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Internalization of homophobia and transphobia may undermine mental health benefits of religiosity or spirituality for LGBTQIA+ people, study finds
https://www.mcgill.ca/newsroom/channels/...-or-372410

PRESS RELEASE: Non-affirming religious doctrine may engender internalized homophobia or transphobia among LGBTQIA+ people of faith, undermining the positive mental health outcomes otherwise associated with religiosity and spirituality, a McGill study has found.

“There was a lot of diversity in what we found, but across all papers, internalized homo/bi/transphobia, an experience borne out of non-affirming religious doctrine, led to a slew of serious mental health outcomes, even unto substance use and suicide,” explained Kevin Prada, PhD student in Counselling Psychology and lead author of the paper, which synthesized the findings of 55 quantitative studies on the subject, representing over 500,000 respondents worldwide.

When LGBTQIA+ people receive non-affirming religious messages, they might engage in self-hate in order to be accepted and loved by a divine power and to belong in a community, Prada said.

Faith and mental health. Prada noted that generally, in the literature, religiosity and spirituality are positively associated with mental health, except for LGBTQIA+ individuals, where the situation is more mixed.

Spirituality can be understood as the internal connection a person holds in a higher power or to something greater than oneself. Religiosity, by contrast, is generally understood as more observable behaviours or expressions of belief, such as attending church or participating in rituals.

“When we look at spirituality and religiosity as something connecting us to something that's bigger than who we are, we can understand how that can give us a sense of purpose, a sense of meaning in life, as well as a really strong sense of belonging and community, which are all factors that we know are highly beneficial for people's mental health,” noted Prada.

“There are reasons why some queer people choose to stay even within non-affirming religions,” he added. “And there's also this theme we see of many LGBTQIA+ people around the globe leaving or even transforming, “queering” different non-affirming religious contexts into something that's actually more suited and more consistent, more congruent with who they are.”

Mindfulness as an alternative path. The review also highlights how mindfulness can be a way that LGBTQIA+ people stepping away from a non-affirming religious group can fill the void and obtain the protective effects of spirituality.

Prada, who is part of the McGill Mindfulness Research Lab led by Professor Bassam Khoury, also a co-author of the paper, explained that he hopes to develop a mindfulness-based intervention as part of his larger research work.

A complementary qualitative research review is also in the works, he said, which will aim to better explain the findings of this study and include larger samples of Two Spirit individuals and others whose experiences have not sufficiently been captured by quantitative research.

PAPER: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00918369.2026.2614619
No shit, Sherlock. 9_9

Maybe some lifestyles are not compatible with religion, or its mental health benefits.
Quote:Non-affirming religious doctrine may engender internalized homophobia or transphobia among LGBTQIA+ people of faith, undermining the positive mental health outcomes otherwise associated with religiosity and spirituality, a McGill study has found.

Ya think? "Non-affirming" religious doctrine is putting it mildly. The Bible is and historically has been one of the biggest justifications for homophobia and the oppression of LGBTQ ever in existence. Modern interpreters have tried valiantly to sugar coat the hateful passages of the OT and of Paul for years, but you can't paint a turd to make it look pretty. Gays who continue sucking hind tit from the churches have been too weakened over the years by its soul-killing doctrines to leave. That's the long-term poisonous effect of religion on all human sexuality which only promotes repression and shame, including among even heterosexuals. It's a spirituality tainted with the black stain of fear of damnation and self-hate and moralistic condemnation. And the sooner it all shrivels up and dies the better.
(Apr 14, 2026 04:11 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: [ -> ]That's the long-term poisonous effect of religion on all human sexuality which only promotes repression and shame, including among even heterosexuals.
Yet heterosexuals who do not abide by religious sexual strictures still enjoy its mental health benefits.
(Apr 14, 2026 04:30 AM)Syne Wrote: [ -> ]
(Apr 14, 2026 04:11 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: [ -> ]That's the long-term poisonous effect of religion on all human sexuality which only promotes repression and shame, including among even heterosexuals.
Yet heterosexuals who do not abide by religious sexual strictures still enjoy its mental health benefits.

Nobody has any estimate of the total psychological and bodily damage centuries of moralistically condemning all sexuality outside of marriage has had on young women and men. Of teaching children to be ashamed of their bodies as nasty and disgusting. The legacy of bloody fetuses in back alley trash cans is only one small result. Dead end marriages and alcoholism and neurosis and exaggerated compensative promiscuity are others.
(Apr 14, 2026 04:39 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: [ -> ]
(Apr 14, 2026 04:30 AM)Syne Wrote: [ -> ]
(Apr 14, 2026 04:11 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: [ -> ]That's the long-term poisonous effect of religion on all human sexuality which only promotes repression and shame, including among even heterosexuals.
Yet heterosexuals who do not abide by religious sexual strictures still enjoy its mental health benefits.

