studies, also employing
the 16PF among different groups of clergy, which find clergy scores of
anxiety clearly coming within the population norms. These studies
include Childers and White (1966) among 72 students at a southern
theological institution; Chalmers (1969) among 70 Seventh-day Adventist ministers; Cattell, Eber and Tatsuoka (1970) among 1,707 Roman Catholic
priests; and Nauss (1972a) among 255 persisting seminarians from
Springfield, Illinois.
Building on the tradition of assessing anxiety levels among clergy
against anxiety levels in the general population, the present study
extends existing research in three ways. First, the present study
proposes to use a much larger and more representative sample of clergy
than available to previous studies in the field. Second, while previous
studies have concentrated exclusively on male clergy and seminarians,
the present study proposes to undertake separate analyses among
clergymen and clergywomen. Third, while previous studies have focussed
on Cattell's personality factor Q4, the present study proposes to
deploy a relatively new and robust index of anxiety included in the
Eysenck Personality Profiler, developed by Eysenck, Barrett, Wilson and
Jackson (1992). The 20-item measure of anxiety proposed by the Eysenck
Personality Profiler is located alongside 20 other personality traits
and modelled within the context of Eysenck's three-dimensional
model of personality. Drawing on the earlier work of Eysenck and Wilson
(1976), the construct assessed by this measure of anxiety is defined in
the following terms:
high scorers on the anxiety sub-factor are people who are easily upset
by things that go wrong and are inclined to worry unnecessarily about
things that may or may not happen. Such people account for a high
proportion of the consumption of minor tranquillizers like Librium and
Valium. Low scorers are placid, serene and resistant to irrational fears
and anxieties. (p. 84)
The scale is characterised by items like: 'Are you inclined to
get yourself all worked up over nothing?'; 'Do you worry
unreasonably over things that do not really matter?'; 'Are you
anxious about something or somebody most of the time?'
Eysenck el al. (1992) reported an alpha coefficient of .83 for the
male sample and .85 for the female sample. Further evidence of the
reliability of this scale is provided by Muris, Schmidt, Merckelbach and
Raassin (2000) who reported an alpha coefficient of .80. The Eysenck
Personality Profiler has been used in a series of studies, including
Marchant-Haycox and Wilson (1992); Jackson and Wilson (1993, 1994),
Wilson and Jackson (1994); Jackson and Corr (1998); Furnham, Forde and
Cotter, (1998a,1998b), Furnham, Forde and Ferrari (1999); Francis,
Robbins, Jackson, and Jones (2000); Muris, Schmidt, Merckelbach and
Rassin (2000); and Jackson (2001).
Against this background, the aim of the present study is to test
the theory that clergy record higher levels of anxiety in comparison
with men and women in general by comparing the mean scores recorded by
male and female Anglican clergy on the anxiety scale proposed by the
Eysenck Personality Profiler with the population norms established for
the instrument by the test constructors.
METHOD
The Eysenck Personality Profiler Questionnaire was mailed during
December 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, and 1996 to all clergy ordained during
that year into the Anglican Church in England, Ireland, Scotland, and
Wales. The names and addresses of the respondents were obtained from the
Church of England Church Commissioners.
Each year achieved a response rate between 62% and 72%. In 1992,
568 questionnaires were successfully mailed and 353 returned their
questionnaires completed, making a response rate of 62.1%. In 1993, 565
questionnaires were successfully mailed and 386 were returned completed,
making a response rate of 68.3%. In 1994, 508 questionnaires were
successfully mailed and 316 were completed making a response rate of
62.1%. In 1995, 449 questionnaires were successfully mailed and 321
returned making a response rate of 71.5%. In 1996, 484 were successfully
mailed and 299 completed, making a response rate of 61.8%. The completed
returns for male clergy was 1,148, and the completed returns for female
clergy was 523.
Of the male respondents 18% were in their twenties, 38% in their
thirties, 26% in their forties, 13% in their fifties, and 4% were sixty
or over. Of the female respondents 8% were in their twenties, 20% in
their thirties, 42% in their forties, 25% in their fifties, and 4% were
sixty or over.
The data were analysed by the SPSS package, using the reliability,
frequency and t-test routines (SPSS Inc, 1988).
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The anxiety scale achieved an alpha coefficient of .83 for male
clergy and .81 for female clergy. Both alpha coefficients are above the
.70 marker given by Kline (1993) as indicating a unidimensional and
homogeneous psychometric instrument.
Table 1 presents the mean scale scores on the index of anxiety for
male and female clergy separately and compares the scores with the norms
provided in the test manual. In light of the use of multiple t-tests,
necessary to examine the relationships between the mean scale scores
recorded by the male and female clergy, and the population means, the
Bonferroni correction was employed, establishing a p-value of .0125.
These data demonstrate that male clergy record significantly higher
scores on the scale of anxiety than men in the normal population. Women
in the normal population, however, record significantly higher scores on
the scale of anxiety than female clergy. Women in the normal population
record significantly higher scores on the scale of anxiety than men in
the normal population. There was no significant difference between male
and female clergy on the scale of anxiety. These data, therefore,
demonstrate that male clergy are more anxious than the men in the normal
population, that female clergy are less anxious than the women in the
normal population, and that there is no significant difference between
the anxiety levels displayed by male and female clergy. Table 2
penetrates behind the overall mean scores recorded on the index of
anxiety to examine the percentage of male and female clergy who endorse
the individual items.
