Title: Welcome to the Society for Christian Psychology
1Welcome to theSociety for Christian Psychology
2The Five DomainsA Christian Psychology Model
for Counseling
- Timothy A. Sisemore, PhD
- Psychological Studies Institute
- Chattanooga, TN
3The Five Domains ModelOverview
- Elements of a counseling model
- A Christian Psychology Model
- Practical Applications
- Spiritual Change Processes
- Behavioral Change Processes
- Cognitive Change Processes
- Emotional Change Processes
- Interpersonal Change Processes
- Case Formulation and Treatment Planning
- Illustrative Case Study
41- Elements of a Counseling Model
- Epistemology
- Nature of persons
- Nature of health
- Nature of pathology
- Nature of treatment of that pathology
5From Elements to a Model
- I propose that these elements are fairly
universal in ALL counseling models - Yet, parts are often implicit or not carefully
worked out - Ill use these to develop a Christian Psychology
Model - And try to point out how this may differ from an
integration model
62- A Christian Psychology Modelfor Counseling
72a-EpistemologyWhat is Epistemology?
- The study of the origin, or source, of knowledge.
8Why is Epistemology Important?
- How do you KNOW about the nature of persons?
- How do you KNOW about what problems really are?
- How do you KNOW what the goals of counseling are?
- How do you KNOW what techniques might help?
- How do you KNOW if these techniques are effective
or appropriate for Christians?
9A Brief History of Epistemology
- Premodern knowing mostly considered as
spiritual - Plato, e.g., thought true forms supernatural, we
see shadows - Christian epistemology pointed to revelation
- Modern scientific knowing
- Postmodern no objective knowledge
- Well use premodern views to look at the latter
two
10How do we knowAbout God?
- What He has SAID about himself
- Special Revelation
- What He has DONE in history and creation
- General Revelation
111. REVELATION
- 2 Timothy 316 tells us Scripture is profitable
- Tells us about God, human nature, and the human
condition. This is AUTHORITATIVE. - Yet, because we are sinful, we are fallible in
interpreting this Truth. - How complete is the Bible as a counseling manual?
- Biblical counseling says completely
- Christian psychology says it provides structure
and some interventions, though general rev helps,
too
12How do we know about nature?2. RESEARCH
- Nature reveals God (general revelation)
- Yet, our sinfulness affects how we understand
nature - Science attempts to transcend our subjectivity
- EMPIRICAL science only that which is observable
and measurable can be known
13RESEARCH, continued
- Research is DESCRIPTIVE, not PRESCRIPTIVE
- It is imprecise .05 confidence level
- We need to judge good from poor science
- Something many Christian counselors dont do well!
14How do we know other things?3. REASON
- Reason is rooted in the imago Dei which well
discuss later - It is how empirical science makes sense
- Seen in laws of logic, e.g. noncontradiction
- Still, our reasoning perverted by the Fall
- Especially these days when logic not taught much
- Logic uses the Bible (theology) and research data
to formulate theory
15Epistemology in OurChristian Psychology Model
- Knowledge from special AND general revelation
helpful - Biblical counselors may disagree with general
- Special revelation holds priority and trumps
knowledge from general revelation - Integrationists largely agree to this point
- But info from secular psychology cannot address
vital issues like the nature of persons - Thus, the language and theories of psychology are
inadequate as the basis for a counseling model - Here we may leave many integrationists behind
16Issues in Counseling
- ONLY theology can tell us about human nature and
the plight of persons. - Psychology can tell some specifics about
personsbut misses things like SIN - Psychology can tell NORMAL, but not RIGHT, or
even HEALTHY - Technologies of psychology must be critiqued by
our Christian worldview
17Areas Where Theology Must Have Priority
- What are persons like BEFORE GOD?
- What is health?
- Goals of life
- Proper behavior (vs. norms)
- Spiritual dimension of problems
- How do persons change?
- Therapists boundaries (e.g. challenging v.
passively accepting sin) - Here our model is more dependent on theology than
many (most?) integration models
182b- The Nature of Persons
19Problems with Persons in Psychology
- Psychological research is built on a-theism
- Psychological theory may concede spirituality,
but not a true God who acts - Persons more often evolutions climax, not
related to God - Thus, a Christian Psychology model makes biblical
anthropology as foundational
20Humans the Climax of Creation
- Creation of man the climax of creation
- Not let there be but let us make
- Made in Gods image
- Made vice-regent over creation
- Has life breathed into him by God
- (Gen 27)
- Can comprehend God and His Law
- Possesses a conscience
- Has rational speech
- God covenants with us
21The Imago Dei
- Seen in Gen. 126
- The reason we treat each other well
- Gen. 96
- Jas. 39
- What exactly is it?
