God's will, God's punishment, or God's limitations? Religious coping strategies reported by young adults living with serious mental illness

Abstract
Qualitative research has demonstrated that religious meaning‐making coping, defined as attributions of a stressful life event that involve the sacred, is particularly relevant to persons with serious mental illness. However, recent research advances in the study of religious coping have yet to be employed in clinical samples. This longitudinal study examines religious meaning‐making coping in a sample of 48 young adults diagnosed with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder over a one‐year period. Young adults with mental illness generally reported using religious meaning‐making coping in levels comparable to nonpsychiatric samples. Reports of benevolent religious reappraisals were associated with perceptions of positive mental health, whereas punishing God reappraisals and reappraisals of God's power were associated with self‐reported distress and personal loss. Religious coping variables accounted for variation in adults' reports of psychiatric symptoms and personal loss one year later over and above demographic and global religious variables. Implications of findings for clinical practice are discussed. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol.