Religious
orientation influences elderly’s fear of death
Newswise — As they
approach death, the churchgoing elderly are likely to
find little solace in religion if they had little
personal commitment to God during the rest of their
lives, a new University of Florida study finds.
In fact, talking about
religion to comfort people who are not very spiritual
can actually increase their fears of dying and what
might lie beyond, said Monika Ardelt, a UF sociologist
whose research appears in the March issue of Research on
Aging.
The study of 103
relatively healthy older adults and 19 hospice patients
in North Central Florida, all of whom were older than
60, found sharp differences between people who are
“intrinsically” and “extrinsically” religious.
Those with an
“intrinsic religious” orientation dedicated their life
to God or a higher power and reported they were less
afraid of death and experienced greater feelings of
well-being than people who fit into the “extrinsic
religious” category of using religion for external ends,
such as a way to make friends or increase community
social standing, Ardelt said.
“I think the take-home
message is that if you cannot commit your life to God or
a higher power, it is better to be nonreligious than to
be religious for the wrong reasons,” she said.
“Extrinsically
religious” people are more vulnerable at the end of life
than non-churchgoers because they might be reminded in
church that their lives have not been morally perfect,
Ardelt said.
“Being exposed to the
doctrines and teachings of their church, they knew what
they were supposed to do, but they may not necessarily
have been doing it,” she said. “So they may be more
afraid of the payback when they die than people who
don’t believe at all.”
Another reason
personal commitment may be important is that church
fellowship tends to decline in old age, Ardelt said.
Elderly people in poor health may end up in nursing
homes or assisted living facilities and be unable to
travel to their old church, having to substitute it with
an unfamiliar congregation that is physically closer or
attended by their relatives, she said.
The study underscores
the need to distinguish between “intrinsic” and
“extrinsic” religious orientations when looking at the
effects of religiosity on people’s attitudes toward
death and feelings of well-being, Ardelt said. Past
studies have relied on measures such as what
denominations people belong to, how frequently they
attend church and how they rate the importance of
religion in their lives; with little research done on
hospice patients, she said.
Interestingly, the
study found that being “intrinsically religious” did not
have a direct effect on achieving a sense of purpose in
life, although participating in shared spiritual
activities did. These might include attending church,
participating in Bible studies and watching religious
television programming with others, Ardelt said.
“It’s not enough to
feel that you have dedicated your life to God, you have
to actually engage in spiritual activities,” she said.
“This is kind of a counter argument to people who say,
‘I don’t need the church, I can be spiritual by myself.’
Apparently it’s being part of a community that creates a
feeling of communion, of being in connection with a
higher power that sustains a sense of meaning and
purpose in life.”
The findings are
important because many people mistakenly believe that
bringing up the subject of religion with the elderly is
helpful, particularly for hospice patients, when the
opposite is actually true for people who are
“extrinsically religious,” she said.
A minister who
participated in the study unexpectedly turned out to fit
such a religious bent. “When I asked if he engaged in
spiritual activities, he said, ‘Well, not as much
anymore, I’m retired,’” Ardelt said. “He ended up not
being very spiritual at all.”
Ardelt said she
believes the man was so busy during his career that he
didn’t have time to seriously question his religion
until later in life, when he had difficulty conceiving
of a place like heaven being roomy enough for billions
of people. “For these extrinsically religious people,
there is some real existential struggle going on at the
end of life,” she said.
Community-dwelling
older residents were recruited from 18 close-knit social
groups, including bowling leagues, garden clubs and
religious congregations. They were surveyed between 1998
and 1999. Patients from a local hospice group were
interviewed and asked to fill out a survey between 1999
and 2001.
The study’s effects
were most pronounced in hospice patients, who naturally
were more affected by thoughts of death, she said.
Having “intrinsic religious” beliefs offered tremendous
help for these terminal patients at the end of life.
“The ‘religious extrinsic’ people often ask ‘Why me?’”
she said, “’Intrinsically religious’ people don’t
necessarily ask that question because they believe that
God must have a reason.”