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Childhood predictors of adults’ belief in god, gods, and spiritual forces across 22 countries

Childhood predictors of adults’ belief in god, gods, and spiritual forces across 22 countries
Childhood predictors of adults’ belief in god, gods, and spiritual forces across 22 countries

Religion is an integral part of everyday life for billions of people, yet little is known about the developmental antecedents of religious belief outside of Western cultures. Using data from over 200,000 individuals across 22 countries, we evaluate several childhood predictors of belief in God, gods, and spiritual forces (Belief in God) in adulthood. We hypothesized that these childhood experiences, personal attributes, and familial or social circumstances would have meaningful and varied associations with Belief in God as adults, with the strength of these associations differing by country, reflecting diverse cultural influences. Most candidate predictors (e.g., parental marital status, childhood socioeconomic status, abuse, being an outsider, and immigration) were associated with Belief in God in some countries but with substantial variation. However, when pooled across countries, only childhood religious service attendance, birth cohort, and gender were significant predictors. Yet there was important variation even for these predictors, and no predictor had a consistent association across all countries. Though this cross-sectional design is limited in allowing causal inference, results provide insights into early-life experiences that might contribute to adults’ Belief in God. The heterogeneity of results highlights the importance of considering any childhood predictor within its social and cultural context.

Belief in God, Childhood, Cross-cultural, Global Flourishing Study
2045-2322
Moon, Jordan W.
552fac5b-2f9e-48c3-9546-a0844409098b
Johnson, Kathryn A.
8a378a72-0ad2-4593-90f2-68aa40d75c7b
Case, Brendan
55529404-daa8-4a7f-8c75-914860094604
Padgett, R. Noah
1ace69c4-5705-46c4-ab09-822bc5ccee2d
Johnson, Byron R.
31950f58-3b60-4e3d-a842-1dfbb0c20054
VanderWeele, Tyler J.
7ba69431-209e-4b4b-919e-aa109daa569d
Moon, Jordan W.
552fac5b-2f9e-48c3-9546-a0844409098b
Johnson, Kathryn A.
8a378a72-0ad2-4593-90f2-68aa40d75c7b
Case, Brendan
55529404-daa8-4a7f-8c75-914860094604
Padgett, R. Noah
1ace69c4-5705-46c4-ab09-822bc5ccee2d
Johnson, Byron R.
31950f58-3b60-4e3d-a842-1dfbb0c20054
VanderWeele, Tyler J.
7ba69431-209e-4b4b-919e-aa109daa569d

Moon, Jordan W., Johnson, Kathryn A., Case, Brendan, Padgett, R. Noah, Johnson, Byron R. and VanderWeele, Tyler J. (2025) Childhood predictors of adults’ belief in god, gods, and spiritual forces across 22 countries. Scientific Reports, 15 (1), [14819]. (doi:10.1038/s41598-025-98796-1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Religion is an integral part of everyday life for billions of people, yet little is known about the developmental antecedents of religious belief outside of Western cultures. Using data from over 200,000 individuals across 22 countries, we evaluate several childhood predictors of belief in God, gods, and spiritual forces (Belief in God) in adulthood. We hypothesized that these childhood experiences, personal attributes, and familial or social circumstances would have meaningful and varied associations with Belief in God as adults, with the strength of these associations differing by country, reflecting diverse cultural influences. Most candidate predictors (e.g., parental marital status, childhood socioeconomic status, abuse, being an outsider, and immigration) were associated with Belief in God in some countries but with substantial variation. However, when pooled across countries, only childhood religious service attendance, birth cohort, and gender were significant predictors. Yet there was important variation even for these predictors, and no predictor had a consistent association across all countries. Though this cross-sectional design is limited in allowing causal inference, results provide insights into early-life experiences that might contribute to adults’ Belief in God. The heterogeneity of results highlights the importance of considering any childhood predictor within its social and cultural context.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 April 2025
Published date: 30 April 2025
Additional Information: © 2025. The Author(s).
Keywords: Belief in God, Childhood, Cross-cultural, Global Flourishing Study

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505619
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505619
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: 9734049f-a85f-4d8c-9dbb-7957f7059da4
ORCID for Jordan W. Moon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5102-3585

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Date deposited: 14 Oct 2025 16:56
Last modified: 15 Oct 2025 02:18

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Contributors

Author: Jordan W. Moon ORCID iD
Author: Kathryn A. Johnson
Author: Brendan Case
Author: R. Noah Padgett
Author: Byron R. Johnson
Author: Tyler J. VanderWeele

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