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Journal Article

Citation

Giesbrecht N, Sevcik I. J. Fam. Violence 2000; 15(3): 229-248.

Affiliation

Postdoctoral fellow (Psychology), University of British Columbia, UK; Discovery House, Calgary, Alberta

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1023/A:1007549401830

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This study utilized a naturalistic methodology to develop a grounded theory of the process of recovery and rebuilding among abused women situated in the conservative evangelical subculture. Among all the women, spirituality and church participation were an integral part of their identity and generated culture-specific issues that needed to be addressed in therapy. The women's faith functioned as a meaning-making framework that could either engender shame and guilt or inspire hope and empower transformative change. The church functioned as an extended family system that could minimize, deny, and enable abuse or provide much-needed social support, spiritual encouragement, and practical assistance. The recovery process required that these women rebuild their personal and spiritual identity, redefine their relationship with the religious community, and find ways of expressing their new identity within the religious subculture.
recovery - abused women - conservative evangelical subculture - spirituality.

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