Theological Education for Specialized Ministries: Teaching Intercultural Competency within a Paradigm of Evidence-Based Spiritual Care

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Theological Education for Specialized Ministries: Teaching Intercultural Competency within a Paradigm of Evidence-Based Spiritual Care Carrie Doehring, Professor of Pastoral Care Iliff School of Theology cdoehring@iliff.edu January 8, 2017 Paradigms of Pastoral Care: HISTORICAL WHY: To save souls (salvation) through faith in God/Jesus Christ WHO: By ordained priests/ministers; endorsed chaplains HOW: Directing/guiding people to belief (teaching adherence) Reconciling people to God/Jesus (through ritual/discipline) Healing souls (care of souls) WHAT: Ministry of guidance/witness that guides through witness to bible (the textual/excusive source of authority/truth) Ministry of presence that heals/reconciles through personal relationship with God/ Jesus 1

Paradigms of Pastoral/Spiritual Care: THERAPEUTIC WHY: Holistic healing of body & soul WHO: Ordained/endorsed chaplains/pastoral counselors HOW: Holistic healing through intensive one-on-one therapeutic relationships that psychodynamically explore emotional issues & traumatic memories WHAT: Ministry of therapeutic presence that heals/reconciles through personal relationship with chaplain or counselor or supervisor that incarnates presence of God/ Jesus Paradigms of Spiritual Care: INTERCULTURAL WHY: Liberative spiritual integration of persons/communities/world WHO: Theologically educated & professionally qualified/licensed HOW: Intercultural presence that builds trust by respecting religious, spiritual, and cultural differences WHAT: Ministry of intercultural presence that uses spiritual practices to increase compassionate awareness of embodied lifelimiting cultural meanings of suffering in order to co-create contextual intentional beliefs, values, and practices that foster liberative goodness. 2

Paradigms of Spiritual Care: EVIDENCE-BASED WHY: Spiritual integration, physical and behavioral health, patient satisfaction and shortened hospital stays WHO: Healthcare professionals with clinical pastoral education; HOW: Uses evidenced based assessments and interventions proven to promote positive spiritual coping, reduce chronic spiritual struggles, and shorten hospital stays WHAT: Spirituality is a search for the sacred and... the journey people take to discover and realize their essential selves and higher order aspirations (Pargament, 2007, p. 58). Religions offer organizational contexts for pursing this search for the sacred, providing historical and contemporary systems of beliefs, values, symbols, sacred texts, and practices like personal and communal worship. HOW does pastoral/spiritual care help? 1. PRESENCE: Respect & trust helps people find spiritual practices that foster embodied experiences of goodness & self-compassion HEALTH: Physical, Behavioral HOSPITAL stay & satisfaction SPIRITUAL Integration 2. LIFE-GIVING MEANINGS (Intentional theologies/orienting systems) integrate compassion/care, counteracting life-limiting embedded oppressive fear- & shame-based theologies/ orienting systems EVIDENCE- BASED OUTCOMES 3

Intercultural Competency 1. An Intercultural Capacity & Differentiation of Self Understanding and responding to the unique contextual ways people live out values, beliefs, and ways of coping/connecting to the sacred (their relational spirituality and orienting systems). Moving from being Ethnocentrically oriented by defending one s culture and/or minimizing cultural differences to Ethnorelative orientations of (1) accepting one s own worldviews as one among many valid worldviews, (2) being respectful guests entering into another s worldview, and (3) adjusting one s behaviors in ways that communicate respect and intercultural empathy. 4

1. An Intercultural Capacity & Differentiation of Self Identifying stress/emotional reactions in the midst of care conversations Discerning whether these reactions arise from -within themselves (and their lived theologies/orienting systems ) -between them and the care seeker -from intersecting aspects of either their or the care seeker s social identities (i.e. implicit biases about race, gender, orientation). Differentiation of self is needed for theological empathy: stepping into another s spiritual orientation and respecting unique values, beliefs, ways of coping and connecting and with sacred. 2. Theological Fluency & Reflexivity Theological literacy: knowing about various theological perspectives, methods, or second-order ways of reflecting upon religious and spiritual experiences (e.g., comparative studies of religions, biblical studies, historical studies, theological and ethical studies and practical theological studies). Theological fluency: being able to use these perspectives in a fluid and embodied way in the practice of pastoral and spiritual care (Doehring, 2002). 5

