The Congregational Structure of Homonegativity: Why Place of Worship May Matter More than Frequency of Worship

J Homosex. 2022 Jun 7;69(7):1275-1299. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2021.1909397. Epub 2021 Apr 1.

Abstract

Using 239 congregants from 14 randomly selected places of worship in the Southern United States-and a mega-analysis of 577 congregants from 34 similarly-located places of worship-we examined the relationship between religiousness and homonegativity. Multilevel models examining the effects of religiousness on homonegativity indicated that service attendance was more strongly related to homonegativity as a congregation-level variable than as an individual-level variable. Interaction effects between service attendance and the affirmativeness of a congregation were not significant, suggesting that the frequency of participation with a homonegative congregation is not related to homonegativity. These findings imply that the religiousness of a congregation is more closely related to homonegativity than the religiousness of an individual and that individuals may select a congregation that matches their views on same-sex sexuality. Homonegativity may serve a signaling function, enabling congregants to affiliate with a congregation with attitudes toward same-sex sexuality similar to their own.

Keywords: LGBTQ; affirming; attitudes toward homosexuality; congregation; homonegativity; religion; service attendance.

MeSH terms

  • Attitude*
  • Homosexuality*
  • Humans
  • United States