Isn't it ironic that there was a much lower divorce rate before marriage counseling became common, before 'Christian counseling', etc.
I had an interesting conversation with a cross-cultural psychologist. He said that in Asia, therapy, individual psychological counseling, etc. was nearly unheard of. A lot of extended families lived together and the older ones would give younger ones advice. A young newly married man comes home late after work, and his uncle tells him he is married now and he needs to try to get home to spend time with his wife.
Professional counselling seems to be popular in individualistic cultures. There are singles living in cities who hardly have interaction with others. They go to a counseling and share their problems for a large fee.
I have also read there is a lack of evidence that marriage counseling, on average, is successful. I think the metric for success may have been avoiding divorce. I am not sure if there is evidence of success with Christian counseling. I do know that there was a 'Christian counseling' show on the radio one place I lived. I just caught a few minutes of it a few times. The counselor on the phone was suggesting separation to a woman if what her husband was doing was verbal abuse-- just based on one member of the couple's testimony-- which seemed possibly reckless to me.
I knew a man whose wife was super angry at him. He had cheated, had a kid with someone else, even, reconciled with her, and had problems again. They were losing their apartment, and she was freaking out, yelling at him all the time. They went to a psychiatrist, and after a few minutes, she said they needed to separate. He felt betrayed after that. He hadn't been a good husband.
I am not a big believer in counseling. It can be good if you get good, Biblical advice, that's fine. It's just so many people who call themselves Christians have a low view of marriage, and can give bad advice. And let's face it, there are plenty of people who call themselves Christians whose ideas of husband and wife roles in marriage are shaped more by feminism in the culture than scripture.
I have also noticed a dangerous trend in that some people think if there are marriage problems and one person does not want to go to counseling, that this is grounds for divorce. Usually, women like counseling and men don't. (In marriage surveys, one of the problems with academic research is that the sample of women who want to take them is so much larger than the number of males who are interested. Men who respond could be different from the average population in some systematic way which could be a thread to validity of the research also.) The wife who dumps her husband because he won't go to counseling does not have Biblical grounds. Men may have good reason to be suspicious of psychological approaches to marriage, and even what gets dubbed as Christian counseling.
I had an interesting conversation with a cross-cultural psychologist. He said that in Asia, therapy, individual psychological counseling, etc. was nearly unheard of. A lot of extended families lived together and the older ones would give younger ones advice. A young newly married man comes home late after work, and his uncle tells him he is married now and he needs to try to get home to spend time with his wife.
Professional counselling seems to be popular in individualistic cultures. There are singles living in cities who hardly have interaction with others. They go to a counseling and share their problems for a large fee.
I have also read there is a lack of evidence that marriage counseling, on average, is successful. I think the metric for success may have been avoiding divorce. I am not sure if there is evidence of success with Christian counseling. I do know that there was a 'Christian counseling' show on the radio one place I lived. I just caught a few minutes of it a few times. The counselor on the phone was suggesting separation to a woman if what her husband was doing was verbal abuse-- just based on one member of the couple's testimony-- which seemed possibly reckless to me.
I knew a man whose wife was super angry at him. He had cheated, had a kid with someone else, even, reconciled with her, and had problems again. They were losing their apartment, and she was freaking out, yelling at him all the time. They went to a psychiatrist, and after a few minutes, she said they needed to separate. He felt betrayed after that. He hadn't been a good husband.
I am not a big believer in counseling. It can be good if you get good, Biblical advice, that's fine. It's just so many people who call themselves Christians have a low view of marriage, and can give bad advice. And let's face it, there are plenty of people who call themselves Christians whose ideas of husband and wife roles in marriage are shaped more by feminism in the culture than scripture.
I have also noticed a dangerous trend in that some people think if there are marriage problems and one person does not want to go to counseling, that this is grounds for divorce. Usually, women like counseling and men don't. (In marriage surveys, one of the problems with academic research is that the sample of women who want to take them is so much larger than the number of males who are interested. Men who respond could be different from the average population in some systematic way which could be a thread to validity of the research also.) The wife who dumps her husband because he won't go to counseling does not have Biblical grounds. Men may have good reason to be suspicious of psychological approaches to marriage, and even what gets dubbed as Christian counseling.
William J. Doherty
Journal of Couple and Relationship Therapy, 2002, 1, 1-17.
Abstract
Two dangers now face married people who seek therapy as individuals or as couples. The first danger is individually trained therapists who are incompetent in working with couples. The second is therapists, whether competent or not, whose individualistic value orientation leads them to undermine marital commitment when the marriage causes distress for an individual. In our consumer culture, some therapists follow the cultural script that regards marriage as a lifestyle to be abandoned if it is not working for either of its customers. We need a searching discussion in the field about how to address our complicity in unnecessary divorces, and a series of reforms to improve how marital problems are treated in clinical practice.
Beware: Individual Therapy Can Harm Your Marriage
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