2. Theological Fluency & Reflexivity Self-reflexivity: the process of reflecting upon one s own story from multiple diverging standpoints take into account one s privilege and disadvantage within intersecting social systems like sexism, racism, and heterosexism. Theological reflexivity: (1) Tracking one s personal theology/orienting system (stress-related and intentional beliefs, values and practices for coping) and discerning how it shapes a care-giving relationship. (2) Using one s theological education to assess whether one s personal theologies are life-giving or life-limiting in particular contexts of care. (3) Being accountable for drawing upon one s theological education to assess the care seeker s embedded and espoused beliefs, values, and practices. (4) Drawing upon personal as well as public theologies to collaborate with care seekers in co-constructing life-giving contextual beliefs and values that can be tested in practice. 3. Spiritual Integration Using spiritual practices (communal/personal) to experience love or goodness or benevolence from God (in theistic traditions) and others, especially in one s bodies Experiencing goodness reveals the life-limiting embedded orienting systems shaped by intersecting social oppressions, and helps people co-create complex intentional meanings about suffering Experiencing goodness and complex meanings make people use more flexible coping that counteracts consumerism Integrating spiritual practices and intentional meanings into daily life has liberative ripple effects *Pargament, Desai & McConnell, 2006; Doehring, 2015a, Doehring, 2015b 6

Attitude: The implicit and explicit perspectives and/or biases people hold about spirituality and religion and how they relate to the practice of [spiritual care] (Vieten et al, 2013, p. 4). Radical Respect for Religious Differences Respect irreducible differences without searching for one God Focus on lived practices, values, and beliefs Dialogue with full awareness of biases & intractable otherness Moyaert, M. (2012). Recent developments in the theology of interreligious dialogue: From soteriological openness to hermeneutical openness. Modern Theology, 28(1), 25-52. Knowledge Information, facts, concepts, and awareness of research literature [spiritual caregivers] should possess about spirituality and religion as it relates to the practice of [spiritual care] (Vieten et al, 2013, p. 4). Pastoral & practical theology Spirituality and health (research literacy & evidencebased chaplaincy care) Religious and theological studies (traveling knowledge from various religious/theological methods) 7

Skills Explore spiritual practices that connect with goodness Co-create meanings Communication skills using motivational interviewing to help people explore the value of change (why change) and tools for change (how to change) Intercultural Military Ministry Values of Caring/Preventing Harm have priority in teaching military ministry. These cornerstone values generate complex theologies of caring that respect theological/ideological/political differences exaggerated by values like loyalty/betrayal, authority/subversion, liberty/oppression (see www.moralfoundations.org) Values of Caring/Preventing Harm bring clarity to issues of conscience in that protection of those seeking care becomes central to military ministry Intercultural spiritual care interfaces with evidence-based behavioral health, especially to understand and respond to religious and spiritual struggles and moral injury (see the research of Ken Pargament) Ethical use of institutional power is rooted in values of care/preventing harm Critical thinking on social and military issues is enriched by complex theologies (values & beliefs) of caring Theory and practice of leadership need to draw upon all of these resources 8

Military Ministry: More than Ministry of Presence Ministry of Presence: when chaplains do their own work of spiritual integration they can be a compassionate presence with service members/veterans, prompting them to use practices fostering self compassion. On its own, a ministry of presence is a minimalist, almost ephemeral, form of empathic spiritual care that is, at the same time deeply rooted in religious histories It is religion stripped to the basics. Religion naturalized. Religion without code, cult, or community, Religion without metaphysics. It is religion for a state of uncertainty. As is typical of American religion, it both resists specific theological elaboration and is deeply rooted in a specifically Christian theology of incarnation (Sullivan, 2014, p. 174) Military Ministry: Presence + Co-creating Meaning 1. Ministry of Presence: when chaplains do their own work of spiritual integration they can be that compassionate presence with service members/veterans, prompting them to use spiritual practices fostering self compassion, goodness and love. 2. Co-creating meanings, especially about suffering: Experiencing goodness reveals the life-limiting embedded orienting systems shaped by intersecting social oppressions, prompting service members/veterans to co-create complex intentional meanings about suffering, which generate flexible coping and spiritual integration 9

