d oes g od m ake it r eal ? c hildren ’ s b elief in r eligious s tories from the j udeo -c...

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DOES GOD MAKE IT REAL? CHILDREN’S BELIEF IN RELIGIOUS STORIES FROM

THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN TRADITION

Jacqueline D. Woolleyand

Victoria Cox VadenThe University of Texas

HOW DO WE REPRESENT REALITY STATUS?

Not real Real

certainty certainty

Boundary is movable. What factors affect movement of the

boundary? Context (Woolley & Van Reet, 2006) Availability (Johnson & Harris, 1994; Bourchier &

Davis, 2002) Emotion (Samuels & Taylor, 1994) Motivation to believe / cost of believing (Carrick

& Quas, 2006; Woolley & Phelps, 2001)

FOCUS OF THE PRESENT STUDY

Reference to God as a potential factor that can affect shifting of the boundary between fantasy and reality

RELIGIOUS STORIES Often contain a mixture of realistic and

fantastical elementsOrdinary people granted special

powersEvents that defy scientific principles

Are conveyed as historical by authority figuresParentsSunday school teachers

BACKGROUND Goldman (1964) - 80% of children up

to age 12 held literal views of Bible stories

Bucher (1991) - children up to age 11 held literal views of Bible stories

ABC news poll (Morris, 1994) - 6 in 10 adults hold literal views of Bible stories

WHAT DO CHILDREN THINK ABOUT STORYBOOK REALITY?

Woolley & Cox (2007)

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

3-year-olds 4-year-olds 5-year-oldsMean number claims events could happen

Fantastical

Realistic

Religious

WHAT FACTORS INFLUENCE CHILDREN’S REALITY STATUS

BELIEFS?

God’s involvement in an event

FamiliarityFamily religiosity

METHOD4-, 5-, and 6-year-olds, primary

ChristianTwo levels of religiosity of stories

(between subjects):References to God intactReferences to God removed

Two levels of familiarity (within subjects):Familiar Bible storiesUnfamiliar Bible stories

MOSES AND MATTHEW AND THETHE

RED SEA GREEN SEA

Moses led God’s people, the Israelites, out of Egypt to get away from the mean Egyptians..

But the king of Egypt was mad. He sent his army to chase after them..

The Israelites called to God for help, and God told Moses, “Do not be afraid. Stretch out your hands over the sea to part the water..”

God told Moses to stretch out his hands again so the sea would go back..

Matthew was helping the people of Ison, the Isonites, out of the town to get away from the mean king..

But the king of Ison was mad. He sent his army to chase after them..

The Isonites called to Matthew for help, and Matthew stretched his hands over the sea to part the water..

Matthew stretched out his hands again so the sea would go back together..

ELIJAH AND THE ETHAN AND THE

FLOUR AND OILFLOUR AND OIL Elijah was hiding from King

Ahab .. God told Elijah, “Pack up

your things.. And so Elijah did exactly

what God told him to do...

Elijah said to the woman, “Don’t worry! God has promised that your flour and oil will not be used up.”

The woman did this and each day more flour and oil appeared (in the jar).

Ethan was hiding from the mayor of Morganton..

Ethan’s father told him, “Pack up your things..

And so Ethan did exactly what his father told him to do..

Ethan said to the woman, “Don’t worry! Your flour and oil will not be used up.”

The woman did this, and each day more flour and oil appeared (in the jar).

TEST QUESTIONS Event factuality: Did the event happen

in real life? Event possibility: Could the event

happen in real life? Character factuality: Is the character a

real person or is he just in the story? Explanations General principles task Parent religiosity questionnaire

EFFECTS OF CONDITION ON CLAIMS ABOUT EXISTENCE OF CHARACTERS

EFFECTS OF CONDITION ON CLAIMS ABOUT FACTUALITY OF EVENTS

EFFECT OF CONDITION ON CLAIMS ABOUT POSSIBILITY OF EVENTS

EFFECTS OF FAMILIARITY ON CHARACTER JUDGMENTS (RELIGIOUS CONDITION ONLY)

EFFECTS OF FAMILIARITY ON EVENT JUDGMENTS (RELIGIOUS CONDITION ONLY)

EFFECTS OF FAMILY RELIGIOSITY

Children with higher family religiosity (FR) scores more often judged characters as real (Religious condition)

Children with higher FR scores more often judged events as real (Religious condition)

No differences re: event possibility No effects of FR in Non-religious

condition Religious education an important

component of FR

CONCLUSIONSBetween 4 and 6, children

increasingly use God’s involvement as a cue to adjust the boundary between fantasy and reality.

How does this work?Reference to God sets up a

contextGod as part of causal chain

CONCLUSIONS (CONT.)Familiar stories are more likely to

be judged as realHow does this work?

Increased familiarity reality status

Multiple contexts/formats reality status

Church reality status

FUTURE RESEARCH QUESTIONS

Do beliefs in God’s omnipotence lead to belief in the reality of stories OR Does belief in the reality of stories promote beliefs in omnipotence?

What other mechanisms can lead to shifting of reality/fantasy boundary?

Would this work with more modern story events?

What constraints are there on this?

Other religions

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This research was supported in part by National Institutes of Health (NICHD) Grant R01 HD 030300 to Jacqueline Woolley, and by a grant from the Deborah Beth Lobliner Graduate Fellowship to Victoria Cox.

Thanks to undergraduate research assistants: Michael Aguhar, Amanda Amescua, Lacy Cervenka, Rebecca Feng, Janette Flores, Dorna Hoseiny, Matt Maa, Claudia Mejia, Oshma Raj, Rachel Riskind, Christine Setty, Elizabeth Shults, Betsy Sohmer, Courtney Stollon, Hayley Stulmaker, and Van Winn.

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