The effects of a wisdom intervention in a Christian congregation* |
| |
Authors: | Paul T. McLaughlin Mark R. McMinn MaryKate Morse Megan Anna Neff Bradley Johnson Drew Summerer |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Graduate Department of Clinical Psychology, George Fox University, Newberg, OR, USA;2. Portland Seminary, Portland, OR, USA |
| |
Abstract: | Psychological research on the topic of wisdom is limited in its incorporation of religion and spirituality. This gap in psychological literature may serve to limit a thorough understanding of wisdom. Positive psychology may allow for some rapprochement in wisdom and spirituality. In collaboration with leaders of a local Friends (Quaker) congregation, two studies investigated the effects of a spiritually informed wisdom intervention delivered in the context of a faith community. Participants for Study 1 consisted of 27 young adults (24 completed both the pre and post questionnaire) and a comparison group consisting of 32 young adults. The intervention was designed to increase participants’ abilities in cognitive, affective and moral domains. Significant group by time interaction effects were found among measurements of practical wisdom, post-formal thinking and subjective well-being, with those in the experimental group showing changes in the expected direction. Study 2 involved qualitative analyses of interviews with 15 of the wisdom participants regarding their changing views of wisdom. Themes emerging from the interviews included a multiple-perspectives view of wisdom, the relational nature of learning wisdom, the importance of taking a reflective perspective, and congruence between what one knows and how one lives. Implications for studying wisdom alongside religion and spirituality are considered. |
| |
Keywords: | Positive psychology wisdom church-psychology collaboration postformal thought |
|
|