Faith is deeply personal. For some people, it’s a grounding source of hope and resilience. For others, it’s complicated and shaped by guilt, doubt, or painful experiences within religious spaces. In faith-based counseling, we make room for both.
I offer Christian faith integration upon client request. This means therapy remains clinically grounded and evidence-based, while also allowing space to explore spiritual beliefs, values, and questions when they are meaningful to the client.
Faith-based counseling may include:
Exploring how Christian beliefs influence identity, relationships, and decision-making
Addressing shame, guilt, or fear tied to religious experiences or teachings
Processing spiritual struggles, doubt, or church hurt
Using faith as a resource for meaning, coping, and values-based growth
Clients are never pressured to discuss faith, pray, or hold any particular belief. You do not need to have everything figured out spiritually to bring it into the therapy space. Curiosity, uncertainty, and honesty are welcome here. My role is not to tell you what to believe, but to support you in understanding how your faith (or questions about it) intersect with your mental health and overall well-being.