2022
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.831534
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“His Main Problem Was Not Being in a Relationship With God”: Perceptions of Depression, Help-Seeking, and Treatment in Evangelical Christianity

Abstract: Some Christian communities may understand mental illness as the result of spiritual causes, such as sin, demons, or a lack of faith. Such perceptions are likely to influence how Christian individuals conceptualise and experience their mental health and enact help-seeking behaviours. This study explores perceptions of depression and mental health help-seeking in evangelical Christianity by using a novel qualitative story completion task. A convenience sample of 110 Christian participants from the United Kingdom… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The church acted as a space that provided vital congregational support. The participants described feeling welcomed and accepted in churches and religious spaces (Keefe et al, 2016; Lloyd et al, 2022; Whitley, 2012); they noted they were treated with respect and without judgment (Baker, 2010; Lloyd et al, 2022). Engagement in church and religious communities, participants reported, allowed for the development of meaningful and positive social relationships with congregation members who shared common interests and spiritual strivings (De Castella & Simmonds, 2013; Lloyd et al, 2022; Pivarunas, 2016).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The church acted as a space that provided vital congregational support. The participants described feeling welcomed and accepted in churches and religious spaces (Keefe et al, 2016; Lloyd et al, 2022; Whitley, 2012); they noted they were treated with respect and without judgment (Baker, 2010; Lloyd et al, 2022). Engagement in church and religious communities, participants reported, allowed for the development of meaningful and positive social relationships with congregation members who shared common interests and spiritual strivings (De Castella & Simmonds, 2013; Lloyd et al, 2022; Pivarunas, 2016).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The participants described feeling welcomed and accepted in churches and religious spaces (Keefe et al, 2016; Lloyd et al, 2022; Whitley, 2012); they noted they were treated with respect and without judgment (Baker, 2010; Lloyd et al, 2022). Engagement in church and religious communities, participants reported, allowed for the development of meaningful and positive social relationships with congregation members who shared common interests and spiritual strivings (De Castella & Simmonds, 2013; Lloyd et al, 2022; Pivarunas, 2016). Some participants noted the social relationships they developed through their religious community were especially beneficial in the absence of strong, familial support networks (Baker, 2010; Wittink et al, 2009).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…More recently, the prevalence of stigmatized perceptions of mental illness in Christian settings has been supported (Lloyd, 2021, 2023a; Lloyd & Hutchinson, 2022). As such, religious individuals experiencing mental ill-health can be misunderstood, ignored, and isolated (Lloyd et al, 2023) which may impact help-seeking behaviors (Lloyd et al, 2022). Recognizing these conflicting accounts, the experience of mental ill-health among Christian individuals is complex, incorporating religious social systems and frameworks of meaning that can work to both benefit and disadvantage the mental well-being of the individual.…”
Section: Evangelicalism and Demonic Etiologies Of Mental Illnessmentioning
confidence: 99%