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Belief Therapy
®
As A Christian Therapeutic
Treatment Modality Dr. Paul Carlin, who is a Scripturologist not a psychologist,
introduced Belief Therapy to the public in November 1997. The modality was
developed during his 20 years of restorative justice ministries in the Texas
Prison System. He used the prisons as his laboratory and prisoners as his
subjects. Carlin claims his basic premise can be traced to both the Old and New
Testaments, that teach, “People do what they do because they believe what they
believe,” i.e., “As a man thinks in his heart so is he.” (Proverbs 23:7) This
modality utilized many of the characteristics of other styles of therapy but its
distinctive quality is that it is founded on the truth of the Word of God, the
Christian Bible.
A large number of professionals in mental health disciplines agree with Dr.
Carlin’s axiom. Their references are framed in psychological terminology, but
carry the same basic meaning. For example, Dr. Maxie C. Maultsby, Jr., says in
his book, Rational Behavior Therapy, “That belief makes obvious the main
therapeutic strategy in RBT: Getting P-Cs to recognize and replace their
sincere, but irrational, opinions with rational ones. (RBT, pg. 18) One of the
most common causes of emotional distress is that people both think what they
don’t mean and mean what they don’t think, all the while believing every word of
it. (RBT, pg. 4)” Belief Therapy interoperates “irrational” as the lies people
believe and “rational” as the truth. (2 Timothy 2:18; James 5:19-20)
A Synopsis Of Belief Therapy
Belief Therapy is a Biblical, faith-based, Scripturodynamic, Christian,
cognitive analytical process based on Albert Ellis’ Rational Emotive Behavior
Therapy with spiritual dynamics added. Belief Therapy rests upon the axiom that
core beliefs are the gates through which thoughts originate, emotions are formed
and behaviors are ultimately acted out. BT places the role of beliefs as the
“sine qua non” of human addiction. According to the model, certain beliefs (lies
people believe) drive and maintain even the addictive process. BT is a lie
versus truth modality. With BT, knowing and appropriating the truth will
progressively (and sometimes immediately) make a person free from any bondage,
i.e., “You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free.” (John 8:32)
“And if the Son shall make you free, you shall be free indeed.” (John 8:36)
Belief Therapy points out that in dealing with false beliefs and/or half-truths,
Jesus often corrected thinking errors by saying, “You have heard it said by them
of old times, but I say unto you.” (Matthew 5, 6 & 7)
Belief Therapy is ineffective without bringing the power of God and the
Scriptures into the treatment process. Jesus said to the most religious people
of His day, “You are wrong not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God.”
(Matthew 22:29) To leave these two essentials out of the treatment process makes
healing incomplete.
In Belief Therapy the heart is emphasized as the center, the core of
psychospiritual life. “Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the
wellspring of life.” (Proverbs 4:23) In some of His harshest teachings Jesus
rebuked the Pharisees, and in doing so he picked up the theme of the heart as
central to human personality. “But the things that come out of the mouth come
from the heart, and these make a man unclean. For out of the heart come evil
thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony, slander.”
(Matthew 15:18-19; Mark 7:1-23)
The heart represents the ego or the person. Thus the heart is the one center in
man to which God turns, in which the spiritual life is rooted, and which
determines moral conduct. The heart is the source of motives, the seat of
passions, and the spring of conscience. This concept incorporates what now is
meant by cognitive, effective and volitional elements of personality. The divine
distinction is made between the “head” and the “heart” even in the salvation
experience: “That if you will confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus, and
believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. For
with the heart man believes unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is
made unto salvation.” (Romans 10:9-10)
The heart is the seat not only of emotion but also of the will and thought; all
three spiritual activities converge in the heart. With the term “mind” (nous;
disnoia in the Grk) we find the same emphasis. The total person is always in
view. In Deuteronomy 6:5 God says, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart
and with all your soul and with all your strength.” There was no technical word
in the Hebrew language for the mind, so we have the word “strength.” The Hebrew
word for “heart” is pronounced “ne-fesh,” which means “the self” or man’s
vitality, the very essence of the person. Out front, preceding cognition, even
driving cognition, is the presence of conscious- ness. Belief Therapy views
consciousness as the spirit of man. It is where man believes.
