The well-being correlates of religious commitment amongst South African and Kenyan students

Abstract

Religious commitment is a prominent feature in the lives of many students in Africa. The present study investigated the well-being correlates (emotional well-being, social contribution, and depression) of religious commitment, and compared them across sex. A cross-sectional sample of 471 students from South Africa and Kenya (men = 244; women = 227; with an average age of 22.8 years) completed the Religious Commitment Inventory, Patient Health Questionnaire, Social Well-being Scale, and Mental Health Continuum Short-Form. Structural equation modelling in Mplus was used to estimate direct effects of religious commitment on emotional well-being, social contribution and depression, and comparison across sex. The results showed significant direct effects, attesting to the association of religious commitment with higher emotional well-being and social contribution, and lower depression, with no significant sex differences. In addition to insight into positive and negative intra- and interpersonal well-being correlates of religious commitment, the absence of sex differences shows uniformity in how religious commitment is related to well-being for male and female students.

Description

open access article

Keywords

Citation

Khumalo, I.P., Selvam, S.G., Wilson Fadiji, A. (2023) The well-being correlates of religious commitment amongst South African and Kenyan students. South African Journal of Psychology. 53 (4), pp. 589-602

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 UK: England & Wales
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/

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