Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and Spirituality

Previous research demonstrates an association between religiousness, spirituality, and generosity in adolescents, but few studies have tested the mechanisms by which religion might facilitate the development of generosity in real-world contexts. In this paper, a theoretical model is presented descri...

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Main Authors: Nathaniel A. Fernandez, Sarah A. Schnitker, Benjamin J. Houltberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-03-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/7/3/35
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spelling doaj-131f8a4330624d318cefbe4e89b680012020-11-24T21:52:10ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442016-03-01733510.3390/rel7030035rel7030035Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and SpiritualityNathaniel A. Fernandez0Sarah A. Schnitker1Benjamin J. Houltberg2School of Psychology, Fuller Theological Seminary, 135 N Oakland Ave, Pasadena, CA 91182, USASchool of Psychology, Fuller Theological Seminary, 135 N Oakland Ave, Pasadena, CA 91182, USASchool of Psychology, Fuller Theological Seminary, 135 N Oakland Ave, Pasadena, CA 91182, USAPrevious research demonstrates an association between religiousness, spirituality, and generosity in adolescents, but few studies have tested the mechanisms by which religion might facilitate the development of generosity in real-world contexts. In this paper, a theoretical model is presented describing the potential mechanisms by which engagement in transformational contexts (i.e., participating in charity marathon training) may lead to the development of generosity in adolescents. Participation in charity sporting events is theorized to increase generosity through both higher-order mechanisms, such as sanctification and the development of transcendent identity, and lower-order mechanisms, such as increased entitativity, positive emotions, and dissonance reduction. An empirical strategy for testing the model is presented; suggested methods for inquiry are longitudinal mixed method designs incorporating observations, questionnaires, and qualitative interviewing. Additionally, a case study of ongoing research on adolescents running with Team World Vision is described as an application of the model to an actual research context.http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/7/3/35generosityreligionspiritualityadolescentssport
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nathaniel A. Fernandez
Sarah A. Schnitker
Benjamin J. Houltberg
spellingShingle Nathaniel A. Fernandez
Sarah A. Schnitker
Benjamin J. Houltberg
Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and Spirituality
Religions
generosity
religion
spirituality
adolescents
sport
author_facet Nathaniel A. Fernandez
Sarah A. Schnitker
Benjamin J. Houltberg
author_sort Nathaniel A. Fernandez
title Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and Spirituality
title_short Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and Spirituality
title_full Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and Spirituality
title_fullStr Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and Spirituality
title_full_unstemmed Charitable Sporting Events as a Context for Building Adolescent Generosity: Examining the Role of Religiousness and Spirituality
title_sort charitable sporting events as a context for building adolescent generosity: examining the role of religiousness and spirituality
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Previous research demonstrates an association between religiousness, spirituality, and generosity in adolescents, but few studies have tested the mechanisms by which religion might facilitate the development of generosity in real-world contexts. In this paper, a theoretical model is presented describing the potential mechanisms by which engagement in transformational contexts (i.e., participating in charity marathon training) may lead to the development of generosity in adolescents. Participation in charity sporting events is theorized to increase generosity through both higher-order mechanisms, such as sanctification and the development of transcendent identity, and lower-order mechanisms, such as increased entitativity, positive emotions, and dissonance reduction. An empirical strategy for testing the model is presented; suggested methods for inquiry are longitudinal mixed method designs incorporating observations, questionnaires, and qualitative interviewing. Additionally, a case study of ongoing research on adolescents running with Team World Vision is described as an application of the model to an actual research context.
topic generosity
religion
spirituality
adolescents
sport
url http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/7/3/35
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