'My Special Prayer': on Self, God and Prayer

Authors

  • Hessel J. Zondag h.j.zondag@uvt.nl
    Faculty of Humanities Tilburg University P.O. Box 90153 5000 LE Tilburg Netherlands
  • Marinus H.f Van Uden Tilburg University, School of Humanities, Department of Culture Studies; The Netherlands

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5708/EJMH.9.2014.1.1

Keywords:

individualisation, self, overt and covert narcissism, prayer, narcissism

Abstract

In this contribution we will demonstrate the impact of narcissism – an important personality trait in individualistic societies – on religious behaviour. Present-day Western culture is generally characterised as being expressive individualistic. A dominant trait in this pattern is the tendency of people to ascribe divine (godlike) characteristics to themselves. Psychologically speaking, we are dealing with narcissism. The various varieties in the spectrum of narcissism show that these attempts to attribute divine characteristics to the self do not always succeed. These individuals fantasise about becoming godlike, but their self-image is too fragile to enable these attempts to be successful. The success of this narcissistic aspiration has effects on religious activities, like praying. Based on earlier empirical research and a case study we show how self-deification, narcissism and prayer are related. Those who succeed in becoming godlike pray in a different manner than those who fail in this effort. The former address their prayers to themselves or an anonymous higher power, the latter address their prayers to a personal God.

Published 2014-06-15

How to Cite

Zondag, H. J., & Van Uden, M. H. (2014). ’My Special Prayer’: on Self, God and Prayer. European Journal of Mental Health, 9(1), 3–19. https://doi.org/10.5708/EJMH.9.2014.1.1