Abstract

Religiosity appears to benefit wellbeing, potentially due to social support offered by religious communities. However, rising secularism implies that fewer people have access to these benefits. To address this problem, we investigated whether these benefits could also be obtained from membership in a secular, quasi-religious community. We conducted a longitudinal study among 92 members of the Sunday Assembly (SA), an international organization of secular congregations. SA members assemble in large services and in smaller interest groups that offer more face-to-face interaction. Once a month for six months, participants completed a questionnaire measuring wellbeing and participation in both SA and non-SA social activities. Panel analysis of longitudinal data revealed that participation in SA small-group activities positively influenced wellbeing over the six-month period, particularly among males. Participation in non-SA social activities, in contrast, had no effect on wellbeing. Aspects of the Sunday service that members perceived as most important, both for creating a sense of community and for friendship formation, were the informal socialising and cooperating that occurs before and after the service itself. Secular congregations may be a viable alternative for non-religious people (and perhaps especially men) who seek the health benefits that religious communities have traditionally offered.

Highlights

  • Religiosity appears to benefit wellbeing, potentially due to social support offered by religious ­communities

  • Participants said they had a mean of 7.51 total close relationships, with 1.21 of them involving people they had met through the Sunday ­Assembly (SA)

  • These results suggest that a important way in which such organisations can benefit members is by providing opportunities for them to engage in direct social interaction before and after formal services, and especially in small groups that meet throughout the week and that provide more frequent opportunities for close social contact

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Summary

Introduction

Religiosity appears to benefit wellbeing, potentially due to social support offered by religious ­communities. Secular congregations may be a viable alternative for non-religious people (and perhaps especially men) who seek the health benefits that religious communities have traditionally offered. The positive religion-health correlation has been observed among both genders, and women generally tend to be more religious than men (review in Hvidtjørn et al, 2014), there is no clear theoretical reason to predict this correlation to be stronger in one gender than the other. One prominent review of studies of religion and health (Powell et al, 2003) concluded that the only aspect of religiosity that seems negatively associated with mortality was social interaction in religious contexts (measured in terms of frequency of attendance at religious services). Lim and Putnam (2010) found that the higher life satisfaction of religious Americans was due to the social benefits of religious attendance, and not to any private aspects of religious belief

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