2023/04/28

Transforming Self and Others through Research: Transpersonal Research Method

Amazon.com: Transforming Self and Others through Research: Transpersonal Research Methods and Skills for the Human Sciences and Humanities (SUNY series in Transpersonal and Humanistic Psychology): 9781438436722: Anderson, Rosemarie, Braud, William: Books





Rosemarie Anderson
Transforming Self and Others through Research: Transpersonal Research Methods and Skills for the Human Sciences and Humanities (SUNY series in Transpersonal and Humanistic Psychology)
by Rosemarie Anderson (Author), William Braud (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars 24 ratings
Part of: SUNY series in Transpersonal and Humanistic Psychology (46 books)


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Brings the transformative approaches of transpersonal psychology to research in the human sciences and humanities.


SUNY Press
Publication date 2011


Editorial Reviews

Review
"Anderson and Braud add an exciting and significant dimension to current developments in qualitative inquiry. This is bold, creative, and inspiring work, and with both clarity and passion, puts forth a vital challenge to traditional assumptions about the nature of both research and knowledge." ---- Kenneth J. Gergen, author of Relational Being: Beyond Self and Community

"In recent decades, transpersonal psychology has begun to influence kindred fields, including clinical research. Transforming Self and Others through Research is a splendid example of this enrichment. This book transcends the conventional concept of researcher and subject as separate entities, as self and other. It reveals how the research process can be a path of personal development and psycho-spiritual maturity for everyone involved. How I wish this book had been available when I studied research in graduate school. I hope it finds its way into every graduate nursing program in the nation." ---- Barbara Montgomery Dossey, author of Florence Nightingale: Mystic, Visionary, Healer

"This excellent book deepens the authors' previous work on transpersonal modes of research. It works well as a source book, and in its comprehensive structure and scholarly content will be a model for quite some time. To my knowledge, there is simply no current work out there that brings so much material together in one place." ---- Robert D. Romanyshyn, author of The Wounded Researcher: Research with Soul in Mind

"In traditional research, we begin by exploring the literature and framing our study of research problems within the existing literature. In the transpersonal method, advanced by Anderson and Braud, a different point of departure for research is advanced: the individual researchers' experiences and personal lives. What a refreshing perspective! This means that research will be more meaningful to the investigator, hold interest, and personally transform the inquirer. This book builds on this perspective and provides an original, insightful, and honest way of inquiry. Their multimethodological approach, emphasizing skills and exercises that intersect with the lives of the researchers, is refreshing and useful. Thanks for offering this approach to the world." --John W. Creswell, author of Research Design: Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods Approaches
From the Back Cover
Research approaches in the field of transpersonal psychology can be transformative for researchers, participants, and the audience of a project. This book offers these transformative approaches to those conducting research across the human sciences and the humanities. Rosemarie Anderson and William Braud first described such methods in Transpersonal Research Methods for the Social Sciences (1998). Since that time, in hundreds of empirical studies, these methods have been tested and integrated with qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-method research designs. Anderson and Braud, writing with a contribution from Jennifer Clements, invite scholars to bring multiple ways of knowing and personal resources to their scholarship. While emphasizing established research conventions for rigor, Anderson and Braud encourage researchers to plumb the depths of intuition, imagination, play, mindfulness, compassion, creativity, and embodied writing as research skills. Experiential exercises to help readers develop these skills are provided.

About the Author


Rosemarie Anderson is Professor of Transpersonal Psychology at the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology. She is the author of Celtic Oracles: A New System for Spiritual Growth and the coauthor of Five Ways of Doing Qualitative Analysis: Phenomenological Psychology, Grounded Theory, Discourse Analysis, Narrative Research, and Intuitive Inquiry.

William Braud is Professor Emeritus at the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology and the author of Distant Mental Influence: Its Contributions to Science, Healing, and Human Interactions. Anderson and Braud are the coauthors of Transpersonal Research Methods for the Social Sciences: Honoring Human Experience.
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Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ SUNY Press (September 1, 2011)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 386 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1438436726
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1438436722


From the United States
CJ
5.0 out of 5 stars Who Knew?
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2011
Verified Purchase
This is a keeper, who knew that research methods could be so enlightening. I have read many research methods books but never has one held my interest such as this book. It is an excellent book if you are looking to expand your current approach to research. The authors have a very healthy and advance understanding of the current and future needs within the field of research.
9 people found this helpful
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Meghan
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly helpful for the researcher
Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2013
Verified Purchase
I used this book to learn more about organic inquiry as it was the methodology used for my thesis. Wonderfully written, not dry, or boring (as so many books on methodology can be). The book also includes exercises to help the researcher develop skills to better understand and utilize each methodology. Wonderful book!
2 people found this helpful
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Matthew Bernier
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2015
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Excellent
One person found this helpful
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From other countries
beckeyla
5.0 out of 5 stars great work
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 1, 2013
Verified Purchase
insightful and 'transformative' so far! Am only a few chapters in so its hard to give and overall view.. but really resonate with everything I have read so far... am wholeheartedly looking forward to finishing the book and have more to say on the subject...
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Transforming Self and Others Through Research: Transpersonal Research Methods and Skills for the Human Sciences and Humanities


              Volume 31 | Issue 2                        Article 15

7-1-2012



Transforming Self and Others Through Research:

Transpersonal Research Methods and Skills for the Human Sciences and Humanities

Dorit Netzer

Sofia University

Transforming Self and Others Through Research:Transpersonal Research Methods and Skills for the Human Sciences and Humanities by Rosemarie Anderson & William Braud

Reviewed by

Dorit Netzer
Sofia University
Palo Alto, CA, USA

The wider your range of knowledge and feeling, the greater your range of imaginative possibilities and the more synthetic and important your work will be.


                                                         

T

he process of scientific inquiry into human experience cannot be separated from life itself.

Becoming aware of the ways in which research in the human sciences and humanities is already infused with tacit knowing may be the first step to intentional cultivation of skills and practices that aim to loosen, shift, and altogether change how researchers approach understanding of lived experience—their own and others’—and, thus, how they transform through and beyond the topical focus of their scholarly pursuits in ways that bridge formal research and lifelong, personal inquiry. Transforming Self and Others Through Research (Anderson & Braud, 2011) provides just such a detailed exposition of whole-person, transformative approaches to scholarly research.

