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Familial Resemblance in Religiousness in a Secular Society: A Twin Study

Personal religiousness such as praying to God, believing in God, and finding strength and comfort in religion were more influenced by genetic factors than were social forms of religiousness such as church attendance.

It is well known that human behavior and individual psychological traits are moderately to substantially heritable. Over the past decade, an increasing number of studies have explored the genetic and environmental influence on religiousness. These studies originate predominantly from countries generally considered more religious than the very secular northern European countries.

Comparisons of the results are complicated by diverse definitions of religiousness, but several studies indicate that the influence of the family environment is most predominant in early life, whereas genetic influences increase with age. We performed a population-based twin study of religiousness in a secular society using data from a Web-based survey sent to 6,707 Danish twins born 1970-1989, who were identified in the Danish Twin Registry. We applied Fishman's three conceptual dimensions of religiousness: cognition, practice, and importance. In all polygenic models and biometric analyses, we controlled for gender and age. The study sample comprised 2,237 same sex twins, a response rate of 45%.

We found high correlations within both monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs in most items of religiousness, indicating a large influence from shared environmental factors. Personal religiousness such as praying to God, believing in God, and finding strength and comfort in religion were more influenced by genetic factors than were social forms of religiousness such as church attendance. We found a small tendency for increasing genetic influence with increasing age for some religious items, but not for all.

Table: Demographic and Number of Twins Answering Yes to Questions About Religiousness.

Ìý

MZ female

DZ femaleÌý

MZ male

DZ male

Demographics Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý
ÌýInvitedÌý 1.316Ìý 1.405Ìý 962 1.228Ìý
ÌýParticipated 709 (54%) 672 (48%) 401 (42%) 455 (37%)
ÌýAge (mean) 30,4Ìý 28,5Ìý 29,6Ìý 28,6Ìý
ÌýMember of the national church 618Ìý 551Ìý 313Ìý 358Ìý
ÌýMember of other churches ÌýÌý25Ìý Ìý 26Ìý ÌýÌý 2Ìý ÌýÌý 7Ìý
ÌýNot a member Ìý 66 Ìý 95Ìý Ìý 83Ìý Ìý 90Ìý
Cognition Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý
ÌýI believe in God 290 218Ìý 116Ìý 117Ìý
ÌýI believe in life after death 276Ìý 246Ìý Ìý 92Ìý 115Ìý
Practice Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý
ÌýI go to church monthly ÌýÌý40Ìý Ìý 38Ìý Ìý 23Ìý Ìý 27Ìý
ÌýI pray to God 403Ìý 344Ìý 150Ìý 168Ìý
Importance Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý
ÌýGod is important in my life 167Ìý 143Ìý Ìý 58Ìý Ìý 68Ìý
ÌýI find strength and comfort inÌýreligion 211Ìý 153Ìý Ìý 68Ìý Ìý 83Ìý

Ìý

Original publication:

Dorte Hvidtjørn, Inge Petersen et al.
Familial Resemblance in Religiousness in a Secular Society: A Twin Study
Twin Research and Human Genetics; 2013 Feb 22:1-10.

Editing was completed: 26.08.2013