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The Walking Wounded
J.
Reynalds
Huntington House, Lafayette, LA., 1996, 207 pages.
Reviewed by
Frank MacHovec, Ph.D.
This paperback in 15 chapters was
written by a “speaker, journalist, and author” apparently with limited academic
or professional credentials, further evidenced by lack of an index or
bibliography and sparse, limited chapter footnotes. The book is aimed at
Christians who have had negative experiences with “faith theology” espoused by
extremist Christian groups. They believe any and all personal problems can be
overcome by faith alone, and if this fails, the fault lies with weakness in the
believer.
As Reynalds puts it, faith theology
teaches that “God’s done all He’s gonna do” and “now it’s all up to you” (10).
He describes it as a “man-centered gospel that preaches divine health and divine
prosperity” such that “illness, financial hardship, and other trials are often
attributed to fear or lack of faith” (p. vi). He considers such a belief system a
“distorted, unbiblical doctrine that is destroying people’s lives” (p.14). He
holds that “it is no indication of a lack of faith when healing doesn’t occur or
when a need isn’t met” (p.14) and “the faith movement error is devastating
thousands of lives worldwide” (p.31). Most of the chapters contain examples of
people who have suffered because of the extremist faith theology position.
Reynalds considers faith movement extremists to be more like cults than orthodox
Christianity. “Serious problems can arise,” he writes, “when faith theology is
misapplied or carelessly interpreted” (p.203). Throughout the book, he offers a
more reasoned, positive position than the movement he criticizes. “We don’t have
to prove anything,” he tells us, but “just relax and bask in the fact that God
really loves us just the way we are” (p.58). This introduces a major weakness in
the book. Does God love serial killers and terrorists who bomb buildings and
airliners just the way they are? He writes “God has a wonderful plan” for you if
you “accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior.” This implies that God may
not have as wonderful a plan for Jews, Moslems, Buddhists, and the
unchurched. The author here is approaching the same kind of gross
overgeneralization or somewhat careless interpretation as that which he
criticizes.
In chapter 7 he urges us to check
the “doctrinal position” of a mental health counselor before agreeing to
therapy, to ask about Freud and Jung, and “which school he or she adheres to.”
“Somebody who’s on the level won’t mind you asking questions like that” (p.93).
What about cognitive and behaviorist therapists, or humanistic therapists using
experiential and transpersonal methods? What about Christian counselors in
denominations with theology markedly different than your church or who have
personal problems not worked through? This reviewer has served on several ethics
committees and has learned that being a “Christian counselor” is no guarantee
there will be no illegal, unethical, or immoral therapist behavior. Most
therapists so value the dignity and integrity of everyone, regardless of their
religious belief or even lack of it, they do no harm to one’s spirituality. Any
licensed mental health professional who attempts to change anyone’s religious
belief can and should be reported.
Chapter 7 ends with four tables of
data based only on “psychiatric” symptoms and care. Table 1 considers
“difficulty with social contacts, concentrating, making decisions, and handling
emotions” to be psychiatric symptoms. “Psychosis-like symptoms” are listed but
not explained. Table 3 lists “length of stay in a Psychiatric Clinic” from one
week to more than three months. Most inpatient facilities are called hospitals
or institutes, and what about treatment by psychologists, social workers, or
other licensed mental health professionals? These tables and data are vague and
incomplete.
On the positive side, the book
focuses on one specific subject and analyzes it well, with real-life examples,
in simple language and a direct style. Despite the negatives cited, the book is
refreshing in its simplicity and the author’s caring and warmth, and his
earnest, genuine attempt to be helpful flow through each chapter. Unstated goals
also emerge: to help those spiritually or psychologically injured to heal, to
restore self-esteem, to renew trust in others and faith in a higher power. In
his closing pages, in better phrased, less sectarian language, he urges readers
to find a church where they can feel accepted, then “let God heal you” to “come
back to a place where you can again trust” (p.201). These positives more than
make up for the deficiencies noted, and if readers can take them into account,
the book is recommended for its insight into a form of Christian extremist
theology and its potential negative effects of spirituality and mental health.
Related
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