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ABSTRACT Recent spirituality research has sought to develop spirituality measures that empirically substantiate spirituality as a unique construct independent of established personality constructs. One such measure is Sanctification, a psychological process through which people perceive aspects of life to possess spiritual character and significance. The results indicated that the Sanctification of Work was a significant predictor of Job Satisfaction, Turnover Intention, and Organizational Commitment after controlling for Spirituality, Religiosity, Personality, Psychological Safety, and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
ABSTRACT Recent spirituality research has sought to develop spirituality measures that empirically substantiate spirituality as a unique construct independent of established personality constructs. One such measure is Sanctification, a psychological process through which people perceive aspects of life to possess spiritual character and significance. The results indicated that the Sanctification of Work was a significant predictor of Job Satisfaction, Turnover Intention, and Organizational Commitment after controlling for Spirituality, Religiosity, Personality, Psychological Safety, and Demographic variables. The findings of the study identified that the Sanctification of Work predicted the largest amount of variance in Job Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment after controlling for the other predictors. The results supported the validity of the Sanctification of Work as an independent construct that assesses spirituality s relationship to work-related outcomes. The findingssuggest that the Sanctification of Work can be a resource for clinicians and clients in assessing the role of spirituality in work-related issues, such as career decisions or coping skills.
Autorenporträt
Stephen Thomas Carroll received a Masters of Arts in Pastoral Counseling from Boston College and a Doctorate in Pastoral Counseling from Loyola College in 2008. He has practiced as a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor in Maryland since 2001,served on the faculty of Loyola University, and currently works as a clinician at Saint Luke Institute.