Intercultural Co-Creation of Meanings Chaplains need to be literate in religions of the world, especially their spiritual and religious practices and ways of understanding suffering Chaplains need to be theologically reflexive about how they themselves spiritually integrate personal suffering Chaplains need to respectfully step into the existential/religious worlds of service members/veterans and deeply respect whatever is sacred for them Once trust is established, chaplains need to follow the service members /veterans lead in co-creating meanings (if appropriate) and/or referring to those in that person s tradition Iliff s Theological Education for Military Chaplains at Iliff began in 2004 with Larry Graham s course on the Impact of War on Families 2004 Graham s Course Who in your family was involved in the military or impacted by military service and/or war? 10

Graham s Scholarship and Research on Pastoral and Public Theologies of War My immersion into the culture of families as they face war over several generations is public pastoral theology because it identifies and evaluates the multiple (and sometimes contending) core meaning systems about war operating within families and between families and their religious and national environments over time. I seek to identify the way these value systems and contexts mediate practical strategies for healing, sustaining, guiding, and liberating individuals, cultures, and the natural order ravished by war. I suggest ways to modify some of our core theological commitments and moral assessments about the nature and impact of war as an enterprise in relation to the common good. Professor Larry Graham US Air Force funds 1-year Degree on Military PTSD 2004 Graham s Course 2008-9 MA Military PTSD Doehring and Graham propose a Post-M.Div. 1-year Masters of Arts in Military PTSD for Air Force Chaplains Iliff faculty: What would this mean in relation to Iliff s social justice orientation? Degree proposal adopted by faculty and trustees in 2009 11

US Air Force Chaplains at Iliff 2006 Graham s Course 2008-9 MA Military PTSD 2009-12 USAF Chaplains 2009-10 USAF Chaplain Dallas Little 2010-11 USAF Chaplain Matt Boarts 2010-11 USAF Chaplain John Sackett 2010-11 USAF Chaplain Glenn Bright 2010-11 USAF Chaplain Erik Harp 2011-12 USAF Chaplain James Parrish Online Graduate Certificate in Military Chaplaincy Ministry Pastoral Theology and Care 16 credits include Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: Pastoral, Psychological and Theological Responses The Impact of War on Pastoral Care and Theology Moral Stress, Resilience, and Spiritual Integration Residential and online formats feature self-reflection, small group interactions, pastoral care skills and theological discussions about suffering 12

Weekend Praxis Courses Military Chaplaincy Ministry Spiritual Care in the Combat Zone Spiritual Care of Military Families Spiritual Care of Women in the Military Spiritual Care of Gays and Lesbians in the Military Pathways to Military Chaplaincy Conference 2006 Graham s Course 2008-9 MA Military PTSD 2009-12 USAF Chaplains 2014 Pathways Conference Strategic Document inviting theologically centrist and left-ofcenter Christian seminaries, theological schools, and divinity schools to become more invested in educating military chaplains 13

Iliff s Military Ministry Online Courses Available to All ATS students Post-Traumatic Stress: Pastoral, Psychological & Theological Perspectives 6 online courses 2-year cycle The Impact of War on Pastoral Care & Theology Moral Stress, Resilience & Spiritual Integration Crisis Care & Pastoral Theology Spiritual Care in Pluralistic Contexts Ethical Perspectives on War and Peace Goals of Iliff s Military Ministry Programs Advance diverse theological perspectives Practice intercultural spiritual care in multicultural and pluralistic contexts Address theological and psychological issues related to war and military service Equip religious leaders as competent intercultural caregivers who can work within an evidence-based approach to spirituality and health 14