- Many theories
- I prefer the restoration hermeneutic
- Eph. 421-24
- Col. 310
- Yields knowledge and righteousness as key
- One is toward God, the other toward man
- Thus fits the Great Commandment
22Relevance of the Imago to Counseling
- The image of God is why we value others
- Our drives explained spiritually (cp.
Augustines comment) - Relatedness to others is vital to health
- Loss of these relationships key to problems
- Loss leads to defenses as in the Garden
- We are moral creatures
- Counseling to direct us toward relationship with
God and others - BUT SIN ENTERED THE WORLD!!!
23Sin and Its Relation to Counseling
24Sin Enters Paradise
- We assume if no sin, no psychological problems
- But Adam and Eve DO sin
- The world is changed dramatically until the Lord
returns
25Seven Effects of the Fall
- Loss of innocence
- Enter TRUE guilt
- And FALSE guilt
- Image of God distorted
- Self-focus replaces pure community
- Fellowship lost
- Lonely, restless hearts result
- Environment cursed
- Romans 820-22
- Man and woman punished
- Now Adam and Eve bring forth after their OWN kind
- Genesis 53
- We now need divine grace
26Original Sin
- Three moral choices for persons
- Born good (Carl Rogers, etc.)
- Born neutral (behaviorists, etc.)
- Born sinful (the historic Christian belief)
- Yet many Christians today disagree, so this is
more controversial than it used to be.
27Not that sin is so popular
28Original Sin
- Definition The inborn sinful nature that
underlies all particular sins, inclining us to
wrong so that none is righteous. - We are NOT free NOT to sin
- Particular sins emerge from the sinful nature
- And we live in a sinful world (recall McMinn)
29Scriptural Basis for Original Sin
- Genesis 65-6 821
- Psalm 141-3
- Psalm 515
- Psalm 583
- Psalm 1303
- Ecclesiastes 720
- Ecclesiastes 923
- Jeremiah 179
- John 542
- Romans 129-32
- Ephesians 21-3
- Matthew 718
- John 644,65
- 1 Corinthians 214
30Implications for Christian Counselors
- People have a propensity toward sin
- Inherently self-seeking
- Want their own way, yet want relationship
- Psychological theories which claiming we are
morally good or neutral dont stand the test of
Scripture - Fallen persons can twist the reason of the image
of God to defend their sin - Mental illness and psychological distress enter
the world
31Sin causes, or leads to, pain
- Idiopathic
- Inflicted
- Inherited
- Polypathic
- Including relationship pain, conflict, and
longing - We need a Savior!
32Our Model Views Persons
- As important given they bear Gods image, albeit
distorted - Made to be in relation to God and each other
- Inherently sinful
- In need of a Savior
- Experience pain
- These, not psychological theory, best explain the
human condition - Integration models may agree, but in practice
draw too heavily from psychological descriptions
of humans
33A Brief Commercial
- This theological anthropology ideally would form
the basis of a Christian personality theory - This is the most conspicuous missing piece in my
model and in Christian psychology and integration
in general - What follows offers some possible pieces
- But a thorough one needed
- Are you game????
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352c- The Nature of Health
36The Nature of Health
- Must understand the basic drives of humans and
how they are designed to function - Found in relationship with the Creator
- Spiritual health escapes the unbeliever
- Yet may find relative health in more successful
coping - Community part of health
- Problems are not surprising
37What Motivates Us? The Pursuit of Pleasure
- Basic motivation To maximize pleasure
pleasure (properly defined) and to minimize
(not avoid) pain. - Yet needs biblical, theological, and
psychological support
38(1) Biblical Support
- Joy in our faith Ps 374 Delight yourself in
the Lord, and he will give you the desires of
your heart. - Also Ps 368 421-2 631
39Joy in the work of being Christian
- Acts of mercy Rom. 128
- Loving mercy Micah 68
- Suffering loss with joy Heb. 1034
- Giving 2 Cor. 97
- Joying in the joy of others 2 Cor. 23
- Serving others eagerly 1 Peter 52
- Watching over our own souls Heb. 1317
40(2) Theological Support
- Augustines restless heart
- Pascal All men seek happiness
- CS Lewis We are far too easily pleased
- Edwards Joy in God the key to religious
affections - Piper glorify God by enjoying Him forever
- Moon Homesick for Eden
41(3) Psychological SupportSeligmans Authentic
Happiness
- Mistakes in modern understanding of happiness
- Gratifications over pleasures
- Using strengths to rise to occasion and meet
challenge
42Gratification
- Uses six core virtues
- Wisdom
- Courage
- Love and intimacy
- Justice
- Temperance
- Spirituality
- See authentichappiness.org
- Attachmentto God
- Rich social life
- Positive feelings over negative, or aversive,
feelings
43Gratifications are broadly defined
44So, for our purposes
- Assume people seek things they believe will make
them happy - This partly instinctual, largely learned
- From parents
- Culture
- Those around us
- Frustrations or hindrances lead to pain
- As do false ideas of happiness
- These all stem from sin in the world
45This Raises a Vital Question
- Is all pain a problem? Pathological?
