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Book ChapterDOI

Promoting forgiveness as a religious or spiritual intervention.

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The article was published on 2011-01-01. It has received 11 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Forgiveness & Intervention (counseling).

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Journal ArticleDOI

Forgiveness and Health: Psycho-spiritual Integration and the Promotion of Better Healthcare

TL;DR: Understanding and recognizing the construct of forgiveness and its mutually central application can foster increased collaboration between the fields and the two fields will be better able to expand and further develop their many shared principles in the service of better healthcare.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forgiveness and health among people in outpatient physical therapy

TL;DR: Forgiveness of self appears to be the most important to health, yet the most difficult to achieve, and forgiveness-based intervention may be useful in the context of rehabilitation, in general, and physical therapy, in particular.
Journal ArticleDOI

Offense Type as Determinant of Revenge and Forgiveness After Victimization: Adolescents’ Responses to Injustice and Aggression

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined to what extent adolescents' interpersonal responses to victimization in terms of revenge and forgiveness depend on the offense type and found that victims of criminal offenses (physical and sexual violence, theft and threat) reported less forgiving motivations than victims of noncriminal transgressions (bullying, ostracism, and other forms of indirect aggression).

Between Resistance and Accommodation: Evangelical Christian Therapists Engaging the Secular World

Kathryn Li
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a table of acknowledgements and acknowledgements of the authors of this paper. Table of Table 1.1.2.3.4.1
DissertationDOI

Comparative influence of relationship with God and with significant other on self-understanding in Protestant Christians, and the relation to counselling practices with Christian clients

TL;DR: This article explored the contribution and nature of human-Divine relationship to the notion of relationally constructed self in poststructural models of psychotherapy such as narrative therapy and found that people in the Christian community conceive of a personal relationship with God.