In this book, Anderson and Braud expand and deepen what they presented in their first co-authored book, Transpersonal Research Methods for the Social Sciences (1998). They contribute to the teaching and practice of research in the human sciences and humanities in ways that are both complementary to existing texts on specific research methods and outstanding among them; but as the authors make sure to clarify, this book is not meant as a standalone text for the teaching of diverse traditions of research methods. The unique value of Transforming Self and Others Through Research is twofold. First, where the authors’ 1998 book offered a broad introduction to transpersonal research methods, the new book is an —Robert and Michèle Root-Bernstein

in-depth primer to transpersonal research process. The exercises given throughout the book serve to prepare researchers for all phases of study, particularly when the topics include phenomena and experiences that are difficult to measure and define and attempt to  account for the many ways in which humans perceive and process personal and transpersonal experiences. Secondly, those readers who are specifically interested in any of the three methods for which the entire first section of the book is devoted, namely Intuitive Inquiry (by Rosemarie Anderson), Integral Inquiry (by William Braud), and Organic Inquiry (by an invited contributor, Jennifer Clements), will find the most updated, in-depth, and well illustrated depictions of these methods to date, along with numerous, past and recent examples of a wide range of topics to which they were applied.

Transpersonal psychologists ground their worldviews in transpersonal practices that are rooted in various wisdom traditions. Anderson and Braud developed the methods they describe in this book over two decades of experience as practitioners, scholars, and educators in this field (although both began as experimental psychologists in the late 60s and early 70s). Nevertheless, they do not present themselves as experts and humbly recognize the collaboratively, evolutionary nature of their insight and teaching. They acknowledge the possible critique for the methods and skills they advocate. Further, they acknowledge the challenges their


International Journal of Transpersonal Studies , 31(2), 2012, pp. 166-172


readers are likely to face by opening to a wider horizon of “knowing” that couples a rigorous effort to bolster the validity of their inquiry without reducing human experience to fit positivistic epistemologies. Integrating their philosophical views, methodological expertise, examples from current applications, and vision for the role of transpersonal inquiry in our diverse, globalized, and ecologically challenged world, the authors invite an inward turn in attitude toward research in the human sciences and humanities by emphasizing the value of a multi-sensorial, praxis-oriented discovery that is meditative, mindful, intuitive, imaginative, and embodied.

In the Preface to their book, Anderson and Braud offer an in-depth consideration of the nature and value of inquiry into human experience when researchers intentionally apply transformative skills and practices that permit more expansive and inclusive insight and target more than reason and analysis. The reader is reminded of or awakened to the possibility that scientific inquiry can be personally transformative, not only due to its findings, but inherently through research as a self-actualizing experience, particularly through the direct impact on all who partake in it or are exposed to its unfolding and/or final presentation (the scholar, research participants, audience, colleagues, and others in the researcher’s social milieu). In Anderson’s and Braud’s own words:

We are emphasizing individual and personal transformation. We are suggesting that under certain conditions, planning, conducting, participating in, or learning about, a research project can be accompanied by increased self-awareness, enhanced psycho-spiritual growth and development, and other personal changes of great consequence to the individuals involved . . . a qualitative shift in one’s lifeview and/or worldview . . . one’s perspective, understanding, attitudes, ways of knowing and doing, and way of being in the world. It may be recognized by changes in one’s body, feelings and emotions, ways of thinking, forms of expression, and relationships with others and with the world. (Anderson & Braud, 2011, pp. xvi-xvii)

As noted earlier, the authors divide their book into two main sections. Section 1, inclusive of the first three chapters, is dedicated to the teaching via praxis of three transpersonal methods (intuitive inquiry, integral inquiry, and organic inquiry). Each chapter, respectively, weaves experiential exercises and practices to help the reader gain intimate knowledge of the various structural aspects of the presented method and provides useful skills that can serve as vehicles to inform and guide the research process through all its phases with integrity and depth.

Chapter 1 presents Intuitive Inquiry. This method is hermeneutical in nature, with emphasis on the value of an intuitive approach. The method carries the researcher through five iterative cycles: a) clarifying a research topic via imaginal dialogue, b) identifying one’s existing-understanding through engagement with the literature, c) gathering data and descriptive findings, d) interpretation of findings and transformation through the understanding of others, and e) integration of one’s discovery with the existing literature. Intuitive inquiry invites the researcher to honor his/her own voice, to be fully attuned to subtle nuances and synchronicities of internal and external experiences, and to employ imaginal and psychic processes, sensory/embodied awareness, empathic identification, and knowing through our wounds as valid modes of understanding the essence of human experience.

Chapter 2 presents Integral Inquiry. This method aims to blend qualitative and quantitative modes of knowing in a manner that values the unique contribution of integrated approaches toward a more inclusive understanding of human experience. It values the multiple facets of research topics: their historical and conceptual contexts; their process oriented nature; and their outcomes and implications. This approach encourages the researcher to be informed by multiple disciplines (conventional and innovative—involving ordinary and nonordinary states of consciousness). It allows the tailoring of a particular blend of methods to suit the study’s topic and purpose (including linear/ analytical, as well as nonlinear/intuitive and imaginative approaches). Integral inquiry emphasizes the importance of ensuring that the research findings are accessible to a variety of audiences through multiple styles of data presentation. 

Chapter 3 presents Organic Inquiry. This method is based on the gathering of rich narratives, often pertaining to psycho-spiritual growth, where the researcher’s personal connection to the topic is central to the study’s motivation, and where the researcher’s identity, psyche, and subjective, unique ways of knowing facilitate the organic evolution of the research process. In this approach to research, information and transformation are inseparable, through the integration of thought, sensations, feelings, and intuition. The researcher is encouraged to pay attention to liminal and spiritual influences throughout the study. The method employs a three-step process as part of a gradual unfolding, beginning with preparation, through inspiration and, finally, integration—as a whole, intending to inspire a transformative experience for the researcher, participants, but more importantly for the readers or those exposed to the research findings.

Section 2 (chapters 4-7) is highly relevant to all fields of qualitative research in the human sciences and humanities, as it presents skills (i.e., quietude and slowing; intentional, attentive, and mindful observing of both conscious and unconscious processes; sensorial and imaginal skills; play and creative expression; as well as intuition, embodied awareness, and direct knowing), which can accompany various research methods, not only the ones that originated through engagement with transpersonal topics of inquiry.  When first reading this book and introducing it to students, I viewed Section 1 as structured, compartmentalized, and somewhat separate from the more exploratory and intricately threaded second section. With my intimate knowledge of the methods and skills, as a past student of Rosemarie Anderson and the late William Braud at the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology, I wondered why the authors chose to open the book with a methodological section, rather than offer it after they introduced the many skills that are integrated into these methods.