In repeating this commandment, Jesus says in Matthew 22:37, “Love the Lord your
God with all your heart and with all you soul and with all your mind [disnoia].”
Loving God with all “your mind” implies the whole personality is to be committed
to an intimate and personal relationship with God.
One central element of Belief Therapy is the development of a positive
self-concept grounded in God’s unconditional, electing love in Jesus Christ.
With a Biblical perspective of self-concept a person is released from the burden
of having to generate feelings of self-worth based on performance. Since a
Christian, i.e., a believer in Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord, need not be a
slave to ego-enhancing behavior, he/she can be free to be unselfish and to
manifest virtues such as faith, integrity, knowledge, patience, self-control,
God-consciousness, kindness, love, sacrifice, obedience and humility. But
without a healthy self-acceptance the practice of these values can easily become
a neurotic striving to gain God’s approval. Belief Therapy identifies this
“striving” condition as a symptom of Positional Identity Disorder (PID), i.e.,
trying to become who you already are. It is the position of BT that a
Christian’s identity is “in Christ” and that “being” is more important than
doing. “For in Him we live, and move, and have our being.” (Acts 17:28)
Christians will never gain a healthy self-concept until they are sure about who
they are “in Christ.” Positional truth is essential for one to become
emotionally and spiritually mature.
In consideration of a healthy, Scripture-based self-concept, BT teaches that
“according as His divine power has given unto us all things that pertain unto
life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him that called us to glory and
virtue.” (2 Peter 1:3) Based on this and other related passages, BT would
emphasize “not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think anything of
ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God.” (2 Corinthians 3:5)
A person’s spiritual, moral and emotional health depends upon his “belief that
comes from the truth” (1 Timothy 2:4; 2 Timothy 3:7; Hebrews 10:26; John 8:32),
walking in the truth (2 John 4), and obeying the truth (1 Peter 1:22).
Belief Therapy is, therefore, a Christian, faith-based approach to treatment.
The process can be used as a single treatment modality or it may be used as an
additive or complementary program with other approaches to treatment. Based on
the DSM IV V Code (V62.89), Religious or Spiritual Problems, which states, “This
category can be used when the focus of clinical attention is a religious or
spiritual problem,” using BT as an additive or complement to traditional
treatment would be clinically acceptable.
The 12 Axioms of Belief
Therapy
1. Man was created to see things from God’s perspective. God-like thinking was
necessary for the dominion management Creator God gave to man. (Gen. 2:15)
2. People do what they do because they believe what they believe. (Prov. 23:7;
Mark 7:6-23) The source of destructive consequent behavior is our belief system.
3. Jesus established the Belief Therapy system in the book of Matthew chapters
5, 6& 7, when He said, “You have heard it said ….. but I say unto you.” He
exposed a lie, half-truth or godless tradition and replaced it with the truth.
4. A lie is as powerful as the truth if you believe it. A person is made free
from the bondage of a lie when he/she replaces the lie with the truth. (John
8:31-36)
5. Man is a sinner by nature, by choice and by practice. Eve chose to believe
Satan’s lie. (Gen. 3:1-13; Romans 3:23)
6. God is always right. When human viewpoint is in conflict with Divine
viewpoint, God is always right. The Bible is Belief Therapy’s body of truth. (Isa.
55: 7-9; 2 Peter 1:3)
7. Belief is the most powerful healing value known to man. (Luke 18:27)
8. The mind is the battlefield. (Rom. 12:1-2)
9. Positional truth is the fundamental principle essential to a constructive,
healthy and godly personal identity. A healthy self-concept of who we are “in
Christ” is necessary for a healthy self-worth concept. Positional Identity
Disorder, trying to become who you already are, is the Christian’s most common
disorder. (Col. 2:9; Col. 3:1-4; Romans 6)
10. All addiction is identified in the Bible as bondage. (Rom. 1:21-23; Rom.
6:14-18)
11. Life-controlling problems have a spiritual root regardless of a possible
organic disorder. (John 9:1-7)
12. In the presence of cognitive dissonance, a person must perform an emotional
by-pass procedure and act upon the truth whether he/she feel like it or not.
