Author: Leffel, G. Michael
Journal of Psychology & Christianity, Vol. 23(2), Sum 2004, pp. 130-139
Abstract:
This article outlines four theological principles of John Wesley’s therapeutic and creational vision of Christian spirituality. It first sketches alternative theological models of the relationship between nature and grace, suggesting that models of the God-world relationship that emphasize Gods transcendence to the exclusion of immanence tend to perpetuate a bifurcation of psychological and spiritual processes of change, contributing to a continuing “disenchantment of nature.” Wesleys concept of Prevenient Grace is discussed as an alternative model of the God-world relationship. Some of Wesley’s lesser known passages concerning the therapeutic and cosmological features of Prevenient Grace are discussed, and implications for a more integrated view of psychotherapy and spiritual formation are considered