But after a brief time of working with the book and gaining further appreciation of its full arc (including the final chapters on an expanded view of validity and the authors’ transformative vision for research and scholarship), I realized that immersing in the methodological conceptualizations and applications of transpersonal approaches to research in Section 1 and understanding their rationale and thoughtful structure, indeed set the stage for a more purposeful utilization of the practices in Section 2. For this reason, when teaching a course named Integral Research Skills (originally developed by Braud and Anderson and taught by various faculty over the past decade at the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology—now Sofia University), where the second section of Transforming Self and Others through Research serves as a main text, I ask students to begin their reading with the introduction to Section 1 and their choice of one of the three first chapters as a way to dive with their whole being into the deep waters of transpersonal research methods. Only then, do they gradually explore and exercise the transformative potential of what Braud and Anderson called integral research skills, by considering their own research topics and all phases of their envisioned study through the various lenses of multiple, interwoven, and integrative ways of knowing.

Observing my own experience of working with the integral skills, as well as witnessing their effect on others, I can attest to the resultant transformation researchers undergo in their relationships with inquiry topics, methods, designs, participants, data, findings, and readers. When working with graduate students at Sofia University, who are called to research human experiences of a vast and complex nature, yet attempt to pursue them within the limited scope of a doctoral dissertation, I noticed how rapidly they form an intimate connection with their topics, when introduced to Anderson’s and Braud’s integral research skills and transpersonal approaches to research, and how they access their questions in a vulnerable, sensitive, and deeply insightful ways.

I have used the book with two cohorts since its release in the Fall of 2011. The first group of students has since went on to write their proposals and begin their dissertation studies. For the purpose of this review, I inquired with two students from that cohort, who are in different phases of their research, as to how their dissertation processes benefitted from having been introduced to this book. One of them, who is researching the meaning and significance of crisis as it leads to transcendence in the evolution of an artist, continues to draw on the book’s philosophy and applications a year after she was introduced to it. She wrote:

The use of integral, intuitive, and complementary methods allows [my] process to remain loosely woven, to breathe and intermingle. The transpersonal research methods and skills that Rosemarie Anderson and William Braud offer enlist the tenets of wonder as question and answer simultaneously, and still acknowledge that all perceptions have a certain degree of correctness and incorrectness. . . . In order to present conclusive interpretation about the evolutionary process of an artist, perceiving the artist as process (from ego to crisis to transformation) I am reminded that the interpretation will merely be my perception of the artist’s perceptions in hindsight. Containing this process within theory and method dangerously risks derailing the creative process, confining and imprisoning it in old interpretations, or perhaps completely extinguishing the flame. There is danger of suffocating the breath or the spirit from the inquiry, danger of robbing it of God. (D. Meyer, personal communication, December 12, 2012)

 Another student, who is now in the process of data gathering for her dissertation on the transformational aspects of postpartum depression, resonated with Braud’s (2011) assertion that “finding recent ideas in these very early sources can help foster an attitude of humility. . . that certain ideas were present for others, even long ago, and that one is often simply rediscovering what has gone before” (p. 95). She has written about incorporating creative expression into her literature review process, to more fully explore the importance of honoring the historical context of current literature:

[In addition to comparing past and present literature], I have worked with this by doing photo collages of women and their children from different points in history. These collages serve to ground my intention, pique my intuition, and externalize a sense of awe and gratitude for everyone touched by my topic throughout time. . . . Anderson’s and Braud’s exercises on working with imaginal, visual, and intuitive listening have been of significant help. My topic is very difficult material. The interviews are not easy. And it is the imagining of what I am intuiting that serves my wellbeing as a researcher, and I believe serves the topic. Where words fail, images fulfill the essential expressive need. (W. Karraa, personal communication, December 11, 2012)

 Similarly, in the most recent offering of the Integral Research Skills course, a student described the flowing nature of considering her intention for a dissertation topic when incorporating visualization into her contemplation. She reflected:

Intention is a powerful tool that Anderson and Braud (2011) discuss in regard to investigating a research topic. I have always found the process of setting intention to be a powerful motivator.

Although it may not be set as a goal per say, it is a motivating force. I find that whenever I have set intentions in my life that I begin to carry them around within a mental construct as well as emotionally. My attention is drawn to it often even in moments when I’m not even fully aware. . . . There seems to be a mix of great excitement, yearning, anticipation, attention, and unknown all mixed in one. As I contemplate my research topic, I find I am filled with the aforementioned emotions and thoughts. A great mix of it all. I hold the intention to research the connection between the embodiment practice of Hatha yoga, in particular, yoga therapy, in increasing and deepening levels of mindfulness. In framing an intention for my topic, the following words arise: awareness, body, yoga, movement, mindfulness, compassion for self and others, embodiment, program, spirituality, oneness, stillness, contemplation, space and sympathetic joy. I envision this as a spiral of different colors swirling around. As I see it I can see that one color stands out more than the next in some moments and others in other moments. I am sitting with this as a lesson in not predicting outcome or goals right now but rather staying in a “watching” phase. (A. Saffi Biasetti, personal communication, September 20, 2012)

About a month into working with the text, she added:

I was used to research always being approached in one way and it feels so freeing to think creatively with my topic. I feel it has already opened up so many doors for me to explore. I am excited each week to sit with the experientials waiting to see what unfolds (A. Saffi Biasetti, personal communication, October 18, 2012).

 

A student, who expressed interest in researching trauma and PTSD, shared the following response to one of the first group of exercises of slowing down and quieting the mind to allow a research question to authentically emerge with intentionality.

In exploring the exercises Intention, Quietude and Slowing, Attention and Mindfulness in Anderson and Braud (2011), I found a new dimension of thinking in terms of my intended research topic. . . . After deep, slowing breaths, I turned my attention to mindfulness of the breath and found myself drifting into thoughts. I felt tension and a closed sensation in my abdominal Tan Den area, and my throat. I began to breathe into these chakras and tried to allow for an expansion and spaciousness to develop. (S. Hutton-Metheney, personal communication, September 28, 2012)

Detailed images (too many to mention in this review) emerged in the course of this student’s meditation, which she subsequently made note of and remarked: “After this meditation exercise, I felt deeply relaxed and calm. The following [question] manifested in regard to my research topic: Can applying mindfulness techniques help trauma and PTSD patients cope and recover from their trauma?” (S. Hutton-Metheney, September 28, 2012). This student is an experienced therapist and an adept meditator, who has obviously entered deep trance states of consciousness many times before, and so she readily took to harnessing these skills as beneficial to approaching her research topic in a new way. For example, one of the images that arose in her initial meditation was of children engaged in painting, which prompted her to consider the possibility of focusing her PTSD topic on family dynamics and utilizing creative expression as one of her vehicles for data gatherings. Following this imaginal meditation, she wrote: “the narratives of family and relationships within the scope of trauma could lead to deeper understanding of the effects of trauma, perhaps the origin of trauma, and the healing of trauma individually, systemically, and communally” (S. Hutton-Metheney, September 28, 2012). She continued with framing the following intentions:

