A Qualitative Investigation Into Faith and LGBTQ Identities in a Nonclinical Sample of Readers of the Dear Abby Column: The Dear Abby Project

To better understand the relationship between faith and LGBTQ+ identity, we conducted a qualitative analysis of 86 respondents to a general question posed through the Dear Abby column. Responses were anonymized and analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Analysis revealed six themes, reflecting a...

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Published inThe journal of nervous and mental disease Vol. 209; no. 12; p. 855
Main Authors Ghazzawi, Alhasan, Casoy, Flávio, Libby, Naomi, McIntosh, Chris, Barber, Mary, Adelson, Stewart, Ahola, Joanne, Ashley, Kenneth, Chavez, Alexis M, Erickson-Schroth, Laura, Fadus, Matthew, Goldenberg, David, Hung, Kenneth, Lothwell, Lorraine, Mattson, Marlin, McAfee, Scot G, Nowaskie, Dustin Z, Schwartz, Alan, Tompkins, David Andrew, Yarbrough, Eric R, Drescher, Jack
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.12.2021
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Summary:To better understand the relationship between faith and LGBTQ+ identity, we conducted a qualitative analysis of 86 respondents to a general question posed through the Dear Abby column. Responses were anonymized and analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Analysis revealed six themes, reflecting a diversity of lived experience from community rejection to acceptance, and self-rejection to feelings of acceptance by God. Despite frequent media portrayals of conflict between faith and LGBTQ+ identity, the reality is more complex, and faith and LGBTQ+ identity development can be complementary.
ISSN:1539-736X
DOI:10.1097/NMD.0000000000001415