Abstract

Since most religions emphasize helping others and childhood family experiences contribute to emerging adults’ behavior, we explored how childhood family religious socialization was related to future emerging adults’ self-reported prosocial behavior after accounting for their current self-reported prosocial behavior. Specifically, we investigated the extent to which emerging adults’ (NT1=551) retrospective views of how frequent (FAITHS-Freq) and important (FAITHS-Importance) their childhood family faith activities were related to their future self-reported prosocial behavior toward family (PBFa), friends (PBFr) and strangers (PBSt) one year later (T2). After accounting for PB-T1 behaviors, FAITHS-frequency T1 significantly predicted T2 self-reported prosocial behavior towards strangers (PBSt), but not future (T2) PBFa or PBFr. The same pattern emerged for FAITHS-importance T1: after accounting for T1 PBs, it was only a significant predictor of T2 PBSt. Thus, for emerging adults both FAITHS-frequency and importance appear to contribute to self-perceptions as helpful toward unfamiliar others in emerging adulthood.

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