I intend that within the creation of my research project, Trauma: Effects of Mindfulness and the Nature of Emptiness on PTSD, images, thoughts, ideas, and fresh inspirations will arise effortlessly and naturally. I will be able to articulate and communicate these images and ideas cohesively and thoughtfully in order to add new information to the field of transpersonal psychology and trauma therapy. This will lead to a deeper understanding of mindfulness and trauma and will benefit the society and the whole planet for the betterment of humanity. (S. Hutton-Metheney, September 28, 2012)

 Interestingly, the ease with which students engage with the integral skills in their daily lives is not necessarily predictive of their comfort and ability to bring these practices into a research project. Another student commented:

One of the biggest gifts of the course is that I am witnessing how much difficulty I am having integrating traditional methodology with more organic ways of knowing. I am also witnessing myself fearful of not knowing. This is interesting for me to observe as in other realms of my life, this does not seem to be a predominant issue. What I am also gaining from this course is how we have the freedom and access to various ways of knowing (A. Charest, personal communication, October 24, 2012).

A student, who is planning to research the experience of psycho-spiritual wholeness during single motherhood wrote:

I feel so grateful that this beautiful language about research is here to support us as we brave new territory as transpersonal students and researchers. What would it have been like if I had this kind of guidebook in earlier academic settings? . . . Autogenic Training and breath work come very naturally to me as I have been engaged with these practices for a very long time. . . . My biggest challenge will be to remember to incorporate them while I’m working on my research! (T. Page, personal communication, September 29, 2012)

Practice, however, is key to ground general affinity to this approach to research in experiential knowing of its value. The same student reflected on her embodied experience during a slowing and centering exercise in the following comment:

I automatically slow down when I read this book. The cadence in which it is written affects a somatic response and my breathing slows. Also, I have to note, the finding a peaceful uncluttered space to “be” was nothing short of amazing for me. For the very first time in my life I have my own space, free of children, noise, clutter and distractions. I am filled with gratitude before I even begin, my eyes are slightly teary. I’m sitting in my new home, a beautiful old Victorian, in the living room, next to a bay window where I hear the birds outside and my heart is bursting with love for this moment. There is truly space for me, just me, and my soul becomes expansive and quiet. (T. Page, personal communication, September 29, 2012).

She went on to link this awareness of self with her relationship to her future study’s participants:

Once my eyes closed, my focus flowed to my heart. It seems this coming year is going to be all about my heart. . . . When in doubt, go back to my heart. After all - that is what got me through and that is what drives me in my research now. The love I have in my heart for single mothers doing the good work, raising the next generation, is all about love. (T. Page, personal communication, September 29, 2012).

Transforming Self and Others through Research is grounded in a global worldview, with awareness of and recognition for the mutual, reciprocal, and collective nature of our human existence and the relevance of this paradigm to our present and future approaches to research. In their last chapter, A Transformative Vision for Research and Scholarship, Anderson and Braud call on researchers to consider the urgent need for positive individual, communal, and worldwide transformation. They convey that in order to promote such change through scholarly inquiry, researchers must begin with more inclusive approaches to inquiry—honoring cross-cultural wisdom psychologies, with reverence for humans’ interdependence on one another and the natural world, and respect for authenticity and diversity in all species.

Anderson and Braud suggest, and I agree, that Transforming Self and Others Through Research can be included as a whole text or select chapters in advanced undergraduate and graduate research courses, particularly in disciplines such as psychology, counseling, education, and various allied health professions. The book also engages seasoned researchers in the above fields, who are open to acknowledge the shortcomings of conventional research methods, namely the attempt to claim objectivity by employing various controls in the studies’ design, researchers’ involvement, and participants’ contribution. I believe that it should be a required text for research students and a must-read for all researchers in fields such as transpersonal studies, humanistic psychology, spiritual direction, religious studies, the arts, creative-expression therapies, and transformative education, since these disciplines call for approaches to research that recognize the subjective and inter-subjective nature of human experience and expression, and the individually constructed meaning that accompanies attempts to inquire about them.

What I value most about this book is that the authors do not ask their readers to take their word for the value of this more expansive attitude toward ways of knowing; they wisely remark that not all approaches will suit all researchers and that some research topics might call for alternative means of understanding more than others. Most importantly, they provide a myriad of examples to illustrate their approaches, and detailed exercises to explore and choose from—each carefully crafted to hone various skills, such as awareness, attention, and intentionality—activating intuitive, imaginative, embodied, and creative ways of knowing through all phases of the study. These skills and practices are commonly associated with personal and psychospiritual development, person-centered therapies, and education, but they have significant influence on the process and outcome of inquiry, when applied in conjunction with established qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods, or as integral to the transpersonal research methods described in the book. In this manner, Anderson and Braud provide a roadmap for researchers to connect with their topics, participants, and research audiences through processes that lead to a deeply felt and personally meaningful understanding of human experience.

I close this review by referring to Anderson’s and Braud’s message, with a heartfelt recommendation of this book to all who seek a pathway to engage in conscious, healing and harmonizing inquiry: be it through interdisciplinary collaborations, integration of spiritual and indigenous insights, methodological pluralism, or the simple but profound appreciation of the transformative qualities embedded in the researcher’s passion to inquire and be of service, transform awareness, and influence change toward health and well-being, peace and harmony, compassion and kindness, integrity and truthfulness.

References

Anderson, R., & Braud, W. (2011). Transforming self and others through research: Transpersonal research methods and skills for the human sciences and humanities. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.


Braud, W., & Anderson, R. (1998). Transpersonal research methods for the social sciences: Honoring human experience. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Root-Bernstein, R., & Root-Bernstein, M. (1999). Sparks of genius: The 13 thinking tools of the world’s most creative people. New York, NY: Mariner Books.

About the Reviewer

Dorit Netzer is an art therapist in private practice and an associate core faculty at the Global PhD Program, Sofia University (formerly the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology), Palo Alto, California. Correspondence concerning this review should be addressed to Dorit Netzer, Sofia University,1069 East Meadow Circle. Palo Alto, California, 94303. E-mail: dorit.netzer@sofia.edu Tel: 631-423-1110.

About the Journal

The International Journal of Transpersonal Studies is a peer-reviewed academic journal in print since 1981. It is published by Floraglades Foundation, and serves as the official publication of the International Transpersonal Association. The journal is available online at www.transpersonalstudies.org, and in print through www.lulu.com (search for IJTS).