- Secular theories give little place to suffering
- Yet, Scripture sees it as integral and beneficial
to the Christian life
46The Place of Suffering in Life
- Types persecution, sickness, accident
- Key using them to show our faith in God, not
letting Satan use them to destroy faith - This is in contrast to the idea the being a
Christian means no suffering! - And the frequent counseling mistake of trying to
eliminate suffering at all costs
47The Place of Suffering in Life - 2
- Were called to lead a life of sacrifice and loss
that looks silly if there is no resurrection (e.g
1 Cor 1529-31) - If Christlikeness is the ultimate joy, then
suffering has meaning in pursuit of the goal and
thus is healthy - We share in His sufferings
- Are changed into His likeness
- Suffering is thus meaningful and healthy
- Just like the pain of working out promotes
physical health
48Suffering Can Yield Benefits
49Suffering in Counseling
- Dont be too quick to try to stop all suffering
- May need the counselee to see false ideas of the
Christian life in this area - Consider if it can be alleviated and what that
would mean - If not, show how can develop character and hope
(Rom 53-5) - Happiness is integrating suffering into the
meaning of our lives, not simply avoiding it
because we are into instant gratification
502d- Nature of Pathology
- Idiopathic pain
- Inflicted pain
- Inherited pain
- Polypathic pain
- But not all pain is pathological
51Pathology in Christian Counseling
- Some psychological problems are more clearly
diseases than others - part of life in a fallen
world - Many are the results of sin, or the fallout of
the sins of others - Many stem from misunderstanding
- the nature of the Christian life
- Ways of God leading to improper pursuits of
pleasure. - This is not necessarily pathology
- DSM-IV is useful, but may
- Pathologize or normalize sin
- Miss problems Christians encounter
522e -The Nature of Treatment
- Pain, or frustrated pleasure seeking, can
manifest itself in 5 different domains - Movement is toward holiness (not necessarily
comfort) - God is seen as active agent in the process of
change - Utilizes biblical truth for living
- And empirically and/or theoretically sound
techniques from psychology - Choice of technique rests on understanding of
pathology
53ITS TIME FOR A BREAK WHEN
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553 Practical Application
- Counseling works from the conceptualization we
have examined - Problems are viewed from Christian personality
theory more than DSM-IV - Seen as symptoms within 5 domains more than
syndromes - Formulation driven, not diagnosis driven
56Choosing Interventions
- Starts with biblical teachings that address
problems (contra much integration) - E.g. much in Scripture on anxiety
- Biblical stories offer examples
- Sometimes psychoeducational uses helping client
better understand faith and God - Supplements with psychological techniques
- Particularly those with empirical support that
are theologically sound - Though theoretically sound approaches also as
needed
57Role of EVTs
- What is an empirically validated treatment?
- Advantages?
- Disadvantages?
- Our model takes components more than
manualsbased on
58Borrowing from Recent Medication Trends
- Finding meds cross diagnostic categories and
address symptoms - So with this modellook at pieces of the problem
and apply techniques - A COMPONENT or MODULAR model
59Our Model Compared to Some Theories
- Psychodynamic
- Strength appreciates depth and dynamics
- Weakness theory misses Godward nature and terms
alien to Christian vocabulary - Client-Centered
- Strength Caring for those in Gods image
- Weakness Misjudges sinfulness
- Cognitive
- Strength Fits with biblical theme of thinking
affecting feeling - Weakness Doesnt consider motives
- Narrative
- Strength Theme of story fits with our meaning
in Gods plan - Weakness Little empirical evidence postmodern
values
60Formulating Treatment
- Think through the case in terms of the five
domains - Identify key problems
- Think through explanations of why they exist
(formulation) - Draws from personality theory, so admitted weak
development here - Identify appropriate interventions based on the
explanations - Prioritize timing
61Questions to Consider in Formulating
- As you review the 5 domains, consider
- What is clients view of what happiness would be?
- Does this need to be changed?
- Theological misconception?
- Theological inconsistency?
- If not, what frustrations are contributing to the
problem? - Can these be overcome, or should coping be focus?
- If there is pain or suffering, what is source?
- If others, how to cope or find meaning?
- If self, how to master?
- Need for resources for coping?
- Family?
- Community?
- Are there needs for skills?
- Social?
- Cognitive?
- Emotional intelligence?
62Surveying the Five Domains
63Spiritual Change Processes
64Spiritual Change Processes
- Assessment and informed consent
- The person of the counselor
- Correcting misunderstandings of the faith
- Spiritual life of clients family
- Clients role
- Conversion?
