Type Patterns among Evangelical Protestants in Ontario
No Thumbnail Available
Issue Date
2012
Authors
Bramer, Paul D. G.
Ross, Christopher
Advisor
Artist
Creator
Editor
Photographer
Type
Article
Keywords
Psychological types
MBTIĀ®
Mental health
Protestant churches
Southern Ontario evangelical churches
Evangelicals
Religion
MBTIĀ®
Mental health
Protestant churches
Southern Ontario evangelical churches
Evangelicals
Religion
Citation
Bramer, Paul and Christopher Ross. āType Patterns among Evangelical Protestants in Ontario.ā Mental Health, Religion & Culture, 15, no. 10 (2012): 997-1007. [Accessed May 15, 2017]. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13674676.2012.678577
Abstract
Drawn from five southern Ontario evangelical churches and two related church organisations, evangelical women (Nā=ā93) were more J, F, FJ, IJ, SJ, and NJ compared to both Canadian and American women, and more I, SF, and IS than Canadian women. Evangelical men (Nā=ā84) were more S, J, SJ, IS, and included more ISFJs and ISTJs compared to Canadian men, but did not diverge from Consulting Psychologist Press American male norms, nor from Canadian Catholic men except for including more ISFJs. Compared to a combined female and male sample of Ontario Anglicans, the total evangelical sample was more E, S, T, J, ES, IS, SJ, ST, and SF. The study replicates for Anglophone Canadians findings from studies in Francophone Canada, the USA, England and Wales that established the association of sensing and judging type preferences with activity in, or affiliation to, evangelical Protestant Christian groups. Type-associated limitations to growth of evangelical churches are discussed here.
Table of Contents
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright Notice
Copyright, Routledge. All rights reserved.
Rights License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
Rights License Link
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
