RT Article T1 Types of God Representations and Mental Health: A Person-Oriented Approach JF The international journal for the psychology of religion VO 27 IS 4 SP 199 OP 214 A1 Schaap-Jonker, Hanneke A2 Corveleyn, Jozef A2 Eurelings-Bontekoe, Elisabeth H. M. A2 Velde, Nathan van der LA English YR 2017 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1575848775 AB As God representations are multi-facetted psychological processes regarding the personal meaning of God/the divine to the individual, this study examines how multiple aspects of God representations are configured within individuals belonging to a sample of psychiatric patients or a non-patient sample, and how these configurations are associated with mental health. By means of cluster analyses, three types of God representations were found: a Positive-Authoritative one, a Passive-Unemotional one, and, only among psychiatric patients, a Negative-Authoritarian one. Types of God representations were significantly related to affective state, as well as religious saliency and religious background. Patients with the negative type of God representation were more distressed and depressed, and Orthodox-Reformed patients reported significantly more negative types of God representations. This study demonstrates the value of a person-oriented approach, by showing that scale scores became especially meaningful in the context of the types, which enables more nuanced distinctions regarding subgroups. NO In der Druckausgabe ist Volume 27, Numbers 1-4 in einem Heft erschienen DO 10.1080/10508619.2017.1382119