Increasingly pastoral counselors—along with psychotherapists and social workers—feel the need to integrate spirituality into their therapy. Thomas Hart's pioneering and lucid book, here reissued and updated, equips them to do so. The problems that people bring to counseling always have a spiritual dimension, and this hidden spring can also figure in their healing. Hart, a therapist and theologian, shows how much richer therapy is when it calls attention to spirituality in addressing human struggles. He argues that psychology and sprituality unite in a common goal of healing, with growth, and fulfilment; while spirituality offers a larger, more ultimate framework of value, meaning, and power. Especially for those whose training tended toward the straightforwardly psychological, Hidden Spring offers a manual for a richer, more meaningful counseling. Initial chapters discuss the presence of God in ordinary life, the relationship of the two disciplines, and the contours of healthy spirituality. Six concrete and illuminating case studies demonstrate how to integrate the two in practice.
- Publisher Fortress Press
- Format Paperback
- ISBN 9780800635763
- eBook ISBN 9781451419085
- Dimensions 6 x 9
- Pages 176
- Publication Date August 6, 2002
Endorsements
"A solid testimony to the mutual enrichment that good therapy and good spirituality can provide for each other."
— The Way
"Bold and original....Therapist, pastoral guide and theologian, Thomas Hart prepares the ground for any good building up of an enlightened spirituality, and enables religiously trained counselors to bring spirituality into the service of healing."
— Diaspora
"Hart masterfully...discusses both spirituality and therapy in a way that frees them from what is often a self-absorbed and self-serving approach. His use of case studies moves beyond story for story's sake into principles, theory, and theology."
— Review for Religious
— The Way
"Bold and original....Therapist, pastoral guide and theologian, Thomas Hart prepares the ground for any good building up of an enlightened spirituality, and enables religiously trained counselors to bring spirituality into the service of healing."
— Diaspora
"Hart masterfully...discusses both spirituality and therapy in a way that frees them from what is often a self-absorbed and self-serving approach. His use of case studies moves beyond story for story's sake into principles, theory, and theology."
— Review for Religious