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심리학. 신학. 영성이 하나 된 기독교 상담 Psychology, Theology, and Spirituality in Christian Counseling

심리학. 신학. 영성이 하나 된 기독교 상담 
마크 맥민 (지은이),채규만 (옮긴이)두란노2001-09-17
원제 : Psychology,Theology,and Spirituality in Christian Counseling






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크리스천이 겪는 심리적인 고통이나 어려움을 기독교의 관점에서 해결하도록 이끄는 책. 내담자 및 상담자를 위한 가이드북이다. 지은이는 교회 안과 밖에서 부딪히게 되는 수많은 문제들을 믿음의 차원에서 해결하도록 권면한다.

단순히 학문적인 기술과 방법으로 심리적인 문제를 치료하는 데 그치지 않고 내담자가 하나님께 그 문제를 내놓고 간구하도록 이끌라는 것. 하나님과 친밀한 관계를 유지하도록 하는 것이 진정한 기독교 심리치료라는 말이다.

인간적인 고통은 하나님께 돌아갈 수 있는 계기를 마련하기도 하지만, 반대로 하나님 곁을 떠나게 하는 요인이 되기도 한다. 지은이는 이 점에 주목하여 하나님과 크리스천의 바람직한 관계를 회복하는 상담의 중요성을 설파한다.

상담심리학을 전공하는 크리스천 또는 많은 성도를 이끄는 큰 교회 성직자들에게 도움이 되는 책이다.


목차


- 추천의 글 (정동섭)
- 머리말
- 감사의 글
- 서문

1장 상담에서의 종교 (제임스 C. 윌호이트와 공동 집필)
2장 심리적, 영적 건강을 위한 첫걸음
3장 기도
4장 성경
5장 죄
6장 고백
7장 용서 (캐더린 로드스 미크와 공동 집필)
8장 구속
9장 기독교 심리 상담의 기범
10장 상담사례


- 각주
- 참고문헌



저자 및 역자소개
마크 맥민 (Mark R. McMinn) (지은이)
저자파일
신간알리미 신청

· 미국 Vanderbilt University(Ph.D.)
· 미국 ABPP & APA 임상심리전문가
· 미국 OHSU(오리건 건강과 과학대학)에서 임상훈련
· 미국 George Fox University 임상심리학 교수 역임
· 현, Wheaton College 임상심리학 교수

최근작 : <통합적 심리치료>,<영혼돌봄의 상담학>,<죄와 은혜의 기독교상담학> … 총 27종 (모두보기)

채규만 (옮긴이)
저자파일
신간알리미 신청

Illinois Institute of Technology 임상심리학 박사
서울대학교 대학원 심리학과 석사
한국 및 미국 임상심리전문가
한국상담심리전문가
한국기독상담전문가
한국중독상담심리전문가
전 횃불트리니티 신학대학원 초빙교수
숭실대학교 기독대학원 초빙교수
국민대학교 교육대학원 겸임교수
한국임상심리학회 회장
한국인지행동치료학회 회장
대한성학회 회장
현 한국열린사이버대학교 상담심리학과 석좌교수, 성신여자대학교 심리학과 명예교수

최근작 : <성행동 심리학>,<채박사의 중독 따라잡기>,<심리학자들이 쓴 행복한 결혼의 심리학> … 총 13종 (모두보기)






기독교적 관점에서 재 해석한 탁월할 심리학, 저자는 미국에서 매우 유명한 심리학자
낭만인생 2010-12-28 공감 (2) 댓글 (0)


기독교 상담 관련에서 첫 번째로 추천하고픈 책




기독상담은 우리의 목적 자체가 복합적이기 때문에 여타의 상담 형태보다 더 복잡하다.



행동주의자들이 증상의 제거에,

정신분석학자들이 자아강도에 관심을 기울일 수 있는 반면,

기독교 상담자들은 정신 건강뿐만 아니라 영적인 성장에 관심을 가진다.


1. 줄거리 。。。。。。。



저자가 가지고 있는 근본적인 문제 의식은 본문에서 뽑은 다음 구절에 잘 드러나 있다.

“병행하는 능력이 없는 상담자들은 문제의 일부분만을 다루는 것으로 끝나게 된다. 만약 상담자가 심리학적 세계를 이해하지만, 반면에 신학적이고 영적인 것을 무시한다면, 하나님을 향한 수잔의 깊은 갈망들을 상담과정에서 결코 이해되지 못하고 무가치하게 될 것이다. 만약 상담자가 영적 생활만 강조하고 심리학과 신학을 간과한다면, 그는 아마 주권적인 하나님을 겸손하게 사랑하는 것에서 오는 진정한 자기이해를 회피하고, 내적인 아이, 내적 안내자 또는 내적 빛을 필사적으로 추구하여 쓸데없는 내적 탐구로 이끌려지게 될 것이다. 만약 상담자가 신학만을 강조한다면, 그는 어떻게 변화해야 하는지 무기력감을 느끼는 반면, 그가 무엇을 해야 하는지에 관한 강박관념에 사로잡히게 될 것이다.(305)”




즉, 저자가 생각하기에 좋은 ‘기독교 상담’이란 신리학 이론에 근거한 방법론들을 건전한 신학적 틀 안에서 사용하되, 피상적인 행동이나 감정, 확신만이 아닌 깊은 영적 차원의 근본적 변화를 추구하는 상담이다.



저자는 이런 목표 아래 상담에서 기도나 성경과 같은 도구들을 어떻게 사용할 수 있는지(그리고 그 과정이 실제 상담에서 일으킬 수 있는 기술적 ․ 윤리적 문제에 대해서도), 또 용서나 죄, 구속과 같은 개념들이 어떻게 상담에 적용될 수 있는지 여러 측면에서 전문가적인 관점으로 살피고 있다.


2. 감상평 。。。。。。。
 

꽤 괜찮은 책이다. 아니, 좀 더 정확히 표현하면 이제까지 내가 읽은 상담, 혹은 심리학 관련 책 중에서(그래봤자 몇 권 안 되기는 하지만) 가장 나은 책이다.


많은 기독교인들은 이 책의 저자와 같은 고민을 한다. 그들은 상담기법들이 가져다 주는 효과들을 필요로 하면서도 동시에 그 이론들의 기반이 되는, 인간이 세상의 전부인 양 생각하는(그래서 인간 내부에서 모든 문제 해결의 열쇠를 찾으려는) 세계관을 경계한다. 하지만 그렇다고 해서 모든 문제를 신학적 질문과 대답으로만 환원시키려는 태도도 원하지 않는다. 물론 신학이 필연적으로 인간 실존과 관련된 문제들을 다루기는 하지만 그것은 대체로 구원의 길과 방법에 집중하고 있기 때문에 적용에 제한이 있기 때문이다.



