Christian faith is increasingly examined in psychology as a resource that strengthens cognitive appraisal, emotion regulation, and coping. This article analyses it as a multidimensional system that shapes perception, motivation, and resilience. Building on research into religious coping, meaning-making, and self-transcendence, it asks how Christian beliefs support psychological stability. The Paulini Stoic stress model is integrated theoretically to expose the interfaces between religious meaning-making and philosophical emotion regulation.
Björn Paulini (Thu,) studied this question.
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