People with a Forgiving God More Likely to Cheat on Tests

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Erik Hayden 2,683 Views Apr 20, 2011

Apparently, people who envision God as harsh and punitive may be less likely to cheat on tests. Those who view God as caring and forgiving are more likely to take a chance that the higher power will let a few copied answers on a math exam slide.

So go the findings, at least, of a new study conducted by administering a easily-cheated computerized math test and theology survey to readily available research guinea-pigs, i.e. college undergraduates. "What matters more than whether you believe in a god is what kind of god you believe in," explained researcher Azim F. Shariff in a public release.

A possible reason for this occurrence could, naturally, be fear of punishment. If one assumes that God will smite you for cheating, this belief acts as a sort of moral deterrence--halting any wandering eyes on an exam. On the other hand, if one can always seek forgiveness from a perceived loving God for a transgression like cheating, what's the incentive to ever stop?

Cue the long-running theological debate.

[h/t: Runnin' Scared]

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