자연히 사람들은 이 둘의 조화를 떠올리지만, 이런 시도들은 신학 어휘들을 사용한 심리학책이나 심리학 어휘들을 사용한 신학책 정도에 그치는 경우가 많다. 하지만 이 책은 이 어려운 작업을 어느 정도 훌륭히 소화해 냈다!!



하지만 이 책의 무엇보다 독특하면서도 강한 점은 이런 이론적, 방법론적인 면에 영성이라는 깊은 부분까지 조화를 시도했다는 점이다. 흔히 ‘영성’하면 신비주의적인 무엇을 떠올리기 쉽지만, 저자는 가깝게는 달라스 윌라드나 리차드 포스터를, 멀게는 토마스 아 켐피스나 아퀴나스 같은 인물들에게로 전해지는 건전한 영성추구의 길을 따라가고 있어 더욱 만족스럽게 느껴진다.



공동 저자로 참여한 채규만 교수의 작업으로 이 책이 단지 서양에만 해당되는 상황들만이 아니라 한국적 상황에도 적용될 수 있는 책이 된 것도 긍정적으로 평가할 수 있겠다.




물론 이 책 한 권이 기독교 상담에 대한 모든 것을 담고 있다고는 할 수 없겠지만, 기독교 상담을 알고 싶어하는 사람에게 첫 번째로 권해주고 싶은 책이라고는 분명히 말할 수 있겠다.



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노란가방 2008-07-01 공감(10) 댓글(0)


Psychology, Theology, and Spirituality in Christian Counseling : McMinn, Mark R: Amazon.com.au: Books







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Psychology, Theology, and Spirituality in Christian Counseling Hardcover – 25 June 1996
by Mark R McMinn (Author)
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The American Association of Christian Counselors and Tyndale House Publishers are committed to ministering to the spiritual needs of people. This book is part of the professional series that offers counselors the latest techniques, theory, and general information that is vital to their work. While many books have tried to integrate theology and psychology, this book takes another step and explores the importance of the spiritual disciplines in psychotherapy, helping counselors to integrate the biblical principles of forgiveness, redemption, restitution, prayer, and worship into their counseling techniques. Since its first publication in 1996, this book has quickly become a contemporary classic--a go-to handbook for integrating what we know is true from the disciplines of theology and psychology and how that impacts your daily walk with God. This book will help you integrate spiritual disciplines--such as prayer, Scripture reading, confession--into your own life and into counseling others.

Mark R. McMinn, Ph.D., is professor of psychology at Wheaton College Graduate School in Wheaton, Illinois, where he directs and teaches in the Doctor of Psychology program. A diplomate in Clinical Psychology of the American Board of Professional Psychology, McMinn has thirteen years of postdoctoral experience in counseling, psychotherapy, and psychological testing. McMinn is the author of Making the Best of Stress: How Life's Hassles Can Form the Fruit of the Spirit; The Jekyll/Hyde Syndrome: Controlling Inner Conflict through Authentic Living; Cognitive Therapy Techniques in Christian Counseling; and Christians in the Crossfire (written with James D. Foster). He and his wife, Lisa, have three daughters.
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Print length

400 pages
Language

English
Publisher

Tyndale House Publishers
Publication date

25 June 1996

Product description

From the Inside Flap
After years of discussion about the relationship between psychology and theology, it is time to move the discussions to a more intimate level: what actually happens in the Christian counseling office? It is here that counseling becomes intensely personal, reflecting counselors' spiritual lives as much as their psychological preparation and theological sophistication.This updated landmark book looks at what happens in two secret places in counselors' lives: behind the closed doors of their counseling offices and in their own spiritual lives.It asks such probing questions asHow can we move into the frontier of interdisciplinary integration, where the practical implications of responsible psychology, Christian theology, and spiritual growth are seen in every counseling interaction?What challenges do we face as we critically evaluate dominant views of mental health, establish a scientific base, and define relevant ethical standards for Christian counseling?How can we adapt our definitions of training?How can we nurture our own spiritual lives so that Christ will be revealed through us?It also asks practical questions, such asIs it wise to pray with a particular client?Under what circumstances should I use Scripture memory as part of counseling?What is the proper role of confession in the therapy process?Is forgiveness a reasonable goal in a specific situation?Mark R. McMinn is professor of psychology at George Fox University, where he teaches and serves as the director of faith integration in the Graduate Department of Clinical Psychology. Mark holds a Ph.D. from Vanderbilt University, is a licensed psychologist in Oregon, and is board certified by the American Board of Professional Psychology. He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA) and a past president of the APA's Psychology of Religion division.Mark has received teacher-of-the-year awards at both George Fox University and Wheaton College, where he taught from 1993 to 2006. He was recently awarded the 2010 Graduate Researcher of the Year award at George Fox. Much of his research and all his clinical work in recent years have focused on clergy health and finding effective ways for mental health professionals and clergy to work well together.Mark's wife, Lisa, is a sociologist and an author. Together they raised three daughters, who are now grown. Mark and Lisa live in rural Oregon, where they attend Newberg Friends Church, tend honeybees and chickens, and run a small Community-Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm.
From the Back Cover
Revised and Updated for the 21st Century

What happens in your Christian counseling office? How do you integrate your spiritual life with your psychological expertise and theological understanding?

Since its first publication in 1996, Psychology, Theology, and Spirituality in Christian Counseling has quickly become a contemporary classic--a go-to handbook for integrating what we know is true from the disciplines of psychology and theology and the impact it has on our everyday walk with God.

This book will help you evaluate how you can effectively integrate prayer, Scripture, confession, forgiveness, and redemption into your own life and your counseling practice.

After years of discussion about the relationship between psychology and theology, it is time to move the discussions to a more intimate level: what actually happens in the Christian counseling office? It is here that counseling becomes intensely personal, reflecting counselors' spiritual lives as much as their psychological preparation and theological sophistication.

This updated landmark book looks at what happens in two secret places in counselors' lives: behind the closed doors of their counseling offices and in their own spiritual lives.

It asks such probing questions as
How can we move into the frontier of interdisciplinary integration, where the practical implications of responsible psychology, Christian theology, and spiritual growth are seen in every counseling interaction?
What challenges do we face as we critically evaluate dominant views of mental health, establish a scientific base, and define relevant ethical standards for Christian counseling?
How can we adapt our definitions of training?
How can we nurture our own spiritual lives so that Christ will be revealed through us?