On the face of the matter these data appear to provide some support
for both of the contradictory hypotheses advanced from the perspectives
of biblical theology and Freudian psychology. Support for the
perspective proposed by Freudian psychology is found among the sample of
clergymen. Support for the perspective proposed by biblical theology is
found among the sample of clergywomen.
The denouement from this puzzle of contradictions can be offered by
consideration of what is known about sex differences in anxiety levels
and by what is known about sex differences among Anglican clergy. First,
it is clear from the data presented in Table 1 that, within the general
population, women record higher levels of anxiety than men. In other
words, higher levels of anxiety are consonant with a feminine
personality profile, while lower levels of anxiety are consonant with a
masculine personality profile. Second, there is evidence from a series
of earlier studies among Anglican ordinands (Francis, 1991), Anglican
priests (Robbins, Francis, & Rutledge, 1997), and Methodists
Ministers (Robbins, Francis, Haley, & Kay, 2001) that male clergy
tend to portray, in some senses, a characteristically feminine
personality profile, while female clergy tend to portray, in some
senses, a characteristically masculine personality profile. Men who are
attracted to ministry may be attracted to work within a predominately
feminised environment. Women who are attracted to ministry may be
attracted to enter what they (mistakenly) perceive to be essentially a
preserve of male identity. If higher levels of anxiety are, indeed,
associated with a feminine personality profile and if male Anglican
clergy tend to portray a characteristically feminine personality
profile, these two observations would account for why it is that male
clergy record anxiety scores significantly higher than the norms
established for men in general. Similarly, if lower levels of anxiety
are, indeed, associated with a masculine personality profile and if
female Anglican clergy tend to portray a characteristically masculine
personality profile, these two observations would account for why it is
that female clergy record anxiety scores significantly lower than the
norms established for women in general.
Following Galton's (1872) pioneering suggestion, namely that
clergy should be seen as primary exemplars of religious people, the
present study set out to examine a general problem in the psychology of
religion among a sample of clergy. The conflict between the findings
among clergymen and clergywomen has been explained in light of a
research tradition which has established how the personality profile of
clergymen differs from the profile of men in general and how the
personality profile of clergywomen differs from the profile of women in
general. It would be unwise, therefore, to generalise these findings
from clergy to religious people in general without knowing a great deal
more about the relationship between the personality profile of clergymen
and religious men in general and about the relationship between the
personality profile of clergywomen and religious women in general.
Future research on the relationships between anxiety and religion should
focus on other groups of people.
Table 1 Mean scale scores (for men and women compared with population
norms)
sex clergy norms
mean sd mean sd
Male 11.82 7.82 9.85 7.87
Female 12.32 7.59 13.45 8.94
Male clergy/
female clergy t = 1.223 p < NS
Male clergy/
male norms t = 5.234 p < .001
Female clergy/
female norms t = 2.329 p < .01
Male norms/
female norms t = 7.980 p < .001
Table 2 Percentage Endorsement of the Twenty Items of the Index of
Anxiety (Anxious/Calm) for Male and Female Clergy
Male Female
% %
Are you inclined to get yourself all worked up over
nothing? 21 21
Are you easily embarrassed in a social situation? 25 28
Is life often a strain for you? 20 25
Do you often worry unreasonably over things that do not
really matter? 29 28
Are you often afraid of things and people that you know
would not really hurt you? 6 9
Are you inclined to tremble and perspire if you are faced
with a difficult task ahead? 16 21
Are you usually calm and not easily upset? 81 76
Do you worry unnecessarily over things that might happen? 28 29
Do you worry too long over humiliating experiences? 45 56
Do you sometimes get into a state of tension and turmoil
when thinking over your difficulties? 47 58
Do you find it difficult to sit still without fidgeting? 33 20
Have you ever felt you needed to take a very long holiday? 65 64
Does your voice get shaky if you are talking to someone
you particularly want to impress? 14 12
Do you sometimes feel that you have so many difficulties
that you cannot possibly overcome them? 11 11
Do you often wake up sweating after having a bad dream? 6 7
Are you easily annoyed if things don't go according to
plan? 46 34
Do you blush more often than most people? 11 19
Do you often feel restless as though you want something
but do not really know what? 29 29
Are you anxious about something or somebody most of the
time? 19 23
Are you a nervous person? 13 12
Note: items [c] Psi-Press, 2001
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SUSAN H. JONES and LESLIE J. FRANCIS
University of Wales
CHRIS JACKSON
University of Queensland
AUTHORS
JONES, SUSAN H. Address: Centre for Ministry Studies, University of
Wales, Bangor, Normal Site, Bangor, LL57 2PX, UK. Title: Director of the
Ministry Course at Bangor. Degrees: BEd, MPhil, PhD, University of
Wales. Specializations: Personality and religion, clergy studies,
psychology of religion, empirical theology.
FRANCIS, LESLIE J. Address: Centre for Ministry Studies, University
of Wales, Bangor, Normal Site, Bangor, LL57 2PX, UK. Title: Professor of
Practical Theology. Degrees: MA, BD, DD, University of Oxford, PhD, ScD,
University of Cambridge. Specializations: Psychology of religion,
empirical theology, clergy stress, burnout and personality,
psychological type.
JACKSON, CHRIS. Address: School of Psychology, University of
Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Degrees: BSc, MPhil, PhD, University of
Coventry. Specializations: Structure and theory of personality and its
applications.
Correspondence concerning this article may be addressed to Leslie
J. Francis, Director, Welsh National Centre for Religious Education,
University of Wales, Bangor, Normal Site, Bangor, Gwynedd, LL57 2PX, UK.
Email address: l.j.francis@bangor.ac.uk