Academics have documented the relationship between
religious faith and the brony fandom. According to Edwards, bronies attend church less frequently than their parents and rate themselves below average on
religiosity scales, possibly because mainstream religions often promote traditional gender norms that conflict with male fans enjoying a show marketed to girls. Edwards suggested that less religious bronies may be drawn to the fandom because it provides the sense of meaning and community that religious institutions typically offer, though he also remarked that bronies' lower religiosity levels are typical for their generations (
millennials and
Generation Z). Crome's 2014 research on
Christian My Little Pony fan works found that rather than seeing fandom and faith as conflicting, many Christian bronies actively combined both. By studying their
fan fiction and
artwork, Crome documented how Christian bronies used familiar character traits to explain religious ideas, as the show's ostensible lack of religion provided "a space for fans to freely project religious concepts." In 2019, Crome interviewed twelve Christian bronies and remarked that the brony fandom served as a way for them to better experience religion. Interviewees reported organizing
My Little Pony-themed
church services,
Bible studies, and using fan works to spread Christianity within the general brony fandom. Crome found that Christian bronies saw their fandom as a way
God worked in their lives; they considered fan works to be forms of
worship and their fandom to be a
divine mission to spread Christianity within it. In his 2024 essay
The Bible and My Little Pony,
theology professor Tom de Bruin extended Crome's research on Christian
My Little Pony fan fiction. De Bruin analyzed two primary methods bronies use to combine Christianity and
My Little Pony: introducing ponies into biblical narratives, and introducing Christianity into
Equestria. De Bruin found that while Christian bronies are respectful about religion and try to stick to correct religious beliefs, creating these works changes how they read the
Bible, with readers reporting that biblical passages now remind them of
My Little Pony characters. De Bruin borrowed
Henry Jenkins's terminology to describe this fan activity as
poaching: Christian bronies often read Christian meanings into the show even when the creators did not intend them, and develop personal fan theories that characters are Christians based on details like
rainbow symbolism and phrases spoken by the characters like "my
prayers have been answered." According to de Bruin, "[Christian
My Little Pony fan fiction writers] are not simply using MLP fandom as a tool for theological reflection or religious experience, but also recasting the entire fandom into the worldview of their faith." He concluded that "their theology needs to be dogmatically correct, otherwise their engagement with the fandom will be for naught." In a 2016 essay on the
spirituality of the brony fandom, Pavol Kosnáč separated casual fans from what he called "devotees": bronies whose entire lifestyle and beliefs are shaped by the show. Through interviews with 32 bronies and surveys with 99 others, he found that 63% said the show and its fandom had changed their worldview or moral values, and 12.5% called it the most important thing in their lives. Kosnáč identified several effects the show had on devoted bronies: a lasting sense of happiness that some said helped with
depression, moral guidance from the show's lessons, and feeling safe in what they saw as a harsh world. Kosnáč found that for some Christian bronies, the show strengthened their existing faith. Like Edwards, Kosnáč concluded that the most devoted bronies treat the fandom like a religion because it provides psychological and
social support like what
organized religions typically offer. == New sincerity ==