It also asks practical questions, such as
Is it wise to pray with a particular client?
Under what circumstances should I use Scripture memory as part of counseling?
What is the proper role of confession in the therapy process?
Is forgiveness a reasonable goal in a specific situation?

Mark R. McMinn is professor of psychology at George Fox University, where he teaches and serves as the director of faith integration in the Graduate Department of Clinical Psychology. Mark holds a Ph.D. from Vanderbilt University, is a licensed psychologist in Oregon, and is board certified by the American Board of Professional Psychology. He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA) and a past president of the APA's Psychology of Religion division.

Mark has received teacher-of-the-year awards at both George Fox University and Wheaton College, where he taught from 1993 to 2006. He was recently awarded the 2010 Graduate Researcher of the Year award at George Fox. Much of his research and all his clinical work in recent years have focused on clergy health and finding effective ways for mental health professionals and clergy to work well together.

Mark's wife, Lisa, is a sociologist and an author. Together they raised three daughters, who are now grown. Mark and Lisa live in rural Oregon, where they attend Newberg Friends Church, tend honeybees and chickens, and run a small Community-Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm.

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Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Tyndale House Publishers (25 June 1996)
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Jessica.
7 reviews
March 18, 2015
I had to read this book for my grad class and I absolutely loved it! It is rare to find a "textbook" that is not dull and torture to read through. But this book is worth reading whether you are going into counseling or wanting to simply improve your discipleship skills. Excellent read and I have a feeling I will refer to this book many times throughout my education and future counseling practice.
97 reviews4 followers
September 7, 2017
No one, no methods are value-free. All counsellors unavoidably pass their worldviews to clients. What differs from non-Christian counselling is that Christian counsellors are the agent of redemptive love of Jesus Christ and its love overflows during counselling to the clients. God's love is the source of unconditional positive regard, of forgiveness, of realization of human brokenness, and of redemption. The line between counsellors' professional life and personal life are blurred because they eventually can't pretend to be someone they are not during counselling. The gospel shapes a very healthy understanding of self and of others. The gospel provides the basis for a healthy, healing relationship.
Profile Image for Rick Sam.
393 reviews90 followers
February 7, 2016
This book gave me a basic introduction about Psychology, Theology and Spirituality integrated together for a Counselor. I think this book helped me to think more about my own self, the identity of self. It is really profound to think about your own self.

It piqued my interest on Cognitive therapy and science. Reading through it, I had no clue what to say to people, when they share their deepest secrets, the author gives guidelines. I feel, you just have to do it rather than reading about it. I loved the Author's insight on each Confession, Forgiveness, Redemption.

Profile Image for T.E. Elliott.
Author 3 books31 followers
September 19, 2021
This was very readable for a textbook, however, I felt like it said a lot in order to explain things that were fairly straightforward. In other words, it was longer than it needed to be. The most helpful parts to me were the example sections that were scattered throughout the book.
4 reviews11 followers
February 19, 2017
Insightful

I found this book very insightful. The author has much wisdom and experience to share with anyone wishing to have an integrated approach to Christian Counseling. I will read again and again.
Profile Image for Traci.
124 reviews7 followers
October 16, 2012
This is not a read for fun, or for personal knowledge kind of book. It is a text book. If you are a considering counseling, pastoral counseling, clinical counseling, psychology, psychiatry, or pastor you will want to read this. It was a very good discussion of how, when, why to incorporate the spiritual disciplines into a counseling session. He gives the pros, the challenges, a good discussion of what to consider as you mentor and counsel. But more importantly, it gives the argument of how important is for YOU as the COUNSELOR to practice your own spiritual disciplines in order to be prepared for the battles of counseling.

On a personal side, while reading this I discovered my Meijers-Briggs profile, ISFJ, made it difficult to read this. McMInn drags a lot of things out, goes the round-a-bout way to get to the point. He is obviously not an S, F, or J on the Meijers-Briggs test. Once I realized he was more of a intuitive and spontaneous kind of writer, I found it easier to read the summaries at the end of the chapter, then dive into the chapter reading. That way I knew the practical piece and where he was headed. This was a good learning lesson for future reading of text books or difficult books....it was a personal growth moment for me, even at my age! LOL :)
Profile Image for Penny.
37 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2016
Thoughtful, inspiring discussion of how Christian counsellors can and should integrate knowledge of psychology and theology along with their own christian spirituality in the counselling room.
Profile Image for Austin.
17 reviews1 follower
May 11, 2017
Great book regarding the interdisciplinary integration of psychology, theology, and spirituality.

Dr. McMinn, lays the book out in a way that is easy to read. He first sets up the stage with the validity and place of religion in the counseling process in the opening chapter. Religious values have often been ignored by the psychology field, holding to a neutral-belief system of counseling. This book aims to be a reference of “counseling process and techniques” (McMinn, 2015, p. 6), to aid counselors with faith integration. Along with psychology and theology, Dr. McMinn adds a third element to integration – spirituality (McMinn, 2015, p. 10). Spirituality differs from theology and psychology because of its tangential nature. Spirituality is more a journey each person takes, being built on experiences. Psychology, Theology, and Spirituality in Christian Counseling seeks to answer the question, “how do we practically use the Christian faith in our counseling?”
Chapter two lays the framework for creating a counseling relationship that pursues spiritual and emotional health. With integration, there is a need to address the need for updating theoretical maps to encapsulate the multifaceted goals of the Christian counselor (McMinn, 2015). There are many nuances in every journey to health that fall outside the scope of a simple theoretical map. “The simple map isn’t wrong; it just leaves out details” (McMinn, 2015, p. 45). Good Christian counseling strengthens the counselee’s sense of self, helps develop honest assessment of their limitations and human need, and development of their relationship with God (McMinn, 2015, p. 64).
The remaining six chapters’ present different interventions Christian counselors can use in the process of integration: prayer, scripture, sin, confession, forgiveness, and redemption. Each intervention is looked at through a psychological, theological, and spiritual perspective (McMinn, 2015, p. 65). McMinn takes great care to develop an integrated view of health, including both psychology and spirituality in this definition. Each chapter has been revised and adapted to include Dr. McMinn’s reflections on integration that have developed since the original publication in 1996 (McMinn, 2015). McMinn holds to his three-pronged approach to effective Christian counseling: psychology, theology, and spirituality. Developing a competency and sensitivity in each area is essential to the helping relationship.
Profile Image for Emily Petersen.
68 reviews5 followers
January 20, 2023
This book had some few helpful thoughts, but I was very concerned by the emphasis on forgiveness from a sexual assault victim and encouragement for reconciliation with a perpetrator. It additionally assumes that most sin problems a therapist will encounter will be sexual ones, and the content revolves around that subject.

