Literature DB >> 15139583

Relationships between God and people in the Bible, part III: When the other is an outsider.

Carol Popp1, Lester Luborsky, Jean Descôteaux, Louis Diguer, Tomasz P Andrusyna, Dan Kirk, George Cotsonis.   

Abstract

This study considers intergroup attitudes in the Bible and compares relationships between God or Jesus and (a) Torah non-Israelites; (b) New Testament people who were not followers of Jesus; and (c) New Testament people who were not Jewish. Torah non-Israelites belonged to an out-group with respect to the Hebrew Torah, New Testament people who were not followers of Jesus belonged to an out-group with respect to the Christian New Testament, and New Testament people who were not Jewish were an in-group with respect to Christians. Results were that God or Jesus' relationships were very negative with people in the Torah who were non-Israelites and with people in the New Testament who were not followers, while relationships were positive with people in the New Testament who were not Jewish. Thus, in conclusion, results indicate that both the New Testament and the Torah portray negative relationships between God or Jesus and members of out-groups. Relationships portrayed in New Testament narratives about God and people who were not followers were sometimes more negative than observed for other groups in the New Testament and the Torah; for people who were viewed as outsiders, the New Testament could sometimes be more negative than the Torah. An aim of this study was to identify patterns of relationships between God or Jesus and different types of people in narratives of the Torah and in the New Testament. One of the characteristics of different types of people, including people described in biblical narratives, is whether they are members of in-groups or out-groups. Our focus in this report is on biblical narratives about people who are members of out-groups. The results contribute a clinical-quantitative assessment of out-groups in the Torah and New Testament that is focused on relationship with God, a central issue in the psychology of religion and the Bible.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15139583     DOI: 10.1521/psyc.67.1.26.31255

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatry        ISSN: 0033-2747            Impact factor:   2.458


  2 in total

1.  The Psychology of the Pursuit for a Sense of Power and Structural Patterns of Biblical Social Relations.

Authors:  Amadeusz Citlak
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2021-04-10

2.  Modelling the effect of religion on human empathy based on an adaptive temporal-causal network model.

Authors:  Laila van Ments; Peter Roelofsma; Jan Treur
Journal:  Comput Soc Netw       Date:  2018-01-05
  2 in total

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