Does faith lead to the social virtue of honesty? Yes, as honesty and social trust are “mutually reinforcing”, as according to Robert Putnam, faith does lead to honesty. To wit: Already determined is that faith leads to the social virtues of altruism and cooperativeness. And, according to Francis Fukuyama, social virtues, over time, build social trust. Therefore, since faith leads to social virtues which lead to social trust, and social trust and honesty are “mutually reinforcing”, as put by Putnam, faith must indeed lead to the social virtue of honesty. Therefore, we can safely say that, yes, faith does lead to the social virtue of honesty.
A study on the role of religious knowledge as correlated to academic dishonesty showed that “religious knowledge is the main predictor in dealing with academic dishonesty and the basis for building the character of the students” and that “Locus of control strengthens the effect of religious knowledge on academic dishonesty.” The conclusion from the findings is that religious knowledge should be synergized in the higher education system for preparing honest accountants, auditors, and doctors.
Hypothesis testing was conducted by using path analysis and the research model in the figure below, which is slightly modified from the study’s Figure 1.

Model Key:
- AD = academic dishonesty of student
- RK = religious knowledge of student
- RA = religious activity of student
- PS = personality of student
- LoC = locus of control of student
- RK-PS = interaction between religious knowledge & personality
- RA-PS = interaction between religious activity & personality
- RK-LoC = interaction between religious knowledge & locus of control
- RA-LoC = interaction between religious activity & locus of control
- H1 = Religious knowledge has a positive role in dealing with students’ dishonest behavior
- H2 = Religious activities negatively affect the academically dishonest behavior of prospective accountants/auditors and doctors
- H3 = Locus of control moderates the influence of religious knowledge on the academically dishonest behavior of prospective accountants/auditors and doctors
- H4 = Locus of control moderates the influence of religious activities on the academically dishonest behavior of prospective accountants/auditors and doctors
- H5 = Personality moderates the influence of religious knowledge on the academically dishonest behavior of prospective accountants/auditors and doctors
- H6 = Personality moderates the influence of religious activity on the academically dishonest behavior of prospective accountants/auditors and doctors
Yes, faith does lead to honesty.
Thanks for reading!