
Religion and Health
By Russell Shaw
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 2/1/07)
To hear militant secularists tell the story, religion
is bad for society's health. To hear social scientist Patrick F. Fagan
tell it, that's plain bunk. On the basis of the facts, Fagan wins this
argument hands-down.
The long and the short of it, says Fagan, is that religious practice "promotes
the well-being of individuals, families and the community." He's
got the evidence for that.
The most notorious slur on religion's social role may be the famous Marxist
claim that faith distracts people from their real needs here and now by
promising "pie in the sky when you die." Lately it's been fashionable
in secularist circles to say religion sows the seeds of social strife,
with zealots battling it out—Sunnis and Shiites trading car bombings
in the streets of Baghdad, say.
There's a kernel of truth here. Religion really has been known to attract
fanatics and extremists. So has non-religion. Does anyone suppose the
horrors perpetrated by Stalin, Hitler, and Mao were enacted in the name
of faith? The genuinely bloody-minded appear to be at least as bloody-minded
without theology as with it.
In any case, that's hardly the issue in a country like the United States.
And here, Fagan points out, a substantial quantity of late-vintage research
exists in illustration of the benign role of religion.
His survey of the literature, "Why Religion Matters Even More,"
has just been published by the Heritage Foundation, where he is a research
fellow in family and cultural issues. "Even More" in the title
is a reference to a similar study Fagan conducted back in 1996. The new
report updates it with findings of the past decade.
Especially noteworthy, Fagan says, are studies showing the benefits of
religion to the poor. In sum:
"Regular attendance at religious services is linked to healthy, stable
family life, strong marriages and well-behaved children.
"The practice of religion also leads to a reduction in the incidence
of domestic abuse, crime, substance abuse and addiction.
"In addition, religious practice leads to an increase in physical
and mental health, longevity and education attainment."
The new report is a rich source of information and scholarly citations
regarding many different issues and concerns. For example, out-of-wedlock
childbearing (37 percent of U.S. births now occur this way).
According to one study cited by Fagan, young women who viewed themselves
as "not at all religious" were much more likely to have a child
out of wedlock than those who considered themselves to be very religious—three
times more likely among whites, 2.5 times among Hispanics, and twice as
likely among blacks.
Fagan calls attention to several steps Congress could usefully and appropriately
take in light of such findings without raising any church-state hackles.
These include a sense-of-Congress resolution declaring data on religious
practice to be useful to policymakers and researchers involved in the
ongoing policy debate, and making the religious factor a regular part
of periodic national surveys such as those conducted by the Census Bureau.
In addition, he says, policymakers should familiarize themselves with
research showing the benign social effects of religious practice and should
give serious consideration to evidence indicating that faith-based social
service programs are more effective than secular counterparts.
Not only are religious belief and practice relevant to addressing and
solving some of the nation's most serious social problems including out-of-wedlock
births and family breakdown—the contrary also is true. As Fagan
says, "To work to reduce the influence of religious belief or practice
is to further the disintegration of society." We ignore that warning
at our peril.
(c) Copyright 2007 by Arlington Catholic
Herald
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