For many people, faith is indispensable to mental health. Religious beliefs and practices strengthen their emotional resiliency in the face of hassles and stressors.
Healthy spirituality can infuse emotion and intellect with hope and clarity. Awareness of the Holy Spirit lessens the sense of aloneness and imparts wise counsel. Reading of religious texts, with focus on scriptures that emphasize God’s love and grace, can correct cognitive distortions regarding low self-worth or helplessness.
Looking inward, prayer provides a structure in which to list problems and to facilitates a mental state of receptivity to new solutions. Going deeper into a meditative state, while contemplating God as creator of the universe yet intimate companion, enlightens the mind to a bigger-picture image of life that causes worries to melt.
Clearly spiritual belief can support mental health. People tell me this, in one way or another, most days.
It is also true that spiritual belief can become emotionally unhealthy. People also remind me of this on a regular basis. A woman with obsessive compulsive disorder tells me of crippling obsessions over past sins. Victims of clergy-abuse describe long-lasting wounds.
And so, healthy and unhealthy beliefs can be intimately interwoven in the mind. Disentangling these beliefs can be hard and the process of uprooting unhealthy spiritual beliefs can be psychologically traumatic. Often, it is better to start with cultivating spiritual wellness through the practices noted above. In time, emotionally healthy spirituality will begin to yield fruits of improved mental fitness.
Reblogged this on mgwebbuddy.
Thanks Doc Hall, for reminding me that I am never alone! God will give me the strength I need! I just have to ask……