TY - JOUR
T1 - Avoidance Behavior Following Terror Event Exposure
T2 - Effects of Perceived Life Threat and Jewish Religious Coping
AU - Zukerman, Gil
AU - Korn, Liat
AU - Shapiro, Ephraim
AU - Fostick, Leah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Society for the Scientific Study of Religion
PY - 2016/9/1
Y1 - 2016/9/1
N2 - The current research was designed to examine associations of perceived life threat (PLT) and religious coping with the development of avoidance behavior following terror event exposure. Based upon the terror management theory (TMT), we hypothesized that religious coping, through its effect on religious beliefs as a meaning system, would moderate the impact of threat, as expressed in PLT, on an individual's reaction to terror event exposure, as manifested in avoidance behavior. Participants were 591 Israeli Jewish students who were vicariously or directly exposed to a terror event in the past. We report a significant interaction between PLT and negative religious coping. PLT was positively associated with avoidance behavior but this relationship was more profound among persons who reported high negative religious coping. Secular students reported higher rates of avoidance behavior and negative religious coping and were more likely than religious students to report intrapersonal religious conflict. Our findings suggest that terror event exposure is associated with an elevated sense of threat, which is, at least in part, associated with a weakening of prior religious beliefs.
AB - The current research was designed to examine associations of perceived life threat (PLT) and religious coping with the development of avoidance behavior following terror event exposure. Based upon the terror management theory (TMT), we hypothesized that religious coping, through its effect on religious beliefs as a meaning system, would moderate the impact of threat, as expressed in PLT, on an individual's reaction to terror event exposure, as manifested in avoidance behavior. Participants were 591 Israeli Jewish students who were vicariously or directly exposed to a terror event in the past. We report a significant interaction between PLT and negative religious coping. PLT was positively associated with avoidance behavior but this relationship was more profound among persons who reported high negative religious coping. Secular students reported higher rates of avoidance behavior and negative religious coping and were more likely than religious students to report intrapersonal religious conflict. Our findings suggest that terror event exposure is associated with an elevated sense of threat, which is, at least in part, associated with a weakening of prior religious beliefs.
KW - avoidance behaviors
KW - perceived life threat
KW - religious coping
KW - terror event exposure
KW - terror management theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85008466130&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/jssr.12283
DO - 10.1111/jssr.12283
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AN - SCOPUS:85008466130
SN - 0021-8294
VL - 55
SP - 516
EP - 530
JO - Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
JF - Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
IS - 3
ER -