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A PRESENT GRACE: THE RELATIONAL BEDROCK
OF PASTORAL COUNSELING AND CARE
I sometimes joke with pastors that pastoral counseling is easy…refer, refer,
refer. While referring parishioners to trained mental health professionals
is essential, it is sometimes not possible or practical. On the other hand,
I often wonder, in this era of specialization and expertise, if pastoral
counseling has become another casualty of the tendency towards viewing counseling
as a place where people get “fixed” of their problems and symptoms get reduced.
Although I dislike this tendency in the larger field of counseling, it is
understandable given the enormous impact of the medical model on the field,
time and money constraints, and the lack of a telos that would suggest a
different trajectory for counseling. That is not the case, however, for pastoral
counseling. Grounded in the theology, practices, and tradition of the church,
pastoral counseling is part of the larger telos of the Christian life, that
is, the transformation of people’s lives into the image of God.
The transformation of the individual into a person, of the broken into the
more whole, of the selfish into the loving is neither a six-session process
nor a purely cognitive or behavioral process. Unfortunately, many students
preparing for ministry still view pastoral counseling primarily in cognitive,
behavioral, and symptom-reduction terms and overlook the importance of new
relational experiences on the process of transformation. In this essay I
will briefly discuss how Trinitarian theology and contemporary psychoanalysis
suggest a relational perspective on change and transformation in people’s
lives.
Trinitarian Theology
Trinitarian theology may seem like a strange place to locate a paradigm for
pastoral counseling, but it is in Trinitarian theology’s understanding of
the relational nature of God that a deep conviction of the centrality of
community and the primacy of love, freedom, and suffering presence within
relationships is formed. The Cappodocian Fathers developed the notion of
God as a communion of three persons in free relations to one another as a
response to modalism and subordinationism. This communion (the doctrine of
the perichoresis) posits that the Father exists in the Son and the Spirit,
the Son in the Father and the Spirit, and the Spirit in the Father and the
Son. In this understanding of the Trinity, the very being of God is found
in communion (J.D. Zizioulas, Being as Communion: Studies in Personhood
and the Church [St. Vladimir’s, 1985]); that is, to be is for God to
be Father, Son, and Spirit in relationship with each other (C. Schwöbel,
Trinitarian Theology Today: Essays on Divine Being and Act [T&T
Clark, 1995] 113-46).
In this communion, however, the three persons are distinct and free; they
have the space to be (Cf. C. Gunton, “Trinity, Ontology, and Anthropology:
Towards a Renewal of the Doctrine of the Imago Dei,” in Persons, Divine
and Human: King’s College Essays in Theological Anthropology, ed. C.
Schwöbel & C. Gunton [T&T Clark, 1991] 47-61). Although the
three persons are distinct and free, they are unified in their mutual love
for each other, which is lived out in relationship with each other and through
their indwelling in the other. Each person of the Godhead then is not only
a subject, but also a “room” for the other (Cf. J. Moltmann, “God’s Kenosis
in the Creation and Consummation of the World,” in The Work of Love: Creation
as Kenosis, ed. J. Polkinghorne [Wm.B. Eerdmans, 2001]). Thus, love ceases
to be a property or a disposition possessed by God, but rather is viewed
as the mode of God’s personal being in relation (Schwöbel, Trinitarian
Theology Today, 113-46).
When viewed in this manner, kenosis, or self-emptying, is seen at the heart
of the inner life of the Trinity. In the loving self-surrender of the Father,
Son, and Spirit to each other, the nature of God is revealed and all of God’s
actions outwards can be seen as emanating from that kenotic nature (Moltmann).
This self-emptying and suffering love is powerfully seen in both the creation
and the crucifixion. It is out of a loving desire for an other that God creates.
As love does not coerce, creation is then understood as the granting of being
to the other, which includes the space to be, other and particular (Gunton).
Creation exists because God’s eternal love seeks fellowship and yearns for
a response back in freedom (J. Moltmann, The Trinity and the Kingdom:
The Doctrine of God [Fortress, 1993]). In the crucifixion, the life of
Christ and his loving surrender of himself to the Father and the Father’s
loving surrendering of the Son, even to death on a cross, becomes the earthly
reflection of the eternal self-emptying love of God.
So what does the Trinity mean for pastoral counseling and care? Besides providing
a theological framework for all aspects of pastoring, one implication is
that a Trinitarian hermeneutic forces one to think in terms of relationships
and communities. In fact a Trinitarian perspective, contrary to American
individualism, would suggest that it is relational interconnectedness and
interdependency that is the foundation of human personhood. For the church,
reaching out to those with diminished capacities to relate, engaging those
who act out destructive patterns within relationships, and creating webs
of interconnection with whoever it touches become important acts of offering
love, grace, personhood, and hope to the other that reflects the Triune God.
