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The Journal of Religion and Health is a bimonthly peer-reviewed academic journal. It was established in 1961 by the Blanton-Peale Institute and published by Springer Science+Business Media. The journal covers contemporary quantitative and qualitative religious, pastoral and spiritual care research which utilizes current medical, psychological ...
Reviews and discussions have appeared in The New Yorker, [1] Freethought Today, [2] First Things, [3] Journal of the American Medical Association, [4] The Gerontologist, [5] the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, [6] Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, [7] The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, [8] Journal of Hospice & Palliative Nursing, [9] Journal of ...
Critiques and evaluations of the MMRS or BMMRS have appeared in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, [3] Research on Aging, [4] [5] the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, [6] the International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, [7] [8] Journal of Religion and Health, [9] [10] Research in the Social Scientific Study of ...
The Journal of Religion was the American Journal of Theology: 0022-4189 JR 1882–present University of Chicago Press: Chicago, Illinois: United States Journal of Religion and Film: 1092-1311 J. Religion Film 1997–present University of Nebraska at Omaha: United States Journal of Religion in Africa: 0022-4200 (print) or 1570-0666 (online ...
Various other reviews of the religion/spirituality and health literature have been published. These include two reviews [7] [8] from an NIH-organized expert panel that appeared in a 4-article special section of American Psychologist. [9] Several chapters in edited academic books have also reviewed the empirical literature. [10]
The weaknesses of this book are a function of its strengths. By aiming for a wide audience the book must cover a lot of ground, some of which is elementary review for some of the readership. The book probes deeply into the complexities of the topic and is encyclopedic in its coverage of the research; it is therefore somewhat daunting in size.
In the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, Boehnlein wrote that the editors' "primary focus, and stated goal, is to assess what is known about the relationship between health outcomes and faith [and they] are largely successful in achieving this goal. "[3] He also wrote that because it reviews so much quantitative research, the book is ...
(2007) [8] and in his book The Madness of King Jesus (2010) [14] that Pilate and other Romans regarded Jesus as an insane lunatic. [8] According to the Gospels , Jesus was presented to Pilate and sentenced to death as a royal pretender , but the standard Roman procedure was the prosecution and execution of would-be insurgents with their leaders.