Page 121 - EMCAPP-Journal No. 7
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Challenges for Christian Psychology
sified reception of the corresponding Christian tuality, is left unclear (although the roots of this
tradition when it comes to putting it into prac- tradition, in the Church Fathers, for example,
tice methodically. The extent to which this prac- are pointed out). This lack of theological perva-
tice is preceded by a consciousness of the laying sion is fundamentally regrettable, but shows the
of a theoretical-theological foundation, such as more pragmatic-phenomenological approach
that successfully laid by Thomas Keaton and of Stinton (as a psychologist!) – ultimately in-
going far beyond the limits of Catholic spiri- spired not least by her own experience.
1970‘s: „Family“
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