- Other strategies such as bibliotherapy, use of
stories - Prayer by, with, and for the client
- Promoting involvement in community
- Spiritual disciplines
65Behavioral Change Processes
66Behavioral Change Processes
- Serves to inhibit sinful inclinations
- Rooted in biblical blessings and cursings
- Assessment
- Moral reasoning
- Empathy training
- Behavior management techniques keep simple
- Behavioral assignments
- Including acts leading to gratifications
67Interpersonal Change Processes
68Interpersonal Change Processes
- Relationships key to healthy Christian life
- Treatment relationship necessary but not
sufficient - Biblical value of relationships
- Assessing relational functioning
69Relationship as
- Support
- Scaffolding
- Relationship strengthens client to change
- Alliance
- Working together on the problem
- Technique
- Here and now lessons from the therapy relationship
70Emotional Change Processes
71Emotional Change Processes
- Galatians 522 first three fruit arguably
emotions - Overcontrolled emotions key in the past
- Undercontrolled gaining interest
- Designed to regulate internal states, moving us
to action or calling us back to stasis (like a
good cry) - If not regulated, problems arise
- Affect modulation
- Emotional constriction
- Not understanding contextual cues
- Inability to control emotional impulses
72Emotional Change ProcessesFour Important Aspects
- How well does client recognize feelings?
- May have to teach this as skill
- How well does client understand feelings?
- E.g. alexithymia
- How well does client grasp the meaning of
emotions? - How well can client regulate her emotions?
73Cognitive Change Processes
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75Cognitive Change Processes
- Thinking is behind actions (e.g. Ps. 11911)
- Areas of cognitive function
- Structures
- Deficits
- Processes
- Learning disorders affect other areas
- Language problems in particular (play a role in
many emotional problems) - Traditional cognitive techniques among strongest
in empirical research
764- Steps in Treatment Planning
- Identify personal/environmental strengths
- Try to use these in treatment
- Survey domains to define problems clearly
- List problems
- Develop formulations for each
- Identify interventions for each
- Biblical/theological
- Empirically validated
- Theoretically acceptable
- Prioritize order of treatment introduction
77Case Studies
Hyacinth is a thirty-one year old divorcee who
comes to you for counseling as she feels her life
is meaningless and empty. A dedicated Christian,
she had always believed that God would honor her
faith with a faithful husband and kids. Her
husband had an affair and left her two years ago,
and her seven-year old son is exhausting her with
his behavior problems. Embarrassed by the
divorce, she left her church and has only
occasionally been attending different churches.
She works as a school teacher which adds stress
to her life, though she has a few friends among
the teachers there. Yet, she does little outside
of school with these friends because they drink
together and she doesnt think a Christian should
be around that type of activity. Hyacinth tells
you that she has little energy after work, so she
doesnt do a good job of taking care of the house
or managing her son. She simply plops in front
of the TV most nights. She feels she has
offended God for Him to let this happen to her,
though at times shell concede shes a bit angry
with God. She sees little hope for things
improving in the future, and says at times she
wishes she were deadthough she denies shed
commit suicide because her son needs her.
Hyacinth often sobs late at night after her son
is in bed, and has begun consoling herself with
ice cream. She has, of course, gained weight.
Hyacinth believes she can do nothing right and is
a failure as wife, mother, Christian, and, to a
lesser degree, teacher. Five Domains
Treatment Plan Adult.doc
78Case Studies
Rudolph is a 16 year old boy who is brought by
his parents (mother and step-father) due to his
deteriorating performance in school. Rudolph
admits that he has changed over the past year,
taking up with kids who are low achievers. He
explains that this is due to his feeling his
mother and step-father dont appreciate his
efforts anyway, and around these friends he finds
acceptance that escapes him at home. Rudolph
thinks that his folks are making too big of a
deal of it anyway and that his grades havent
really changed nor is he getting in more trouble.
He denies doing drugs, saying his friends
respect him if he says no. His tastes in music
have changed to dark heavy metal, but he sees
this as merely his maturing. Rudolph considers
himself to be a Christian, but has been irritated
since his mother remarried and the parents
decided to change churches, so he blames this for
his not wanting to go to church any more. He
says he occasionally prays, though he wonders why
God doesnt change his parents when he asks Him
to. Rudolph sees his step-father as a hypocrite,
spouting off Bible verses but yelling at him and
his mother, calling them rather unchristian
names. Since he came on board, Rudolphs mom has
tried to get him to call him dad and to cut off
contact with his father. Rudolph admits his
father is lazy, but still loves him and Rudolph
wants to encourage his dad. Now he is punished
by not being allowed to see his father. Rudolph
thinks the solution would be to get his step-dad
to back off.
79Thank you for comingTsisemore_at_psy.edu