Another implication is that love, freedom, empathy, patience, and understanding
come to define what is brought to the relationship in order to allow participation
with the other for the sake of the other. A final implication is that transformation
into the image of God means that kenosis is the developmental goal for the
Christian life.
Contemporary Psychoanalysis
Like Trinitarian theology, contemporary psychoanalysis asserts the fundamental
interdependence of humanity and acknowledges that at the core humans are
primarily relational beings. While psychoanalysis is often linked predominately
with Freud and his notion of the impersonal, mechanistic drives that motivate
humanity, contemporary psychoanalysts such as Fairbairn, Guntrip, Winnicott,
and Kohut have long been arguing for a relational understanding of human
motivations. That is, contemporary psychoanalysts have attempted to understand
how relational experiences come to be organized into patterns of acting,
thinking, and feeling and how those patterns then interact within the context
in which the person finds herself. For example, from a contemporary psychoanalytic
framework, a young woman who is abusing drugs would be understood as communicating
something about her view of herself, her view of others, and her view of
her current context, all of which have been shaped at her deepest core by
her relational experiences.
In contemporary psychoanalysis empathic attunement and understanding by the
caregiver are viewed as foundational to the development of a child’s experience
of feeling “agentic” and “whole” in the world and thus a self. For example,
when the caregiver responds to an infant as if they were communicating meaningfully,
then the infant experiences itself as meaningful and understandable. Through
the experience of the caregiver’s consistent empathic availability, a cohesive
self (the self experience of oneself as “okay,” put together, whole, and
an agent) is developed whereas empathic failures create deficits in self
experience (e.g., expectations that one will not be taken seriously or responded
to with care, feelings of self doubt and worthlessness, etc.). From a contemporary
psychoanalytic viewpoint, the experience of empathy not only provides the
foundation for the experience of oneself as cohesive and “full,” but also
prepares one to be empathic with others.
While typical ways of understanding one’s self develop through interactions
with the caregiver, relational interactions throughout life either confirm
or deter that understanding. Thus, the subjective experience of self can
change on a moment-to-moment basis based on the relational experience one
is in. Repeated relational experiences gain power over time and can change
the way one typically understands one’s self for either good or bad. It is
these repeated relational experiences that undergird one’s patterns of feeling,
thinking, and behaving which become increasingly repetitious, rigid, and
unconscious (automatic). The belief for the contemporary psychoanalytic practitioner
is that a new relational experience of empathy and understanding that is
consistently available will provide a “developmental second chance” for the
client within the therapeutic relationship (D.M. Orange, Emotional Understanding:
Studies in Psychoanalytic Epistemology [Guilford, 1995]). Given that
one is often dealing with deeply ingrained understandings of self, others,
and the world, this is not a quick or easy process to undergo with someone.
From a relational perspective, though, it is a process that must be undergone
for transformation to occur.
Conclusion
I have very briefly attempted to present two perspectives, one theological
and one psychological, that might inform a relational approach to pastoral
counseling and care. As a clinician, I have found that Trinitarian theology
provides a theological framework for my contemporary psychoanalytic formulations
and interventions. Authors such as C. Gunton, C. LaCugna, J. Moltmann, M.
Volf, and J. Zizioulas provide wonderful perspectives on Trinitarian theology.
For contemporary psychoanalysis, a good place to begin would be with textbooks
that provide overviews of the various theories within contemporary psychoanalysis:
object relations theory, relational psychoanalysis, self psychology, or intersubjectivity
theory. For further reading, authors such as R.D. Fairbairn, H. Guntrip,
D. Winnicott, H. Kohut, S. Mitchell, R. Stolorow, and D. Orange provide insightful
(and often dense) glimpses into working from a relational perspective. James
Jones and R. Sorenson are two Christian authors who write from a contemporary
psychoanalytic perspective. The Society for the Study of Psychology and Wesleyan
Theology has also produced a good deal of work on relational approaches from
a Wesleyan perspective (http://www.ptloma.edu/wesleyan/SPWT/spwt.htm).
In the end, it is important for the pastor to practice “being present” with
others. Pastoral counseling is not about technique or advice. It is
about relational presence. In contrast to American culture that values quick
fixes and instant change, pastoral counseling is about participating in the
transformation of people’s lives and witnessing to God’s love, grace, and
forgiveness. The process of transformation in a person’s life is not a fast
one, and witnessing to God’s love, grace, and forgiveness is less about words
and more about a relational experience. As people experience love, grace,
empathy, patience, and forgiveness in relationships, rather than merely words,
they are profoundly impacted. Giving advice often comes too quickly and easily.
Advice, when given, should come out of a prolonged time of being present
with the other person. The difficulty with being present with someone, for
most pastors and counselors, is the loss of control it entails and the anxiety
it brings up about one’s inability to “fix” others or ourselves. Attempting
to fix situations is much easier than sitting on the mourner’s bench with
the person.
By Ronald W. Wright, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Psychology at
Mount Vernon Nazarene University.
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