Description

Book Synopsis
Many religious people distrust the idea of psychotherapy because they fear mental health professionals will misunderstand and pathologize their beliefs. This book provides concrete guidance on how therapists can work effectively with clients from a variety of religious backgrounds.

Each chapter is devoted to a different religious denomination and is written by an author who is both a mental health professional and an expert on the tradition described. The contributors provide information on the central beliefs and practices of the faith, describe how spiritual concerns may emerge in therapy, and offer guidelines for promoting trust and positive outcomes.


Table of Contents

Contributors

Preface

Acknowledgments

I. Introduction and Overview

  1. Toward Religious and Spiritual Competency for Mental Health Professionals
    P. Scott Richards and Allen E. Bergin
  2. Religious Diversity in North America
    Roger R. Keller

II. Christianity

  1. Psychotherapy With Roman Catholics
    Edward P. Shafranske
  2. Psychotherapy With Members of Eastern Orthodox Churches
    George Morelli
  3. Psychotherapy With Mainline Protestants: Lutheran, Presbyterian, Episcopal/Anglican, and Methodist
    Everett L. Worthington Jr., James T. D. Berry, Joshua N. Hook, Don E. Davis, Jennifer S. Ripley, and Chelsea L. Greer
  4. Psychotherapy for Evangelical and Fundamentalist Protestants
    Nancy Stiehler Thurston and Winston Seegobin
  5. Psychotherapy With Pentecostal Protestants
    Richard D. Dobbins
  6. Psychotherapy With Latter-Day Saints
    Wendy Ulrich, P. Scott Richards, Kristin L. Hansen, and Allen E. Bergin
  7. Psychotherapy With Seventh-Day Adventists
    Carole A. Rayburn

III. Judaism

  1. Psychotherapy With Orthodox Jews
    Aaron Rabinowitz
  2. Psychotherapy With Conservative and Reform Jews
    Lisa Miller, Yakov A. Barton, Marina Mazur, and Robert J. Lovinger

IV. Islam

  1. Psychotherapy With Muslims
    Zari Hedayat-Diba

V. Eastern Traditions

  1. Psychotherapy With Hindus
    Anu R. Sharma and Pratyusha Tummala-Narra
  2. Psychotherapy With Buddhists
    Mark Finn and Jeffrey B. Rubin

VI. Ethnic-Centered Spirituality

  1. Psychotherapy With Members of African American Churches and Spiritual Traditions
    Donelda A. Cook and Christine Y. Wiley
  2. Psychotherapy With Members of Latino/Latina Churches and Spiritual Traditions
    Fayth M. Parks, Maria Cecilia Zea, and Michael A. Mason
  3. Psychotherapy With Members of Asian American Churches and Spiritual Traditions
    Siang-Yang Tan and Natalie J. Dong
  4. North American Indian and Alaska Native Spirituality and Psychotherapy
    Jeff King, Joseph E. Trimble, Gayle Skawen:nio Morse, and Lisa Rey Thomas

VII. Afterword

  1. Religious Diversity and Psychotherapy: Conclusions, Recommendations, and Future Directions
    P. Scott Richards and Allen E. Bergin

Index

About the Editors

Handbook of Psychotherapy and Religious Diversity

    Product form

    £74.70

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £83.00 – you save £8.30 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 6 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by P. Scott Richards, PhD, Allen E. Bergin, PhD

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Handbook of Psychotherapy and Religious Diversity by P. Scott Richards, PhD

      Publisher: American Psychological Association
      Publication Date: 12/05/2014
      ISBN13: 9781433817359, 978-1433817359
      ISBN10: 1433817357

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Many religious people distrust the idea of psychotherapy because they fear mental health professionals will misunderstand and pathologize their beliefs. This book provides concrete guidance on how therapists can work effectively with clients from a variety of religious backgrounds.

      Each chapter is devoted to a different religious denomination and is written by an author who is both a mental health professional and an expert on the tradition described. The contributors provide information on the central beliefs and practices of the faith, describe how spiritual concerns may emerge in therapy, and offer guidelines for promoting trust and positive outcomes.


      Table of Contents

      Contributors

      Preface

      Acknowledgments

      I. Introduction and Overview

      1. Toward Religious and Spiritual Competency for Mental Health Professionals
        P. Scott Richards and Allen E. Bergin
      2. Religious Diversity in North America
        Roger R. Keller

      II. Christianity

      1. Psychotherapy With Roman Catholics
        Edward P. Shafranske
      2. Psychotherapy With Members of Eastern Orthodox Churches
        George Morelli
      3. Psychotherapy With Mainline Protestants: Lutheran, Presbyterian, Episcopal/Anglican, and Methodist
        Everett L. Worthington Jr., James T. D. Berry, Joshua N. Hook, Don E. Davis, Jennifer S. Ripley, and Chelsea L. Greer
      4. Psychotherapy for Evangelical and Fundamentalist Protestants
        Nancy Stiehler Thurston and Winston Seegobin
      5. Psychotherapy With Pentecostal Protestants
        Richard D. Dobbins
      6. Psychotherapy With Latter-Day Saints
        Wendy Ulrich, P. Scott Richards, Kristin L. Hansen, and Allen E. Bergin
      7. Psychotherapy With Seventh-Day Adventists
        Carole A. Rayburn

      III. Judaism

      1. Psychotherapy With Orthodox Jews
        Aaron Rabinowitz
      2. Psychotherapy With Conservative and Reform Jews
        Lisa Miller, Yakov A. Barton, Marina Mazur, and Robert J. Lovinger

      IV. Islam

      1. Psychotherapy With Muslims
        Zari Hedayat-Diba

      V. Eastern Traditions

      1. Psychotherapy With Hindus
        Anu R. Sharma and Pratyusha Tummala-Narra
      2. Psychotherapy With Buddhists
        Mark Finn and Jeffrey B. Rubin

      VI. Ethnic-Centered Spirituality

      1. Psychotherapy With Members of African American Churches and Spiritual Traditions
        Donelda A. Cook and Christine Y. Wiley
      2. Psychotherapy With Members of Latino/Latina Churches and Spiritual Traditions
        Fayth M. Parks, Maria Cecilia Zea, and Michael A. Mason
      3. Psychotherapy With Members of Asian American Churches and Spiritual Traditions
        Siang-Yang Tan and Natalie J. Dong
      4. North American Indian and Alaska Native Spirituality and Psychotherapy
        Jeff King, Joseph E. Trimble, Gayle Skawen:nio Morse, and Lisa Rey Thomas

      VII. Afterword

      1. Religious Diversity and Psychotherapy: Conclusions, Recommendations, and Future Directions
        P. Scott Richards and Allen E. Bergin

      Index

      About the Editors

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account