Our human race is constructed by war. Our beings, [our families], our nations, our cultures, our religions they are constructed, infused by, built and rebuilt by war. The fact that we are not aware of that doesn t mean that it s not true. What we have not found is a way in our culture to productively engage the multi-layered ways we have experienced war It has impacted us, we ve endured it, we ve recovered from it, we are passing on our legacies from it, and all of that is part of who we are. Larry Graham (2014). Lecture on war: Theology and religious practice. Denver, CO. References Clebsch, W. A., & Jaekle, C. R. (1964). Pastoral care in historical perspective. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. Doehring, C. (2002). Theological literacy and fluency in a new millennium: A pastoral theological perspective. In R. L. Petersen & N. M. Rourke (Eds.), Theological literacy for the twenty-first century (pp. 311-324). Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Press. Doehring, C. (2015a). The practice of pastoral care: A postmodern approach (Rev. & Expanded). Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox. Doehring, C. (2015b). Resilience as the relational ability to spiritually integrate moral stress. Pastoral Psychology, 64(5), 635-649. doi: 10.1007/s11089-015-0643-7 Exline, J. J., Pargament, K., Grubbs, J. B., & Yali, A. M. (2014). The Religious and Spiritual Struggles Scale: Development and initial validation. Psychology of Religion and Spirituality, 6(3), 208-222. doi: 10.1037/a0036465.sup Graham, L. (2014). Lecture on war: Theology and religious practice. Denver, CO. Haidt, J. (2003). The moral emotions. In R. J. Davidson, K. R. Scherer & H. H. Goldsmith (Eds.), Handbook of affective sciences. (pp. 852-870). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Hammer, M. R., Bennett, M. J., & Wiseman, R. (2003). Measuring intercultural sensitivity: The intercultural development inventory. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 27(4), 421-443. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0147-1767(03)00032-4 Handzo, G. F., Cobb, M., Holmes, C., Kelly, E., & Sinclair, S. (2014). Outcomes for professional health care chaplaincy: An international call to action. Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy, 20(2), 43-53. doi: 10.1080/08854726.2014.902713 Moyaert, M. (2012). Recent developments in the theology of interreligious dialogue: From soteriological openness to hermeneutical openness. Modern Theology, 28(1), 25-52. 15

References Myers-Shirk, S. (2009). Helping the good shepherd: Pastoral counselors in a psychotherapeutic culture 1925-1975. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press. Pargament, K., Desai, K. M., & McConnell, K. M. (2006). Spirituality: A pathway to posttraumatic growth or decline? In L. G. Calhoun & R. G. Tedeschi (Eds.), Handbook of posttraumatic growth: Research and practice (pp. 121-135). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Pargament, K. (2007). Spiritually integrated psychotherapy: Understanding and addressing the sacred. New York, NY: Guilford Press. Pargament, K., Mahoney, A., Exline, J., Jones Jr., J., & Shafranske, E. (2013). Envisioning an integrative paradigm for the psychology of religion and spirituality: An introduction to the APA handbook of psychology, religion and spirituality In K. Pargament, A. Mahoney, J. Exline, J. Jones Jr. & E. Shafranske (Eds.), APA handbook of psychology, religion and spirituality (Vol. 1, pp. 3-19). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. Patton, J. (1993). Pastoral care in context: An introduction to pastoral care. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press. Sullivan, W. F. (2014). A ministry of presence: Chaplaincy, spiritual care, and the law. University of Chicago Press: Chicago, IL. Waggoner, E. (2014). Pathways to military chaplaincy: An invitation to theologically centrist and left-of-center seminaries, schools of theology, and divinity schools. Fort Worth, TX: The Forum on Military Chaplaincy. Vieten, C., Scammell, S., Pilato, R., Ammondson, I., Pargament, K., & Lukoff, D. (2013). Spiritual and religious competencies for psychologists. Psychology of Religion and Spirituality, 5(3), 129-144. doi: 10.1037/a0032699.supp 16