“…R eligious/spiritual beliefs are an integral part of clients' worldviews (Pargament, ); when counselors match therapeutic interventions to their clients' worldviews, the therapeutic alliance is strengthened (Wampold, ). With the ever‐changing landscape of religious demographics (Pew Research Center, ) and the rise of hate crimes against religious/spiritual minority groups in the United States (Schlosser, Ali, Ackerman, & Dewey, ), counselors need to be aware of diverse religious/spiritual beliefs and practices and how these beliefs and practices may manifest in counseling (Association for Spiritual, Ethical, and Religious Values in Counseling, ; Pargament, ; Utz, ). For example, counselors, and consequently their clients, would benefit from a deeper understanding of how religious/spiritual practices, such as private prayer behaviors, are associated with mental health.…”