Human Sciences Research Centre, University of Derby, Kedleston Road, Derby, DE22 1GB, UK.
J Relig Health. 2021 Aug;60(4):2702-2727. doi: 10.1007/s10943-021-01268-9. Epub 2021 May 15.
The belief that mental distress is caused by demons, sin, or generational curses is commonplace among many evangelical Christian communities. These beliefs may have positive or negative effects for individuals and groups. Phenomenological descriptions of these experiences and the subjective meanings associated with them, however, remain somewhat neglected in the literature. The current study employed semi-structured interviews with eight evangelical Christians in order to idiographically explore their experiences of mental distress in relation to their faith and wider communities. Through an interpretative phenomenological analysis, two superordinate themes were constructed: negative spiritualisation and negotiating the dialectic between faith and the lived experience of mental distress. Participants variously experienced a climate of negative spiritualisation, whereby their mental distress was demonised and dismissed, and they were further discouraged from seeking help in secular institutions and environments. Participants often considered such dismissals of their mental distress as unhelpful and stigmatising and experienced heightened feelings of shame and suffering as a result. Such discouragement also contributed to the process of othering and relational disconnection. Alongside a rejection of church teachings, which exclusively spiritualised psychological distress, participants negotiated a nuanced personal synthesis of faith, theology, and distress, which assumed a localised and idiographic significance. This synthesis included advocating for the uptake of aetiological accounts, which contextualised mental distress in terms of the whole person and resisted de-politicised, dichotomised, and individualistic narratives. Results are discussed in relation to a broad range of literature in the field, while further research suggestions are provided.
在许多福音派基督教社区中,精神痛苦是由恶魔、罪恶或代际诅咒引起的这种信念很常见。这些信念对个人和群体可能有积极或消极的影响。然而,这些经历的现象描述以及与之相关的主观意义在文献中仍然有些被忽视。本研究采用半结构化访谈的方式,对 8 名福音派基督徒进行了访谈,以个体主义的方式探讨他们与信仰和更广泛的社区有关的精神痛苦经历。通过解释性现象学分析,构建了两个上位主题:消极的精神化和信仰与精神痛苦的生活体验之间的辩证关系的协商。参与者经历了消极的精神化氛围,他们的精神痛苦被恶魔化和忽视,他们进一步被劝阻不要在世俗机构和环境中寻求帮助。参与者经常认为这种对他们精神痛苦的忽视是无益和污名化的,因此感到羞耻和痛苦加剧。这种劝阻也促成了他者化和关系脱节的过程。除了拒绝教会教义将心理困扰完全精神化之外,参与者还协商了一种微妙的个人信仰、神学和痛苦的综合,这种综合具有本地化和个体主义的意义。这种综合包括倡导采用病因学解释,将精神痛苦置于整个人的背景下,并抵制去政治化、二分法和个人主义的叙述。研究结果与该领域的广泛文献进行了讨论,并提供了进一步的研究建议。