Humility, Relational Spirituality, and Well-being among Religious Leaders: A Moderated Mediation Model

AbstractPrior research has demonstrated positive associations between general humility and well-being, and posited a protective effect for intellectual humility against maladjustment among religious leaders. We tested a model that extended findings on general humility to include intellectual humility among religious leaders (N = 258;M age  = 42.31; 43% female; 63.7% White; 91.9% Christian affiliation). We observed a positive general humility–well-being association. Contrary to expectations, we observed risk effects for religion-specific intellectual humility. Our findings also point to the possibility that these risk effects migh t be attenuated by the integration of high levels of general and intellectual humility.
Source: Journal of Religion and Health - Category: Medical Ethics Source Type: research
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