2004
DOI: 10.1606/1044-3894.318
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Developing Cultural Competency with Evangelical Christians

Abstract: Cultural competency with people of faith is stipulated in the profession's ethical standards. Yet, in spite of growing interest in spirituality and religion, a paucity of material has appeared in the literature with the express purpose of developing cultural competency with evangelical Christians, the nation's largest spiritual minority. To address this gap in the literature, salient aspects of the Evangelical cultural narrative are reviewed, which in turn provides the context for a discussion of various pract… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
(94 reference statements)
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“…Spiritual care competence is defined as an active ongoing process characterized by three interrelated elements which involve a growing awareness of one's value, developing an empathic understanding of the client's world view and the ability to implement individualized interventions appropriate to each client [32].…”
Section: Competences In Spiritual Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spiritual care competence is defined as an active ongoing process characterized by three interrelated elements which involve a growing awareness of one's value, developing an empathic understanding of the client's world view and the ability to implement individualized interventions appropriate to each client [32].…”
Section: Competences In Spiritual Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A particular theme emerged which, over time, became a key focus in discussions as the two authors reflected on, and exchanged views about, how best to bring the research data to the consulting room. Although it may sound strange, perhaps even contradictory, given the focus of the research was on religion, unlike Hodge (2004) we came to wonder: might it often be better if practitioners declined to focus on what seems like 'religious differences'? Might it, in fact, often be better to reframe out of differences that are embedded in stable, even rigid, oppositions based on religious doctrine, as we came to consider that ascriptions of conflict based on religious faithfulness tend to lead to processes that inflame rather than solve?…”
Section: Speaking Directly: Should One Reframe 'Religious Differences'?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These value systems often differ from those affirmed in the wider secular culture (Hodge ). For instance, Muslims (Hodge ), Hindus (Hodge ), traditional Catholics, evangelical Christians (Hodge ) and many other groups have all developed subcultures in keeping with their unique value systems (Richards & Bergin , Van Hook et al . ).…”
Section: Rationales For Conducting a Spiritual Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%