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Exploring Faith
Martin Luther (the priest from the 1500's, not the civil rights
activist) said, "This life, therefore, is not godliness but the
process of becoming godly, not health but getting well, not being
but becoming, not rest but exercise. We are not now what we shall
be, but we are on the way. The process is not yet finished, but it
is actively going on. This is not the goal but it is the right road.
At present, everything does not gleam and sparkle, but everything is
being cleansed."
As a practicing Christian, Stephanie relates to this quotation.
Stephanie is keenly interested in being sensitive to her clients'
spiritual needs. She worships regularly, is active in her church and
most importantly, Stephanie makes time throughout each day to stay
connected with the Source of her life, Jesus Christ. Stephanie
respects each person's unique way of viewing his or her religion, so
Stephanie works with people of any religious tradition. She has
found that when an individual struggles with feeling alienated from
God, he or she is experiencing difficulties in his or her primary
relationships as well.
The following article by Tim Clinton, President of American
Association of Christian Counselors, and Joshua Straub, an adjunct
professor at Liberty University provides helpful information
regarding how we relate with God. Stephanie helps her clients work
through relationship challenges as they explore together the
connection between these difficulties and their relationship with
God.
Though it seems that America is tired of religion, we’re finding
quite the opposite about a relationship with God. A recent Newsweek
poll found that 91 percent of American adults claim a belief in
“God”, while Time magazine reported that 85 percent identify
themselves as Christian. Gallup reports that 73 percent of Americans
“are convinced that God exists.”
People want more of God, not less.
Yet in their spiritual thirst, many people hit a wall when faced
with a crisis in life: a cancer diagnosis, a divorce, a car
accident, a natural disaster or a job loss. Too often, they feel
distant from God and have a hard time believing he will be there for
them when they need him most.
Either that or they turn to God in prayer more than ever before, but
end up disillusioned when he doesn’t come through in the ways they
had hoped.
An exciting new body of research on attachment is adding to our
understanding of why we feel "close to" or "distant from" God. This
theory of relationship understanding and emotion goes beyond a
legalistic religious obligation to maintain good standing with God.
It’s becoming a powerful way of comprehending how we can better
relate to God and experience his grace on a daily basis.
For many who claim to be Christian, much of modern-day thinking
about how to connect with God has been reduced to a theory of sin
management - that what we do or don’t do in our daily lives is the
gauge by which we measure why we are, or are not, close with him.
The truth is that many who leave the faith or turn away from God do
so because they have come to realize that this mindset led to
nothing more than a shallow or empty relationship with God.
Attachment theory helps us understand our misconceptions about who
God is and how we approach a relationship with him. The problem
isn’t God; it is the way we view him and act toward him.
Our spiritual journeys are linked to core relational beliefs
established early in life based on how we've learned to perceive
ourselves and others in our closest relationships. In fact, we
believe everyone reading this blog has a relationship style that
affects their relationship with God and significant others.
We are not trying to establish religious beliefs. We're also not
saying that sin doesn't create distance with God. What we’re trying
to do is to help people understand more fully the nature of how
their relationship style infects or affects how they relate to God.
There are four kinds of attachment or relationship styles developed
from our core relational beliefs, which are or aren't formed within
the context of safe, close, affectionate and secure bonds.
These styles reveal whether we believe we’re capable of getting the
love and comfort we desire and how much we trust others to be
accessible and available in moments of need. They also shape our
expectations about how God will relate to us, especially during
times of need. We break down the styles in our book God Attachment:
Secure: a positive view of self/a positive view of others
Avoidant: an overly inflated view of self/a negative view of others
Anxious: a negative view of self/an over inflated view of others
Fearful: a negative view of self/a negative view of others
When we’re faced with stress, we seek closeness to those we feel
safe with. Each one of us exerts specific behaviors to help us get
closer to those we’re attached to in times of need.
If we don't feel safe; if we are confused in our core beliefs about
whether we’re worthy of love or whether others are capable of loving
us or accessible when we need them, then we'll transfer those
beliefs onto God and struggle to believe he could really be there
for us.
But if God serves the functions of an attachment relationship in our
individual lives, it can be the difference between cognitively
believing in God, as most do, and emotionally connecting, trusting,
and walking with him every day, which is much less common.
If you came from a dysfunctional family and stopped reading now, you
might be tempted to believe that it is impossible to have a genuine
relationship with or healthy view of God. But the good news is that
research supports the notion that those with insecure relationship
styles can and do find a close, secure relationship with God as they
turn to him and discover he is not like other attachment figures who
have hurt them in life.
Perhaps it’s time to challenge our beliefs about God (if we’ve seen
him as disinterested or unavailable) and re-evaluate our own
identity (if we tend to see ourselves as hopeless or unlovable).
Finding hope and meaning doesn’t happen overnight. There’s no magic
prayer or verse that will heal the wounds we’ve experienced. We need
to be honest with ourselves, grieve our losses, repent of our own
wrongdoings, forgive those who have hurt us, and learn new
relational skills.
Just like any other relationship, building intimacy with God
requires vulnerability. Honesty. Time. Prayer. Focus. Listening.
Journaling. Reading the Bible. Meditating.
Remember, the goal is to connect with God, and get to know him for
who he really is. This often requires peeling off layers of false
core relational beliefs.
When we understand our relationship with God in light of attachment
research, we begin to realize how our unhealthy preoccupation with
anxiety, fear, guilt, or self-punishment may actually be shutting
out the love and healing we truly long for.
God is not like your mother, your father, your spouse, your ex, or
any other human that failed, abused, or abandoned you.
If you’re from a secure background, God also cannot be the God of
your father or mother. Your relationship with him must become
personal. When you connect with God, and begin to grasp who he
really is, you begin to build the most vital relationship in your
life. He becomes your source of truth, love, forgiveness, joy, and
security. It’s a choice you make.
So if you’re one of the 97 percent of people who do believe in God,
who is he to you? Are you close to him? If not, your relationship
style is likely the reason. |
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The first session is
always free of charge! Referrals to other counselors are provided if
the prospective client does not feel like he or she can work well
with Stephanie. Contact info:
Phone: 303-500-3266
Located in Faith Lutheran Church
17701 W. 16th Avenue
Golden, CO 80401
email:
Steph@IntegrativeCounselingLLC.com
Website:
www.IntegrativeCounselingLLC.com |