The Centrality of Religiosity Scale (CRS)

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2012, Vol 3, Issue 3

Abstract

The Centrality of Religiosity Scale (CRS) is a measure of the centrality, importance or salience of religious meanings in personality that has been applied yet in more than 100 studies in sociology of religion, psychology of religion and religious studies in 25 countries with in total more than 100,000 participants. It measures the general intensities of five theoretical defined core dimensions of religiosity. The dimensions of public practice, private practice, religious experience, ideology and the intellectual dimensions can together be considered as representative for the total of religious live. From a psychological perspective, the five core-dimensions can be seen as channels or modes in which personal religious constructs are shaped and activated. The activation of religious constructs in personality can be regarded as a valid measure of the degree of religiosity of an individual. The CRS thus derives from the five dimensional measures a combined measure of the centrality of religiosity which is suitable also for interreligious studies. The paper presents the theoretical basis and rationale of its construction with different versions of the CRS in 20 languages with norm values for 21 countries. Furthermore, the paper presents versions of different extension and describes specific modifications that were developed for studies with Buddhists, Hindus and Muslims.

Authors and Affiliations

Stefan Huber and Odilo W. Huber

Keywords

Related Articles

Studies on Bhartr .hari and the Pratyabhijña: The Case ¯ of svasam . vedana

The article addresses a critical problem in the history of South Asian philosophy, namely the nature of the ‘knowledge of knowledge’ (svasam. vedana). In particular, it investigates how the Saiva tantric school of the...

The City of Man, European Émigrés, and the Genesis of Postwar Conservative Thought

This article explores the forgotten manifesto The City of Man: A Declaration on World Democracy, which was composed in 1940 by a group of prominent American and European anti-isolationist intellectuals, including Thoma...

Marketing Missions: Material Culture, Theological Convictions, and Empire in 18th-Century Christian Philanthropy

In the 18th century, Halle Pietists were part of a global missionary network that reached into North America and that anticipated later developments in worldwide evangelical missions; Pietists made critical alliances w...

Redeeming Emotion-Focused Therapy: A Christian Analysis of Its Worldview, Epistemology, and Emphasis

While emotion-focused therapy (EFT) offers clinically useful information to Christian practitioners, its underlying worldview, epistemology, and emphasis present challenges for Christian therapists. This article advoca...

Marital Naming Plans among Students at Four Evangelical Colleges

Despite increasingly egalitarian gender roles in the United States, when the wedding bells ring for heterosexual couples, husband and wife still commonly emerge sharing the man’s last name. Largely missing from previou...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25263
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3030710
  • Views 380
  • Downloads 15

How To Cite

Stefan Huber and Odilo W. Huber (2012). The Centrality of Religiosity Scale (CRS). Religions, 3(3), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25263