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๐Ÿ™Religion and Psychology Unit 14 Review

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14.3 Religious perspectives on death and dying

๐Ÿ™Religion and Psychology
Unit 14 Review

14.3 Religious perspectives on death and dying

Written by the Fiveable Content Team โ€ข Last updated September 2025
Written by the Fiveable Content Team โ€ข Last updated September 2025
๐Ÿ™Religion and Psychology
Unit & Topic Study Guides

Religious views on death and the afterlife shape how people approach end-of-life decisions. Beliefs range from heaven and hell in Abrahamic faiths to reincarnation in Eastern traditions, influencing moral behavior and life's purpose.

Religious rituals and practices provide comfort during death and dying. Prayer, last rites, and community support offer spiritual solace, while ethical dilemmas arise when balancing religious teachings with medical interventions and personal autonomy.

Religious Perspectives on Death and Dying

Religious views on death and afterlife

  • Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) share monotheistic belief in one God, linear view of time and history, concept of judgment after death shapes moral behavior
  • Eastern religions (Hinduism, Buddhism) embrace cyclical view of existence, belief in reincarnation or rebirth, karma influencing future lives drives ethical conduct
  • Afterlife beliefs vary: Heaven and Hell in Abrahamic traditions reward or punish earthly deeds, Nirvana in Buddhism ends suffering cycle, Moksha in Hinduism liberates from rebirth
  • Meaning of life differs: Abrahamic religions emphasize fulfilling divine purpose, Buddhism seeks achieving enlightenment, Hinduism aims to break the cycle of rebirth

Religious influence on end-of-life decisions

  • Sanctity of life principle impacts life-sustaining treatments and organ donation decisions (ventilators, dialysis)
  • Acceptance of death as part of life's journey affects hospice and palliative care preferences, attitudes towards pain management
  • Religious authority and guidance involve clergy in decision-making process, consultation of religious texts and teachings (Bible, Quran, Vedas)
  • Cultural and familial considerations balance collective decision-making in some cultures with individual autonomy vs family involvement

Comfort through religious rituals

  • Prayer and meditation offer personal spiritual practices and communal prayer gatherings for support
  • Last rites and sacraments provide spiritual preparation (Extreme Unction in Catholicism, Viaticum)
  • Sacred texts and readings offer recitation of scriptures, spiritual guidance from holy books (Torah, Bhagavad Gita)
  • Symbolic objects and practices include use of religious items (rosary beads, prayer rugs), lighting of candles or incense
  • Community support involves visitation by religious leaders, presence of fellow congregation members

Ethical dilemmas in religious contexts

  • Sanctity of life vs quality of life debate explores religious views on suffering and its meaning, concept of human dignity in different faiths
  • Autonomy and self-determination balance religious perspectives on free will and personal choice with religious teachings
  • Natural death vs medical intervention examines acceptance of palliative care across religions, views on artificial life support and its withdrawal
  • Physician-assisted death faces prohibition in many traditional religious views, emerging liberal interpretations in some faith communities
  • Ethical frameworks in different religions apply principle of double effect in Catholic moral theology, Buddhist emphasis on compassion and reducing suffering
  • Interfaith dialogue on end-of-life issues promotes collaborative efforts to address ethical challenges, respect for diverse religious perspectives in healthcare settings