(James 1:8)
The Role of The Belief
Therapist
The Belief Therapist,
unless he/she is a licensed professional, is a paraprofessional personal human
development therapon. The Belief Therapist uses this distinctive mark to
announce his/her association with Belief Therapy and to distinguish themselves
from others who are in the faith-based counseling field.
The task of the Belief Therapist is to act as a discernotician, therapon,
educator, Scripturologist and technical consultant who assesses maladaptive
cognitive processes (lies people believe) and works with the Christian client to
design learning experiences that will replace the lies he/she is believing with
the truth of God’s Word and the behavioral and affective patterns with which
they correlate. For the Belief Therapist, listening must therefore be below the
surface. Listening includes spiritual discernment. (1 Corinthians 2:14; 1
Corinthians 12:10; Hebrews 5:14)
The Belief Therapist
is to emphasize the primacy of agape
love and the need to develop a warm, genuine and emphatic relationship with the
client that is collaborative. (John 13:34-35; Galatians 5:13; Galatians 5:22;
Ephesians 4:2; Ephesians 4:15; Ephesians 5:2; Philippians 2:1-2; 1 Thessalonians
4:9)
The Belief Therapist
must deal Scripturally and more adequately with the past, especially unresolved
developmental issues or childhood experiences that are affecting their present
pain, with the judicious use of prayer for healing. (Philippians 3:13; James
5:13-16)
The Belief Therapist
must also pay special attention to the meaning of spiritual, experiential and
mystical aspects of faith and life and not overemphasize the rationalistic
dimension. (Matthew 17:14-21; Hebrews 11:1-3)
The Belief Therapist
should always be sensitive to the
possibility of demonic involvement in some cases. (Ephesians 6:12)
The Belief Therapist
should use Biblical truth and not relativistic, empirically oriented values in
conducting belief restructuring to change problematic thinking, darkened
emotions and godless, negative, maladaptive behavior. (Romans 12:1-2)
The Belief Therapist
also emphasizes the ministry of the
Holy Spirit in processing inner healing, cognitive, behavioral and emotional
change. (John 14:17; John 16:13)
The Belief Therapist
may use only those techniques that
are consistent with Biblical truth, morality and ethics and not simplistically
use whatever techniques are perceived to work. (John 14:16; Matthew 7:14; 2
Corinthians 5:7; Colossians 2:6-7; 2 Tim. 3;16)
The Belief Therapist
may utilize rigorous outcome
research methodology before making definitive conclusions about the superiority
(not just the general effectiveness) of Belief Therapy. (Galatians 6:4; 2
Corinthians 13:5; 1 Thessalonians 5:21)
Belief Therapy Credentials
The Therapon Institute and Belief Therapy credentials are not state credentials.
They are, however, independent, faith-based, Christian, Biblical, complementary
and alterative credentials. Certified and Licensed Belief Therapists use this
distinctive mark to announce their association with Belief Therapy and to
distinguish themselves from others who are in the faith-based counseling field.
Therapon is an approved education provider for all four Texas licensure boards
and for the National Board of Certified Counselors.
The Therapon Institute offers the following independent faith-based credentials:
Certified Belief Therapist – CBT
Licensed Belief Therapist – LBT
Licensed Pastoral Counselor In Belief Therapy -LPC
Licensed Anger Resolution Counselor In Belief Therapy - LARC
Licensed Family & Marriage Counselor In Belief Therapy – LFMC
Licensed Sex Addiction Counselor In Belief Therapy – LSAC
Licensed Christian Social Worker In Belief Therapy – LCSW
Licensed Christian Child Care Worker In Belief Therapy – LCCCW
Licensed Crisis Counselor In Belief Therapy – LCC
Licensed Chemical Addiction Counselor In Belief Therapy - LCAC
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