Welcome to the Spirituality and Recovery Blog

We hope to post about religion, faith-based initiatives, and spiritual practices and resources and mental health recovery as we develop our understanding and a vibrant community of spiritually informed practice. Please share your ideas, concerns and resources with Lael Ewy at lael.ewy@wichita.edu. Please comment on our posts and share your own experiences, thoughts, questions and resources.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Religious Freedom: Restraint as Opportunity



By Lael Ewy, MFA, CPS

US Constitution, Photo courtesy Mr T in DC

The most common issue we’ve encountered as we have explored spirituality and mental health recovery comes from service providers who are worried that they will run afoul of the 1st Amendment’s “establishment clause” if they even approach the subject of a person’s spiritual life.
The actual clause reads thus: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” (U.S. Const. Amend. I). Various interpretations of this amendment have set the bar fairly high: working within the framework of Medicaid services delivery, I am subject to a law Congress has made; therefore I ought to tread carefully so that I am not seen as promoting a faith or prohibiting others’ exercise of their own.  My own code of ethics as a Certified Peer Specialist states that I shall not “practice, condone, facilitate or collaborate in any form of discrimination,” including against any particular religion (State of Kansas, cited in WSU-CCSR, 2006, p. 5), an idea reinforced by the precept that I shall “at all times respect the rights and dignity of those [I] serve.”

A quick look at the American Psychological Association’s policy manual suggests similar guidelines, though they go on to note that the APA “encourages collaborative activities in pursuit of shared prosocial goals between psychologists and religious communities when such collaboration can be done in a mutually respectful manner that is consistent with psychologists’ professional and scientific roles” (APA, 2007, p. 4).
Those shared goals mentioned by the APA suggest a direction to go. And, with the usual caveats that I am not a lawyer and this is not legal advice, we can at least explore a few ideas about how to approach a person’s faith and spirituality as we move toward the shared goal of mental health recovery.

Defer To Agency Policy and Code of Ethics

First, and obviously, if you’re working for a mental health center or other organization that has a specific policy regarding discussions of religion and faith, defer to that. Defer, also, to your own professional code of ethics. 

Don’t Evangelize

This also ought to be obvious, but avoid trying to convert those you serve. That’s covered by the policies against “discrimination” above. You can discriminate against (“Your religion is bad”), and you can also discriminate in favor of (“My religion is good.”). Neither is kosher ethically, and both are unproductive. If we believe in self-determination, we are beholden to be aware that with the position of service provider comes power and authority, and to suggest to people how to believe in matters of faith is an abuse of that power.

Their Faith (or Lack Thereof) Is Their Own

Respect people’s right to practice (or not). That’s the second part of the establishment clause, and it’s important not just to the aforementioned notions of self-determination, but also because we each have different ways of believing, even within a given religious tradition. You might share a faith with someone you serve, but that does not necessarily mean that you experience that faith in the same way. You might view the bosom of your church as a place of solace and safety, but another might view it as a place of judgment and shame and may find recovery easier if she stops going. That’s okay; it’s her call. You can find out where she is on the subject by listening.

Listen

A big part of finding out when, if, and how a person wants to talk about spirituality is to listen to what she says about it. This may seem like a simple thing, but it’s sometimes hard to see through the cloud of our own ideas about how spirituality ought to work for people and see how it actually does. Our relationships with spirituality, particularly those of us who grew up inside specific faith traditions, are often as complex as the relationships we have with people—and often as deep. To try to sum up my relationship with my Mennonite background as good or bad, supportive or problematic, freeing or smothering, simply does not meet the charge. It has been all those things at various times, sometimes several all at once.

Ask

If by listening you pick up on the idea that a person’s spiritual life is important to him, or that it is important to his recovery, you have an indication that asking about it might be OK. Open-ended questions can help determine what the person’s relationship with his spiritual life is like and what he thinks it might do for (or against) him. At the right time, questions like “What does being a Methodist mean to you?” or “How could your mosque help support you in making this change?” could help a person get in touch with spiritual resources or determine how one’s spiritual life might be working at cross-purposes to his recovery.

Free Your Mind

Last, be open to the possibilities. Since everyone’s experience of spirituality is unique, being open to what is going on for a person spiritually and not pressing with interpretations of your own can lead someone to self-discovery. Many people experience what psychiatry would label symptoms as deep spiritual experiences. Even atheistic existentialists like Jean-Paul Sartre spoke of “angst” as not merely a matter of personal experience but as a result of a consciousness relating to the universe as a whole. One woman’s vision may be, to a mental health practitioner, hallucination. If so, they have little to discuss: the person having the experience may feel dismissed and misunderstood, and the practitioner, by reducing the woman’s experience to something that has no basis in reality, may be missing an important insight into how that woman sees the world.

Profoundly spiritual experiences may even be disturbing, but that does not necessarily mean they are unwelcome or bad to those going through them; the least appropriate response may be to try to “treat” them or medicate them away. Difficult spiritual experiences may be both deeply meaningful and an avenue to a whole new life, a whole new way of thinking. Just about all religious traditions have stories or rebirth through tribulation and trial, yet we are terrified that any setback or difficulty is a treatment failure, not an opportunity for growth. A respectful look through others’ spiritual lenses, even though they might not be the ones through which we look, can help create and maintain relationships of healing and of hope.

Following these points can turn what seem to be legal and ethical restrictions into assets for the service relationship, creating safe places in which people can express themselves freely without the fear of being told their faith is wrong or that their mental distress is a source of shame.

It is also far from an exhaustive list. Please contribute approaches that work for you in the comment box below. We’d love to hear from you!     

References

American Psychological Association. (2007). Resolution on religious, religion-based and/or religion-derived prejudice. In The Council Policy Manual. Retrieved from  http://www.apa.org/about/policy/religious-discrimination.pdf

U.S. Const. Amend. I

Wichita State University-Center for Community Support and Research. (2006). Code of ethics. Kansas Peer Specialist Basic Training Program for Certification: Facilitator’s Guide. Wichita, KS: WSU-CCSR.