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“Seeing Conversion Whole”: Testing a Model of Religious Conversion

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Abstract

Rambo (1993) theorized that religious conversion consists of a process involving seven dimensions, labeled context, crisis, quest, encounter, interaction, commitment, and consequences. To test the Rambo model, a new measure, the 97-item Adult Religious Conversion Experiences Questionnaire (ARCEQ), was developed, revised on the basis of feedback from a focus group, and administered by mail to 110 adult volunteers who self-identified as having experienced conversion. Reliability analysis of the subscales of the ARCEQ resulted in five (crisis, quest, encounter, commitment, and consequences) meeting the criterion (α > .80). A sixth (interaction) achieved a reliability of .76 and was retained, but the seventh (context) was dropped. Principal components factor analysis with Varimax rotation produced factors labeled Redemptive Love, Zealous Dedication, Dysphoric Need, Openness to Uncertainty, Extrinsic Crisis, and Experiential Learning, which could readily be interpreted in relation to Rambo's model. Subsidiary analyses showed a number of significant correlations between demographic characteristics of the sample and differences in religious conversion experience.

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Correspondence to Peter J. Kahn.

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Kahn, P.J., Greene, A.L. “Seeing Conversion Whole”: Testing a Model of Religious Conversion. Pastoral Psychology 52, 233–258 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1023/B:PASP.0000010025.25082.25

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/B:PASP.0000010025.25082.25

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