ABSTRACT

What is depression, and what are its many and varied types? Who becomes depressed, and how can it be recognized? How can depression be measured, and what are its suicidal potentialities? What are the therapeutic interventions the pastor can use in helping people who are undergoing the pain of depression? The Pastoral Care of Depression: A Guidebook answers these questions and many more. With a focus on the pastor as an instrument of healing in cooperation with families, physicians, and other mental health professionals, this book will help you understand some of the current research and procedures used in helping people suffering from depression. As the frontline mental health workers in many communities, pastors need confidence, competence, and skill in handling people with emotional problems. As Author Binford W. Gilbert explains, “Depression is among the most treatable of major illnesses. It enters the realm of the spiritual and demands the best of the pastoral leader to guide, assist, and enhance the struggle for peace and soundness of mind and body.” The Pastoral Care of Depression helps caregivers by overcoming the simplistic myths about depressive disorders and probing the real issues. This book covers:

  • a thorough description of clinical depression
  • predisposing factors that may lead to depression
  • the need for a multidisciplinary approach, and the role of the pastor on the treatment team
  • the importance of church and family involvement
  • diagnosis--the ability to distinguish between normal grief, ordinary blues, situational depression, and clinical depression
  • ministers’own emotional, physical, mental, and relational health
  • the pastor’s privileged role that gives him/her unique abilities and opportunities

    A valuable resource for pastors, chaplains, counselors, psychiatrists, psychologists, physicians, family members, and teachers of pastoral care, The Pastoral Care of Depression is meant to inspire action-oriented counseling; to establish cooperative relationships between ministers, families, and the medical community; to carry out responsible and innovative creative therapeutic interventions; and to treat the whole human being.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter1|7 pages

Depression: How It Feels

chapter Chapter2|6 pages

The Roots of Depression

chapter Chapter3|9 pages

The Subconscious and Depression

chapter Chapter4|7 pages

Making the Diagnosis

chapter Chapter5|12 pages

Cognitive Therapy

chapter Chapter6|12 pages

Behavioral Treatment

chapter Chapter7|10 pages

The Pastor: Unique Caregiver

chapter Chapter8|13 pages

A Theology of Pastoral Care

chapter Chapter9|15 pages

The Minister's Own Mental Health

chapter Chapter10|12 pages

Taking Charge of Your Life

chapter Chapter11|2 pages

Summary