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American Protestantism in the age of psychology / Stephanie Muravchik.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011.Description: 1 online resource (xi, 242 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9780511862571
  • 0511862571
  • 9781139128629
  • 1139128620
  • 9781107010673
  • 1107010675
  • 9781139117968
  • 1139117963
  • 9781139115797
  • 1139115790
  • 9781139115797
  • 1107222206
  • 9781107222205
  • 1139125125
  • 9781139125123
  • 1283296365
  • 9781283296366
  • 1139123718
  • 9781139123716
  • 9786613296368
  • 6613296368
  • 1139113607
  • 9781139113601
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: American Protestantism in the age of psychology.DDC classification:
  • 253.5/2097309045 22
LOC classification:
  • BV4012 .M785 2011eb
Other classification:
  • online - EBSCO
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Clinical Pastoral Education; Alcoholics Anonymous; The Salvation Army; 1 The Fall and Rise of Psychoreligious Cooperation; The Fall of Psychoreligious Cooperation in the United States; The Postwar Renewal of Psychoreligious Cooperation; American Faith in the Age of Psychology; Turning Against the Therapeutic Turn; A Revised Assessment of the Therapeutic Ethos; PART ONE. THERAPY AS MINISTRY IN CLINICAL PASTORAL EDUCATION; Introduction; 2 The Priest Must Drink at the Scientific Well; Self-Awareness; Social Savvy.
CounselingShepherding Perspective; Theology; Why Accept Freuds Determinism But Laugh at Calvins Predestination?; Conclusion; 3 Being the Love of God; Learning to Be the Love of God; A Call to Ministry?; Does Dynamic Psychology Answer Theological Questions?; Conclusion; PART TWO. THERAPY AS FELLOWSHIP IN ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS; Introduction; 4 Democracy Is a Therapy; Creation of a Psychospiritual Therapy for Alcoholism; AA as Therapy; AA Therapy and Psychotherapy; AA, the Self, and Civil Society in the Last Decades of the Twentieth Century; Conclusion; 5 Came to Believe.
The Tocquevillian ParadoxThe Will to Believe; God Grant Me Serenity; The Big Book and the Good Book; Calling the Higher Power by Name at Retreats and Eleventh-Step Groups; Theist Apologetics; God as We Understood Him; Came to Believe; Conclusion; PART THREE. THERAPY AS EVANGELISM IN THE SALVATION ARMY; Introduction; 6 Freud Is Not a Suitable Psychologist; "Service to Man": Religious Therapy for the Psychosocially Impaired Sinner; Spiritual Rehabilitation; Work Therapy; Milieu Therapy; Counseling and Case Work; Anti-Addiction Therapy; Psychotherapy; Conclusion; 7 New Creatures in Christ.
The Ministry of the Mens Social Service Department, 1945-1990Conclusion; 8 Conclusion: American Psychology in an Age of Faiths; Bibliography; Index.
Summary: "The social history of three major psycho-spiritual movements since World War II shows that these groups innovated a practical religious psychology that nurtured participants' faith, fellowship, and responsibility"--Provided by publisherSummary: "Many have worried that psychology has corrupted American faith, eroded citizens' virtue, and weakened its community life. But the social history of three major psycho-spiritual movements since World War II--Alcoholics Anonymous, The Salvation Army's outreach to homeless men, and the "clinical pastoral education" movement finds the opposite. These groups innovated a practical religious psychology that nurtured participants' faith, fellowship, and personal responsibility. This is one of the first works to have found a positive role for psychology in bolstering American religious and democratic life. It is also perhaps the only book in the history of religion and psychology to base its arguments on the effect of psycho-spiritual programs on its subjects' actual lives over time"--Provided by publisher
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - EBSCO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (ebsco)399321

"The social history of three major psycho-spiritual movements since World War II shows that these groups innovated a practical religious psychology that nurtured participants' faith, fellowship, and responsibility"--Provided by publisher

"Many have worried that psychology has corrupted American faith, eroded citizens' virtue, and weakened its community life. But the social history of three major psycho-spiritual movements since World War II--Alcoholics Anonymous, The Salvation Army's outreach to homeless men, and the "clinical pastoral education" movement finds the opposite. These groups innovated a practical religious psychology that nurtured participants' faith, fellowship, and personal responsibility. This is one of the first works to have found a positive role for psychology in bolstering American religious and democratic life. It is also perhaps the only book in the history of religion and psychology to base its arguments on the effect of psycho-spiritual programs on its subjects' actual lives over time"--Provided by publisher

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Print version record.

Cover; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Clinical Pastoral Education; Alcoholics Anonymous; The Salvation Army; 1 The Fall and Rise of Psychoreligious Cooperation; The Fall of Psychoreligious Cooperation in the United States; The Postwar Renewal of Psychoreligious Cooperation; American Faith in the Age of Psychology; Turning Against the Therapeutic Turn; A Revised Assessment of the Therapeutic Ethos; PART ONE. THERAPY AS MINISTRY IN CLINICAL PASTORAL EDUCATION; Introduction; 2 The Priest Must Drink at the Scientific Well; Self-Awareness; Social Savvy.

CounselingShepherding Perspective; Theology; Why Accept Freuds Determinism But Laugh at Calvins Predestination?; Conclusion; 3 Being the Love of God; Learning to Be the Love of God; A Call to Ministry?; Does Dynamic Psychology Answer Theological Questions?; Conclusion; PART TWO. THERAPY AS FELLOWSHIP IN ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS; Introduction; 4 Democracy Is a Therapy; Creation of a Psychospiritual Therapy for Alcoholism; AA as Therapy; AA Therapy and Psychotherapy; AA, the Self, and Civil Society in the Last Decades of the Twentieth Century; Conclusion; 5 Came to Believe.

The Tocquevillian ParadoxThe Will to Believe; God Grant Me Serenity; The Big Book and the Good Book; Calling the Higher Power by Name at Retreats and Eleventh-Step Groups; Theist Apologetics; God as We Understood Him; Came to Believe; Conclusion; PART THREE. THERAPY AS EVANGELISM IN THE SALVATION ARMY; Introduction; 6 Freud Is Not a Suitable Psychologist; "Service to Man": Religious Therapy for the Psychosocially Impaired Sinner; Spiritual Rehabilitation; Work Therapy; Milieu Therapy; Counseling and Case Work; Anti-Addiction Therapy; Psychotherapy; Conclusion; 7 New Creatures in Christ.

The Ministry of the Mens Social Service Department, 1945-1990Conclusion; 8 Conclusion: American Psychology in an Age of Faiths; Bibliography; Index.

English.