This cross-sectional study examined religious coping, dispositional forgiveness, and posttraumatic outcomes (posttraumatic stress and growth) among adult survivors of the Liberian Civil War (1989War ( -2003. This study contributes to the literature on religion/spirituality, forgiveness, and trauma in post-conflict African contexts. Participants were 407 adult survivors recruited in 2011 from a faith community in Liberia and a Liberian refugee camp in Ghana. Participants completed the Brief RCOPE, Heartland Forgiveness Scale, Impact of Event Scale-Revised, and Posttraumatic Growth Inventory. Relative to men, women reported lower levels of positive religious coping, dispositional forgiveness, and perceived posttraumatic growth; however, there were no sex differences in negative religious coping or posttraumatic stress. Directly exposed survivors (who experienced or witnessed the war as a combatant or noncombatant) reported higher levels of posttraumatic stress and lower levels of dispositional forgiveness and perceived posttraumatic growth, relative to indirectly exposed survivors (whose family members or close associates experienced or witnessed the war). Regression-based analyses indicated that dispositional forgiveness partially mediated (explained) the relationship between positive religious coping and perceived posttraumatic growth. These findings suggest that, in post-conflict African contexts, there may be differences in religious and posttraumatic outcomes based on sex and on war exposure. Moreover, survivors may engage in positive religious coping because it can help promote forgiveness toward others (and possibly themselves) and may help to restore a personal (and possibly communal) sense of meaning and purpose, enabling them to experience perceived posttraumatic growth.