Feeling Good Through Faith and Thanks
Turkey, JordanTue Jun 02 2026
Relief from stress, a sense of purpose, and simple joy are all parts of what makes life feel good. In two Muslim‑majority countries, researchers wanted to know how these feelings link with religious practice. They studied 812 adults from Turkey and Jordan, asking them about how often they pray or attend religious services, how happy they feel, how thankful they are for what they have, and whether they experience envy that is cruel or harmless.
The results showed a clear pattern. People who reported stronger religious engagement also felt happier overall. But the link was not direct. Instead, religion seemed to boost two specific emotions that then lifted happiness. First, those who were more religious tended to feel greater gratitude – a warm sense of appreciation for life’s blessings. Second, they reported less malicious envy, the nasty feeling that others have more and one wants to bring them down. Both of these emotional trends were tied to higher happiness scores.
Interestingly, benign envy – the harmless feeling that someone else has something nice and you wish you did too – didn’t connect with religion or happiness at all. This suggests that it is the positive appreciation and reduced hostility that matter most when faith and joy intersect.
Because all data were collected at one time point, the study cannot say for sure that religion causes these feelings or that feeling grateful makes people religious. It simply shows statistical relationships that hint at a possible pathway: religion may encourage thankfulness and calmness, which in turn make people feel happier. Future studies that follow people over time or manipulate gratitude levels could help confirm whether these emotions truly drive the happiness benefits seen in religious communities.