While Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is an empirically-supported treatment, many behavioral and analytical psychotherapists also recognize the healing potential of religious belief. CBT and Christianity offers CBT therapists an authoritative, practical, and comprehensive resource for counseling clients with an allegiance to the Christian faith. This innovative new treatment approach compares the teachings of Jesus to contemporary cognitive therapies, describing a variety of successful assessment and treatment approaches with Christian clients by incorporating the teachings of Jesus into logical thinking, schema modification, and committed behavior change. Clarity is further enhanced through a variety of specific examples, descriptions of generic methods, and supplemental resources provided by the author. By combining effective treatments with sensitivity to religious convictions, CBT and Christianity offers innovative insights into the spiritual and psychological well-being of clients with Christian beliefs.



Autorentext

Michael L. Free is a clinical psychologist working with adults and adolescents in individual and couples therapy. He is a former lecturer in clinical psychology at Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia. He is the author of Cognitive Therapy in Groups (Wiley Blackwell, 2nd edition, 2007).

Klappentext

A surprisingly satisfying read that refreshed my perspective on, and deepened my understanding of, two topics that have long seemed overly familiar. This work underscores how much of contemporary thinking has been anticipated by the ancients or just how much 'new thinking' is a recapitulation of the old, but does so in a thoroughly original way.

Murray J. Dyck, PhD, Professor of Clinical Psychology, Griffith University

While cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is an empirically supported treatment, many behavioural and analytical psychotherapists also recognize the healing potential of religious belief. CBT and Christianity offers CBT therapists an authoritative, practical, and comprehensive resource for counselling clients with an allegiance to the Christian faith. This innovative new treatment approach compares the teachings of Jesus to contemporary cognitive and mindfulness-based therapies, describing a variety of successful assessment and treatment approaches with Christian clients by incorporating the teachings of Jesus into logical thinking, schema modification, and committed behaviour change. Clarity is further enhanced through a variety of specific examples, descriptions of generic methods, and supplemental resources provided by the author. By combining effective treatments with sensitivity to religious convictions, CBT and Christianity offers innovative insights into the spiritual and psychological well-being of clients with Christian beliefs.

Zusammenfassung
CBT AND CHRISTIANITY

A surprisingly satisfying read that refreshed my perspective on, and deepened my understanding of, two topics that have long seemed overly familiar. This work underscores how much of contemporary thinking has been anticipated by the ancients or just how much 'new thinking' is a recapitulation of the old, but does so in a thoroughly original way.

Murray J. Dyck, PhD, Professor of Clinical Psychology, Griffith University

While cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is an empirically supported treatment, many behavioural and analytical psychotherapists also recognize the healing potential of religious belief. CBT and Christianity offers CBT therapists an authoritative, practical, and comprehensive resource for counselling clients with an allegiance to the Christian faith. This innovative new treatment approach compares the teachings of Jesus to contemporary cognitive and mindfulness-based therapies, describing a variety of successful assessment and treatment approaches with Christian clients by incorporating the teachings of Jesus into logical thinking, schema modification, and committed behaviour change. Clarity is further enhanced through a variety of specific examples, descriptions of generic methods, and supplemental resources provided by the author. By combining effective treatments with sensitivity to religious convictions, CBT and Christianity offers innovative insights into the spiritual and psychological well-being of clients with Christian beliefs.

Inhalt

List of Figures xii

List of Boxes xiii

List of Tables xiv

About the Author xvi

Author's Preface xvii

Part 1 Rationale for the Use of the Teachings of Jesus in CBT 1

1 Introduction 3

Topics in Chapter 1 3

A historical view of spirituality, religion and psychotherapy 3

The development and dominance of cognitive therapy as a psychotherapy 4

The importance of Christianity in the West 6

The appreciation of the role of nonspecific factors in psychotherapy 6

Interest in the Buddhist technique of 'mindfulness' 7

Findings relating religious adherence to positive mental and physical health 8

The growing respect for cultural and individual differences 9

The decline of logical positivism and the rise of postmodernism and social constructionist theory 9

The question of a logical connection between cognitive therapy and the teachings of Jesus 10

A general outline of the book 11

2 Introduction to Cognitive Therapy 12

Topics in Chapter 212

General aspects of psychotherapy 12

The basis of cognitive therapy 13

Beck's cognitive therapy 14

Rational emotive (behaviour) therapy 16

Schema therapy 21

Similarities amongst the three main schools of cognitive therapy 26

3 The Context of the Teachings of Jesus 27

Topics in Chapter 3 27

Why we should consider the teachings of Jesus 28

The records of Jesus the person 29

The location of the teachings of Jesus 30

The approach taken in this book towards the teachings of Jesus 31

The historical context of the New Testament 32

The social context of the New Testament 40

Stages in the early dissemination of the teachings of Jesus 47

Jesus' own context 56

The written Gospels 56

Conclusion 59

4 What Did Jesus Teach: A Biblical Scholarship Approach 60

Topics in Chapter 4 60

The purpose of the chapter 60

Problems with direct use of the Gospels 61

Summary of factors influencing the content of the Gospels 65

The historical Jesus and the Jesus of faith (and the inerrancy of scripture) 66

Biblical scholarship: Tracking the words and deeds of Jesus 68

Conclusions about Jesus' life, circumstances and characteristic behaviour 73

Jesus' teachings as conveyed in words 75

The proverbial sayings (apophthegms/aphorisms) 79

Other kinds of sayings 82

Conclusion 82

5 Comparison of Jesus' Teaching with Cognitive Therapy: Part I: Logic 84

Topics in Chapter 5 84

Content and process of thinking 84

The nature of logic 85

Logic in cognitive therapy 88

Logic in the teaching of Jesus 89

A method for comparing cognitive therapy with the teachings of Jesus 89

Jesus' references to the use of logic 90

Conclusions 124

Comparison of Jesus' logic with cognitive therapy 125

6 Comparison of Jesus' Teaching with Cognitive Therapy: Part II: Content 127

Topics in Chapter 6 127

The content of cognitive therapy 127

The content of Jesus' deeds 132

The content of Jesus' teachings as reported by experts 135

The implicational content in Jesus' teachings 147

Relationship of themes identified in the teachings of Jesus to cognitive therap…

Titel
CBT and Christianity
Untertitel
Strategies and Resources for Reconciling Faith in Therapy
EAN
9781118323274
ISBN
978-1-118-32327-4
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
09.09.2015
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
3.67 MB
Anzahl Seiten
399
Jahr
2015
Untertitel
Englisch