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Religious Trauma Syndrome: How some organized religion leads to mental health problems

phands

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As I've frequently said...religion is bad for brains....

At age sixteen I began what would be a four-year struggle with bulimia. When the symptoms started, I turned in desperation to adults who knew more than I did about how to stop shameful behavior—my Bible study leader and a visiting youth minister. “If you ask anything in faith, believing,” they said. “It will be done.” I knew they were quoting the Word of God. We prayed together, and I went home confident that God had heard my prayers.

But my horrible compulsions didn’t go away. By the fall of my sophomore year in college, I was desperate and depressed enough that I made a suicide attempt. The problem wasn’t just the bulimia. I was convinced by then that I was a complete spiritual failure. My college counseling department had offered to get me real help (which they later did). But to my mind, at that point, such help couldn’t fix the core problem: I was a failure in the eyes of God. It would be years before I understood that my inability to heal bulimia through the mechanisms offered by biblical Christianity was not a function of my own spiritual deficiency but deficiencies in Evangelical religion itself.

https://www.rawstory.com/2018/10/re...anized-religion-leads-mental-health-problems/
 
Well, it not working for her isn't a deficiency in evangelical Christianity anymore than someone not being able to overcome bulimia using cognitive behavioural therapy is a deficiency of CBT. Different methods work for different people therapy is never one stop shopping.

I'm sure that evangelical methods work wonders for some people and they'd be as viable a resource as anything else for a first attempt. It's only when continuing to use them for a patient who isn't showing results as opposed to moving him or her to a new method that it would become a problem.
 
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