Communications Psychology (Mar 2025)

Spiritual boredom is associated with over- and underchallenge, lack of value, and reduced motivation

  • Thomas Goetz,
  • Jonathan Fries,
  • Lisa Stempfer,
  • Lukas Kraiger,
  • Sarah Stoll,
  • Lena Baumgartner,
  • Yannis L. Diamant,
  • Caroline Porics,
  • Bibiana Sonntag,
  • Silke Würglauer,
  • Wijnand A. P. van Tilburg,
  • Reinhard Pekrun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44271-025-00216-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract The emotion of boredom has attracted considerable research interest. However, boredom experienced in spiritual contexts (i.e., spiritual boredom) has rarely been investigated. Based on control-value theory (CVT), we investigated the occurrence, antecedents, and motivational effects of spiritual boredom in five different spiritual contexts: yoga, meditation, silence retreats, Catholic sermons, and pilgrimage. For each context, we conducted two independent studies, one including trait and another including state measures. The set of 10 studies included a total sample of N = 1267 adults. We complemented individual study results with an internal meta-analysis. The results showed a mean level of spiritual boredom of $$\bar{M}$$ M ¯ = 1.91 on a scale of 1 to 5. In line with CVT, spiritual boredom was positively related to being overchallenged ( $$\bar{r}$$ r ¯ = 0.44) in 9 out of the 10 studies and positively related to being underchallenged ( $$\bar{r}$$ r ¯ = 0.44) in all studies. Furthermore, as expected, spiritual boredom was negatively related to perceived value in all studies ( $$\bar{r}$$ r ¯ = −0.54). Finally, boredom was negatively related to motivation to engage in spiritual practice ( $$\bar{r}$$ r ¯ = −0.46) across studies. Directions for future research and practical implications are discussed.