The author claims to hold out a middle option between secular and Biblical counseling movements, but it smacked of the hubris and ignorance contained in most 'Biblical' counseling materials.

I am a devout Christian woman, but I cannot with good conscience recommend that any client of mine put themselves under the care of a counselor using this material.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 35 reviews

==
Profile Image for Tyler Thomas.
41 reviews2 followers
November 20, 2020
Reading this text from a pastoral perspective, rather than that of a vocational counselor, it’s easy to get lost. Absent the context of that field, it often comes across as drudgery. However, the chapter on Sin is, alone, worth the price of admission. Rather than debate between sin and sickness, McMinn explains how sin IS the sickness. It’s among the best chapters on the human condition I’ve ever read. I read the entire text, and everything else is valuable to be sure, but it’s best skimmed for the most pertinent information.
Profile Image for Serena Snead.
7 reviews22 followers
November 11, 2017
Good read. Insight into how/when/if you should incorporate spiritual disciplines into a professional counseling relationship. Seeks to take reader into a new, deeper understanding of “sin” and “redemption.” Focuses on allowing the counseling relationship to develop healthy sense of self, healthy sense of need, and healthy relationships.

10/10 recommend
Profile Image for Trent Thompson.
115 reviews
March 17, 2020
This was a helpful introduction to the integration of psychology, theology, and spirituality. McMinn combats the popular notion that psychology and theology are intrinsically at odds with one another, and instead puts forth integration as a way of applying modern counseling theory while remaining faithful to scripture. I am sure I will return to this book.
33 reviews
December 10, 2021
Not a fan of this book. The writing style put me to sleep and also the author spent more time convincing us of all the reasons to not use different Christian interventions in session, which is valuable, but as a takeaway, I don't feel prepared to use any of them. I feel more afraid to even consider it because of all the risks, which I doubt was his intention.
Profile Image for Ingrid O..
60 reviews1 follower
July 25, 2017
This is such a great book! Especially if you are in ministry or are thinking of becoming a Christian counselor. It is a great resource on how to integrate your psychological expertise, your spiritual life and your theological understanding and applying it in your ministry or counseling office.
Profile Image for Marilyn Gardiner.
26 reviews
August 21, 2020
Great book!

Very eye-opening and inspirational. Pastoral Counsellors are partners with Jesus making people whole. It’s both challenging and exciting to be a part of the healing process.
Profile Image for Moriah Conant.
275 reviews27 followers
October 12, 2017
Read this for grad school, one of the only books from this session that I liked.
Profile Image for Josiah Durfee.
79 reviews
March 30, 2019
Not impressed, case studies were good, but information was so elementary a Freshman could have written it. I might reread it in the future.
Profile Image for Lindsey Varble.
268 reviews2 followers
April 29, 2020
My favorite thing about this book was the creative names — Miss Stormy Ann Dempty, Dr. Ura Vicktem, Dr. S. Trey Tenarrow, Ms. R. E. Morse and many others 😆😂
Profile Image for Lauren Cheatham.
41 reviews
May 5, 2022
Read this book for school it was SO good. I feel like I will keep going back to this book
Profile Image for Brett.
177 reviews25 followers
January 23, 2008
What is it that makes counseling uniquely Christian? McMinn wrestles with this question while offering principles for the use of prayer, scripture, and confession within the counseling relationship. Each of these spiritual disciplines offers unique contributions to the healing process, but also give rise to challenges. McMinn addresses this tension by offering suggestions as to when and where such practices are most (and least) appropriate. What is more, McMinn helps the reader to understand how concepts such as sin, forgiveness, and redemption should be introduced into the counseling session. Overall, this is a very helpful resource full of real life examples. B+
Profile Image for Blake.
352 reviews6 followers
June 3, 2016
I used this book in my Critiquing Modern Philosophies of Counseling class. It was perfect for challenging the students to read with discernment and to identify the unbiblical elements within and to then discuss their thoughts about the book each week. This is not a book I would offer any recommendation for, other than if one wants to see some of the tragic results of embracing the concept that God's Word is not sufficient. I appreciated the spirit in which McMinn wrote but much of what was written came up short.
Profile Image for Chelsey L.
2 reviews
March 1, 2016
Excellent read

This book is extremely well written and organized in a fashion that allows readers to understand each chapter of the book individually as well as all together. I recommend this book for any Christian or spiritual counselor or anyone aspiring to be a counselor. The text is insightful and opens one's eyes to the cautions and dangers of using the Bible in counseling but shows that the Bible has a time and a place in counseling as well. The update to the book is a wonderful addition to the text as well.
Profile Image for Jeremy.
737 reviews15 followers
January 16, 2017
This was a great treatment on counseling integration. I especially appreciated the case studies that presented various scenarios and unpacked the potential outcomes of those scenarios. They helped me to further my own understanding of integration and how I want to apply it in my own counseling experience.
Profile Image for Meleah Allard.
12 reviews
June 14, 2016
This book was really helpful. It was a textbook in my course on counseling. The main text was written from a secular perspective so this book really helped with the faith integration. I found it an invaluable source that I will continue to refer to in the days ahead.
Profile Image for Kim Blackham.
58 reviews12 followers
October 5, 2008
Mostly, I just kept plowing my way through and was very grateful when I was done.
Profile Image for Bill Larson.
34 reviews5 followers
February 27, 2012
This was a text book for an Intergration of Theology, Psychology, and Spirituality master's level course. It was actually a very interesting read as well as very imformative.
Profile Image for Andrew.
29 reviews2 followers
December 16, 2012
This book is slow to start with, but practical and good. I believe in McMinn's viewpoint and found this to be worth the time.
5 reviews
January 23, 2016
This is a great comprehensive book about the integration of psychology and theology I have read. The author provides readers with practical and personal examples.
Profile Image for Cris.
7 reviews1 follower
May 1, 2017
Dr. McMinn writes from a broad base of experience in both practice and teaching the counseling art. I am pleased to be able to highly recommend McMinn's volume as he aptly conjoins all the major elements in psychology, counseling and Scripture to help us better understand how they can intersect and yet be different and divergent. Dr. McMinn draws upon his astute skills and share with us a picture or vision of where the counseling profession and particularly, Christian counseling, must go in order to remain viable in the professional craft as well as remaining true to theological truth and spiritual relationship. I thank Dr. McMinn for his enormous contribution to the counseling profession in this superbly written book.
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