Abstract

AbstractThe present study investigated the parent‐child relational repercussions of converting to religion, switching, or deconverting from religion. Qualitative research indicates that these religious changes may negatively affect parent‐child relationship quality, however, few quantitative studies investigate this issue. Subsequently, we utilized structural equation modeling to test if changes in religious identification during adolescence and emerging adulthood predicted worse parent‐child relationship quality using three waves of the National Study of Youth and Religion (N = 2,352). We found that deconversion between Waves 1–2 significantly predicted poorer parent‐child relationship quality at Wave 2 and father‐child relationship quality at Wave 3. Further, deconversion between Waves 2–3 significantly predicted poorer mother‐child relationship quality at Wave 3. Autoregressive cross‐lagged models indicated an association between deconverson and father‐child relationship quality. Deconversion had a significant indirect effect on parent‐child relationship quality through decreased parental warmth and mother‐child religious belief similarity. Implications and directions for future research are discussed.

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