In your textbook Spiritual Formation, Counseling, and Psychotherapy, read Chapte
ID: 3484698 • Letter: I
Question
In your textbook Spiritual Formation, Counseling, and Psychotherapy, read Chapter 8, “God as a Secure Base and Haven of Safety: Attachment Theory as a Framework for Understanding Relationship to God.” Read the article “Reflection on Psycho-Spiritual Development” on the website Daneo Services Human & Spiritual Development at http://daneoservices.weebly.com/refection-on-psycho-spiritual-development-john-friel-cp.html. Read the Frances Vaughan article "Spiritual Issues in Psychotherapy" at http://www.atpweb.org/jtparchive/trps-23-91-02-105.pdf. Consider the quote, “Wholeness is holiness” (Friel), and the importance of maturity and a whole human being in developing spiritual maturity. In your journal for this week, record your thoughts.
Explanation / Answer
Book Description:
Integrating psychology and theology has come with various intellectual challenges, including the challenge of valuing various ways of knowing. Psychology, deeply rooted in a scientific epistemology, places great value in systematic and measurable observations.
Christian theology is bounded by central doctrines, forged over centuries of dialog and based on the authority of a sacred text. Those integrating psychology and theology most effectively have learned to value both epistemologies—the scientific and the authoritative—and have often been maligned and misunderstood in both worlds for valuing the epistemology of the other.
This book is focused on Christian spirituality. The editors believe that Christian spirituality can contribute to both the evangelical integration dialogue, and to the broader discussion of spirituality and religion because of its insight into the nature of God, human development and maturity, and the means of spiritual change.
Spiritual formation, Counseling, and PsychotherapyEditors: Hall, Todd W. (Rosemead School of Psychology, Biola University); McMinn, Mark R. (Wheaton College)
Book Description:
Integrating psychology and theology has come with various intellectual challenges, including the challenge of valuing various ways of knowing. Psychology, deeply rooted in a scientific epistemology, places great value in systematic and measurable observations.
Christian theology is bounded by central doctrines, forged over centuries of dialog and based on the authority of a sacred text. Those integrating psychology and theology most effectively have learned to value both epistemologies—the scientific and the authoritative—and have often been maligned and misunderstood in both worlds for valuing the epistemology of the other.
This book is focused on Christian spirituality. The editors believe that Christian spirituality can contribute to both the evangelical integration dialogue, and to the broader discussion of spirituality and religion because of its insight into the nature of God, human development and maturity, and the means of spiritual change.