Mental illness within evangelical Christian communities is frequently stigmatised, with many attributing it exclusively to demonic possession, lack of faith, personal sin, or other negative spiritual influences. This study explores perceptions of self-harm in the context of evangelical Christian faith communities using the novel qualitative story completion task. A convenience sample of 101 UK-based evangelical Christians completed a third-person fictional story stem featuring a devout female Christian who self-harms. A contextualist informed thematic analysis was carried out focusing on perceptions of cause, cure, and treatment. Most stories positioned spiritual causes of mental illness (that is, demonic possession or personal sin) as harm...
Evangelical Christians consistently endorse spiritual aetiologies for mental distress, which include...
There has been an increase in recent years in the effort to raise awareness of mental health issues,...
Depictions of the mentally ill, even in the modern media, have often been reduced to a trope of demo...
The belief that mental distress is caused by demons, sin, or generational curses is commonplace amon...
Recent qualitative evidence suggests Christian communities can hold specific religious and cultural ...
A large body of research supports the central importance of religious and spiritual belief systems f...
Seeking professional help for psychological distress is generally associated with improved outcomes ...
This thesis explores perceptions and attitudes toward mental illness in the church through a literat...
The importance of providing culturally-competent treatment is increasingly being emphasized in the m...
OBJECTIVE: To explore existential meaning-making in an ethnic-majority subgroup with mental ill heal...
textThe past two decades have seen a surge of research publications in the psychology of religion, w...
Evidence suggests that faith communities can support psychological wellbeing but can also potentiall...
Mental disorders are both common and disabling worldwide. They affect beliefs, emotions, identity an...
Recovery from mental illness is a deeply personal process unique to each individual, involving the s...
Objectives: The Attribution Model of mental illness stigma posits that attributions about the causes...
Evangelical Christians consistently endorse spiritual aetiologies for mental distress, which include...
There has been an increase in recent years in the effort to raise awareness of mental health issues,...
Depictions of the mentally ill, even in the modern media, have often been reduced to a trope of demo...
The belief that mental distress is caused by demons, sin, or generational curses is commonplace amon...
Recent qualitative evidence suggests Christian communities can hold specific religious and cultural ...
A large body of research supports the central importance of religious and spiritual belief systems f...
Seeking professional help for psychological distress is generally associated with improved outcomes ...
This thesis explores perceptions and attitudes toward mental illness in the church through a literat...
The importance of providing culturally-competent treatment is increasingly being emphasized in the m...
OBJECTIVE: To explore existential meaning-making in an ethnic-majority subgroup with mental ill heal...
textThe past two decades have seen a surge of research publications in the psychology of religion, w...
Evidence suggests that faith communities can support psychological wellbeing but can also potentiall...
Mental disorders are both common and disabling worldwide. They affect beliefs, emotions, identity an...
Recovery from mental illness is a deeply personal process unique to each individual, involving the s...
Objectives: The Attribution Model of mental illness stigma posits that attributions about the causes...
Evangelical Christians consistently endorse spiritual aetiologies for mental distress, which include...
There has been an increase in recent years in the effort to raise awareness of mental health issues,...
Depictions of the mentally ill, even in the modern media, have often been reduced to a trope of demo...