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Centrality of Religiosity Scale (CRS)

The Centrality of Religiosity Scale (CRS), developed by Stefan Huber and Odilo Huber and consolidated in their 2012 paper, measures how central the religious meaning system is within an individual's personality. It operationalizes five core dimensions drawn from the Glock-Stark tradition — intellect, ideology, public practice, private practice, and religious experience — and treats them as indicators of a single higher-order construct, the centrality of religiosity. The CRS comes in interchangeable 15-, 10-, and 7-item versions, yields both dimension scores and an overall centrality score, and supports a simple three-level classification of respondents as not religious, religious, or highly religious. Designed for cross-cultural and interreligious use, it has become one of the most widely applied general religiosity measures in contemporary survey research.

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Sources

  1. Huber, S., & Huber, O. W. (2012). The Centrality of Religiosity Scale (CRS). Religions, 3(3), 710-724. DOI: 10.3390/rel3030710
  2. Glock, C. Y., & Stark, R. (1965). Religion and Society in Tension. Chicago: Rand McNally. link

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Huber Centrality of Religiosity Scale (Five-Dimensional Measure of Religious Centrality). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/religious-studies/centrality-of-religiosity-scale

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Referenced by

ScholarGateCentrality of Religiosity Scale (CRS) (Huber Centrality of Religiosity Scale (Five-Dimensional Measure of Religious Centrality)). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/religious-studies/centrality-of-religiosity-scale · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026