Nobody has any estimate of the psychological and bodily damage centuries of moralistically condemning all sexuality outside of marriage has had on young women and men. Of teaching children to be ashamed of their bodies as nasty and disgusting. The legacy of bloody fetuses in back alley trash cans is only one small result. Dead end marriages and alcoholism and neurosis and exaggerated compensative promiscuity are others.

Yet religious people still enjoy the mental health benefits of being religious.
(Apr 14, 2026 04:43 AM)Syne Wrote: [ -> ]
(Apr 14, 2026 04:39 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: [ -> ]
(Apr 14, 2026 04:30 AM)Syne Wrote: [ -> ]
(Apr 14, 2026 04:11 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: [ -> ]That's the long-term poisonous effect of religion on all human sexuality which only promotes repression and shame, including among even heterosexuals.
Yet heterosexuals who do not abide by religious sexual strictures still enjoy its mental health benefits.

Nobody has any estimate of the psychological and bodily damage centuries of moralistically condemning all sexuality outside of marriage has had on young women and men. Of teaching children to be ashamed of their bodies as nasty and disgusting. The legacy of bloody fetuses in back alley trash cans is only one small result. Dead end marriages and alcoholism and neurosis and exaggerated compensative promiscuity are others.

Yet religious people still enjoy the mental health benefits of being religious.

No they don't. That's like saying heroin addicts still enjoy the pleasures of their addiction. There is more mental illness among religious people than among any other group.

"Researchers and theorists have identified and begun to study problematic aspects of religiousness, including religiously-based violence and religious struggles within oneself, with others, and with the divine. Religious problems can be understood as a by-product of psychiatric illness (secondary), a source of psychiatric illness (primary), or both (complex). This growing body of knowledge underscores the need to attend more fully to the potentially constructive and destructive roles of religion in psychiatric diagnosis, assessment, and treatment."--- https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3619169/
It seems obvious to me that homosexuals joining a church or a religious tradition that condemns or is otherwise critical of homosexuality will lead to internalized conflict. Did we really need a probably lavishly funded Canadian "study" to tell us that?

I'd be willing to bet that conservative Christians experience similar psychological conflicts trying to fit into woke "mainstream" Protestant denominations like the Episcopalians or the Methodists that preach lefty sermons condemning Trump and his voters every Sunday and fly their rainbow and trans flags outside.

It seems to me that the solution is for homosexuals to seek out more welcoming congregations, though admittedly those might not satisfy their need for spirituality, since many of them seem more like political activist groups than religious groups. (I still remember attending a Unitarian Universalist service many years ago and it was all about the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. Nothing about spirituality or religious experience or the transcendent. I didn't go back.)
Quote:It seems to me that the solution is for homosexuals to seek out more welcoming congregations, though admittedly those might not satisfy their need for spirituality, since many of them seem more like political activist groups than religious groups. (I still remember attending a Unitarian Universalist service many years ago and it was all about the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. Nothing about spirituality or religious experience or the transcendent. I didn't go back.)

LOL I went to a Unitarian Church when I lived in Austin in the 80's. All they talked about was "values". I have never worshipped or prayed to a "value" in all my life. Apparently they had to water down their spirituality so much so as to not step on the toes of any of the diverse believers in their congregation. Then after one service they actually handed out condoms! That wasn't for me. I prefer my spirituality far less domesticated and neutered-- full of dangerous mysteries and wild animal gods and deeply magical interconnections. So I left.
(Apr 14, 2026 04:55 AM)Magical Realist Wrote: [ -> ]
(Apr 14, 2026 04:43 AM)Syne Wrote: [ -> ]Yet religious people still enjoy the mental health benefits of being religious.

No they don't. That's like saying heroin addicts still enjoy the pleasures of their addiction. There is more mental illness among religious people than among any other group.

"Researchers and theorists have identified and begun to study problematic aspects of religiousness, including religiously-based violence and religious struggles within oneself, with others, and with the divine. Religious problems can be understood as a by-product of psychiatric illness (secondary), a source of psychiatric illness (primary), or both (complex). This growing body of knowledge underscores the need to attend more fully to the potentially constructive and destructive roles of religion in psychiatric diagnosis, assessment, and treatment."--- https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3619169/
Yet, overall, most religious people still enjoy the mental health benefits... even while not following every tenet. There's no accounting for those who have a preexisting or propensity to mental illness... in any setting. Abuse would mostly imply the contagion of mental illness, from abuser to victim, like it would in any other setting.


(Apr 14, 2026 05:59 AM)Yazata Wrote: [ -> ]It seems to me that the solution is for homosexuals to seek out more welcoming congregations, though admittedly those might not satisfy their need for spirituality, since many of them seem more like political activist groups than religious groups. (I still remember attending a Unitarian Universalist service many years ago and it was all about the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. Nothing about spirituality or religious experience or the transcendent. I didn't go back.)
It does seem like the more a church panders to secular culture the less it focuses on actual spirituality. Virtue signalling instead of actual virtue.

The Unitarian Universalist church I visited mostly just read poets, like Walt Whitman... which is at least spiritual.
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