Course

Spiritual Integration: Mental Health—Steady with the Wind, Course 2

~3 Hours

The second part of this series, Spiritual Integration: Mental Health—Steady with the Wind, Course 2 offers 3 APA-approved CE credits for mental health professionals. Learn to assess, incorporate, and converse about all aspects of clients’ lives.

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5 instructors
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About This Course

Mental health professionals address all areas of our clients’ lives, especially those connected to their identity. Religion and spirituality often deeply influence identity, but these can be complex topics to address directly with clients. Lack of practitioner expertise, as well as clients’ negative experiences with religion and spirituality, can often stand in the way of holistic healing.

In this series, Spiritual Integration: Mental Health—Steady with the Wind, you will be introduced to a framework for assessing and incorporating spiritual, existential, religious, and theological conversations into your mental health work. 

In Spiritual Integration: Mental Health 2, you will explore what the integration of psychology and spirituality looks like in practice, learning from case studies, exercises, and other tools to help you do this within your work. 

Join lead instructor Dr. Brad Strawn along with Dr. Alexis Abernethy, Dr. David Wang, & Dr. Christin J. Fort as they demonstrate ways to navigate through these uncharted waters. This course offers three APA-approved psychology continuing education credits.


Learning Outcomes

  • Apply the four aspects of the SERT (Spiritual, Existential, Religious, Theological) framework
  • Develop a spiritual inventory for oneself and others using the SERT (Spiritual, Existential, Religious, Theological) framework 
  • Incorporate three elements of SERT history and insights into various mental health settings
  • Identify how one's own religious/spiritual background may influence clinical practices, attitudes, perceptions, and assumptions in at least four possible ways

Competency Areas

  • Awareness of the impact one’s own religious/spiritual background has on clinical practices, attitudes, perceptions, and assumptions
  • Using religious/spiritual strengths and resources in treatment
  • Working with spiritual strain


Produced by Pine Rest, hosted by FULLER Equip.

  • Mental Health APA-Accredited Training
  • Mental & Emotional Health

Introduction

1. Getting Started

In Practice

2. Leaving the Dock: Understanding the Spiritual Inventory

3. Remembering Your Journeys: Importance of Self-Understanding

4. Guiding the Crew: Interactive Walkthrough of a SERT Inventory

5. Captaining Your Ship: Sharing Your Spiritual and Religious History

6. Navigating the Shoals: Dealing with Spiritual Strain and Professional Limitations

Conclusion

7. Continuing the Journey

8. Next Steps

Your Instructor

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Brad Strawn

Chief of Spiritual Formation and Integration - Fuller Seminary

Brad Strawn is the chief of spiritual formation and integration for the seminary, dean of the chapel, and serves on the Senior Leadership Team. In his many years serving as the chair of integration in the Clinical Psychology Department, Strawn was responsible for strategically integrating theology and psychology into the curriculum of Fuller’s doctoral programs, as well as leading spiritual retreats for students. Prior to joining Fuller he served as vice president for spiritual development and dean of the chapel at Southern Nazarene University.

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Alexis D. Abernethy

Chief Academic Officer - Fuller Seminary

Alexis Abernethy has served at Fuller as professor of Clinical Psychology since 1998 and has served on the Brehm Center’s steering committee. She is currently the Chief Academic Officer for Fuller Theological Seminary. Her primary research interest is the intersection between spirituality and health, and she has received grants from California Cancer Research Program, the National Cancer Institute, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship, and the Templeton Foundation.

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David C. Wang

Cliff and Joyce Penner Chair for the Formation of Emotionally Healthy Leaders

David Wang is a licensed psychologist, pastor, editor of the Journal of Psychology and Theology, and serves on the editorial board for the APA journal Spirituality in Clinical Practice. In 2022, he joined Fuller’s faculty as the Cliff and Joyce Penner Chair for the Formation of Emotionally Healthy Leaders. His research interests include trauma and traumatic stress, spiritual formation and spiritual theology (with special interest in the experience of the spiritual desert), and various topics related to multicultural psychology, peace, and justice.

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Christin J. Fort

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology - Fuller Seminary

Christin J. Fort joined Fuller’s faculty in 2022 is an assistant professor of clinical psychology and is an associate editor for the Journal of Psychology and Christianity. Her scholarship, research, teaching, preaching, and clinical practice lie at the intersections of faith, race, emotional health and relational well-being. She is the author of a range of academic articles published in journals such as the Journal of Psychology and Theology, Pastoral Psychology, and the aforementioned Journal of Psychology and Christianity.

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Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services

Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services is a nonprofit organization founded in 1910 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Pine Rest is the third largest non-profit behavioral health provider in the U.S., offering a full continuum of services including psychiatric urgent care, inpatient and partial hospitalization, residential, outpatient and teletherapy services, addiction treatment and recovery, extensive child and adolescent programs, senior care services, as well as specialized assessment and treatment clinics.

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