Among the religious factors that significantly contribute to believers' well-being, research on the personal experience of divine forgiveness (DF) remains in its infancy. The aim of this study was to investigate similarities and differences in the conceptualization of DF, its conditional/unconditional nature, and the understanding of sin across the three main monotheistic religions.
Methods
This was achieved by interviewing theologians (N = 3) through a focus group and having lay believers (N = 229, 63.8% female, Mage = 33.09 years, SD = 13.81) from Christianity, Islam, and Judaism complete a self-report questionnaire.
Results
The theologians' and believers' perspectives revealed that while there are shared aspects across religions (e.g., God's mercy is greater than His justice), some differences are evident (e.g., the pathways to seek and achieve DF).
Discussion
These findings make a significant contribution to the psychology of religion, shedding light on universal and culturally specific dimensions of this multidimensional phenomenon.
divine forgiveness monotheistic religions, religious well-being forgiveness, cross-religion comparison forgiveness, sin forgiveness psychology, focus group religious experience, self-report divine forgiveness scale, Christian Muslim Jewish forgiveness, religious coping well-being
PMID 41280190 41280190 DOI 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1646554 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1646554
Cite this article
Mulligan, J. J. (1989). *Theologians and Authority*.
Mulligan JJ. Theologians and Authority. 1989.
Mulligan, J. J. *Theologians and Authority*. 1989.
Sebire E et al., 2026The Lancet regional health. Europe
BACKGROUND: Down's syndrome (DS) is the most common chromosomal congenital condition diagnosed in pregnancy. Antenatal screening for DS is available in Scotland, and in September 2020, non-invasive pr...
BACKGROUND: Social Egg Freezing (SEF), often promoted in Western contexts as a means to enhance reproductive autonomy, has seen varied uptake in countries with wider gender disparities. In such settin...
Jain N et al., 2026Women's health (London, England)
BACKGROUND: Healthcare professionals' and students' willingness to provide abortion influences access to care and workforce readiness.
OBJECTIVE: We conducted a literature synthesis to identify patte...
GBD 2023 Intimate Partner Violence and Sexual Violence against Children Collaborators, 2026Lancet (London, England)
BACKGROUND: Violence against women and against children are human rights violations with lasting harms to survivors and societies at large. Intimate partner violence (IPV) and sexual violence against ...