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By Richard Houskamp, D.S.W.
Spirituality is an extremely broad topic. A brief article
cannot address it comprehensively. As a result, I have chosen to discuss
spirituality from the perspective of a Christian therapist. In doing so,
I realize I am "looking at the elephant" from a very limited
view. Nevertheless, it may provide a perspective which is not always considered
in discussing spirituality and therefore be helpful to some who struggle
with spirituality in their own lives.
What is spirituality? The heart of spirituality is captured in Augustine's
famous statement, "Thou hast made us for thyself and our hearts are
restless until they find their rest in thee."
This statement does not suggest an escape from the world. Rather, our
living, our willing, our choosing are to reflect an attitude of serving
God with our entire being. Eugene Peterson, in The Contemplative Pastor,
states that Christian spirituality means "...living in the mature
wholeness of the gospel. It means taking all of the elements of life--children,
spouse, job, weather, possessions, relationships--and experiencing them
as an act of faith. God wants all the materials of our lives" (p.
13). Spirituality includes all aspects of our lives.
Second, spirituality is a process. In the Reformed tradition, it might
be likened to sanctification. It is a life-long quest which requires that
we seek to reform our basic tendency to live "as the world lives."
It demands that we become God-conscious in our living. And in doing so,
we discover that God's presence surrounds us in remarkable ways.
Third, spirituality encompasses a holistic perspective which includes
a person's developmental and relational experiences. Each person is a
unity of the physical, psychological, social, and spiritual.
For example, the psyche has the ability to control the bodily functions
of the autonomic nervous system by reducing heart rate, blood pressure,
and body temperature. Another example would be the increased interest
in the power of laughter and commitment-to-life to withstand the ravages
of cancer and other deadly diseases. And people with deeply held spiritual
beliefs have survived long-term confinement, torture, and pain--a testimony
to the power of spiritual beliefs to overcome physical and psychological
abuse and torture. Corrie Ten Boom was an example of such a person.
Clinical experience also supports the conclusion that each individual
is a psychospiritual unity. When people are encouraged to share their
experience of God and their spiritual struggles, some remarkable consistencies
begin to emerge in their personal relationships, their view of themselves,
and their perceived relationship to God. What hurts or heals their view
of self and their relationship with others will be reflected in how they
perceive God relating to them.
The story is told of a young boy, living in the streets of a large city,
who was befriended by a Christian youth worker. When told by the well-intended
youth worker that "God was like a Father," the boy replied,
"If God is like my father, I don't want nothin' to do with him."
Because the person is a psychospiritual unity, a person's past experience
and current circumstances do indeed contribute to mental and emotional
problems. This is true for the Christian and non-Christian alike.
As a professor at Calvin College, I was frequently confronted by well-intended
Christian students who resisted the fact that Christians have serious
mental and emotional problems and that these problems are not solved by
simple admonitions to pray, repent, or "get right with the Lord."
In fact, such simple conclusions may result in adding to the person's
illness or confusion. Christian clients often present me with the same
concern. They ask, "If I'm a Christian, why are the promises of God
not realized in my life?" How does one respond to such a question?
It is important to make a distinction between God's promises and our own
experience of those promises. God's love is sure and constant. Our experience
of it is not.
The Christian is guaranteed that God is the victor, that God has won
the battle over the forces of evil, and that God's good future is assured.
That victory was won for us in Christ's death and resurrection.
But there are promises beyond the victory of Christ over sin and death.
Galatians 5: 22-23 identifies them, "But the fruit of the Spirit
is love, joy, peace, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, and self- control.
Against these there is no law." Ephesians 2:2 adds, "Be completely
humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love."
Note how all of these virtues have a relational and communal component
to them, evidenced most clearly in the emphasis on love. So, the fruit
of the Spirit is to be found in our relationships to each other.
When these relationships are distorted by what James Fowler has called
our "fallenness" (that which happens to us and shapes our ways
of being selves in which we have to acknowledge some degree of complicity,
awareness, and assent) or our "befallenness" (that which happens
to us beyond our ability to influence it), we need to experience healing
and perhaps, repentance.
How then do we bring together the assurance of God's love with our own
experience?
- by being Christlike in our relationships with each other
- by being the vehicles of God's love to those around us
- by providing corrective experiences to those whose own experiences
have resulted in their feeling alienated from God and significant others
- and by allowing ourselves to be vulnerable to Christian compassion
and love when it is offered to us.
We are to be a healing community. "Love one another as I have loved
you." And we need to minister to each other with humility and compassion.
"Only the wounded can serve in the army of the Lord" (quoted
in James Fowler, "Faith Development and Pastoral Care" from
The Ballad of the Sad Cafe by Carson McCullers).
Therefore, only the "wounded" can minister to others; only
the "wounded" can experience spirituality.
Much healing and spiritual growth occurs in the body of Christ, the members
of his church. By being Christ-like, by evidencing the fruits of the Spirit,
we become sources of healing to each other.
But there are occasions when this is not enough:
- when "fallenness" and "befallenness"
have consorted to bring about mental and emotional pain
- when a victim of early physical and sexual abuse cannot
overcome the ravaging scars of hopelessness and helplessness
- when dysfunctional families or individuals have contributed
to an overwhelming sense of confusion, anger, or despair
- when death, divorce, or chemical imbalances disrupt
the fine-tuning of the person
At these times, professional help may be necessary. But this help is
also evidence of healing which occurs in community.
Those of us who are privileged to be in the helping professions are agents
whose task is to restore people to their community, where they will be
able to continue their spiritual journey.
There is little doubt that God intended that the fruits of the Spirit
were to be realized in community. But there are instances where the victims
of "befallenness" have had such damaging experiences in their
early development that they cannot experience God's love. And there
are many examples of "fallenness" in which people are so alienated
from themselves and others that God seems remote or unavailable.
In such situations the question is inevitable: Have the people of God
been given the responsibility of being what C.S. Lewis calls "little
Christs" to those who cannot experience the love of Christ
because they've never known consistent, affirming human love? Are those
who have experienced God's love in human relationships--whether
or not they acknowledge the source of that love--the only means by which
some may experience God's love? A hesitant response is--yes.
This is not to suggest that God's love and forgiveness has not already
been accomplished for those who believe. Christ's death and resurrection
already assured that victory. However, the body of Christ may hold the
key to enabling people to experience that love in this world.
This possibility is strongly evident in Matthew 25: 34-40:
Then shall the King say unto them on his right
hand, Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you
from the foundation of the world. For I was hungry, and ye gave me meat.
I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink. I was a stranger, and ye took me
in. Naked, and ye clothed me. I was sick and ye visited me. I was in prison
and ye came to me Inasmuch as ye have done it unto the least of these...,
ye have done it unto me.
Spirituality involves all of our living and being. It is a process which
is never completed. Spirituality is realized in our relationships to each
other, as a reflection of God's relationship to us. Those who will lose
their life for Christ's sake will find it.
And our hearts will be at rest.
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