How Relationship-Enhancing Transcendent Religious Experiences during Adversity Can Encourage Relational Meaning, Depth, Healing, and Action
Abstract
:1. Introduction
To illustrate, James ([1902] 1997) referred to the kinds of transcendent experiences that each person has at some point in life:so long as we deal with the cosmic and the general, we deal only with the symbols of reality, but as soon as we deal with the private and personal phenomena as such, we deal with realities in the completest sense of the term.(p. 386, italics in original)
That unsharable feeling which each one of us has of the pinch of his individual destiny as he privately feels it rolling out on fortune’s wheel may be disparaged for its egotism, may be sneered at as unscientific, but it is the one thing that fills up the measure of our concrete actuality, and any would-be existent that should lack such a feeling, or its analogue, would be a piece of reality only half made up.…The axis of reality runs solely through the egotistic places…The individual’s religion may be egotistic, and those private realities which it keeps in touch with may be narrow enough; but at any rate it always remains infinitely less hollow and abstract, as far as it goes, than a science which prides itself on taking no account of anything private at all.…By being religious we establish ourselves in possession of ultimate reality at the only points at which reality is given us to guard. Our responsible concern is with our private destiny, after all.(p. 387–388)
2. Transcending Self to Benefit Others
We find we are standing in a different relation to the world than we were a moment before. It is not that we cease to stand at the center of the world, for we never stood there. It is that we cease to stand even at the center of our own world.(p. 112)
3. Definitions of Important Concepts
4. Review of Research and Theory
4.1. Transcendence as Normative
The term “transcendence” is often used to imply something otherworldly, religious, or metaphysical, or outside of the lives of ordinary people and relationships. Thus, transcendence is commonly presented as a movement beyond the actual, the embodied, and the historical, something that should be studied by theologians or philosophers, but not by psychologists. In contrast, I argue that transcendence is a central thread in the fabric of ordinary human existence.(p. 177)
4.2. Religion, Spirituality, and Transcendence during Adversity
4.3. Research and Theory on Transcendent Experiences
4.4. Adversity as a Priming Event for Transformative Transcendence
5. The Current Study
6. Method
6.1. Participants
6.2. Interviewing
7. Findings
7.1. Outcome 1: Provided Relational Meaning
[My husband and I said], "We have been trying all these years and we haven’t been able to have any kids, [so] let’s adopt kids.”…We [prayed], “Lord, give us some kids.” That next week,...my aunt said,...“I got a baby you can adopt.” [Later, we were blessed with more]....So, I always say that [my children] are a gift, they are special to me.
We were told that we would never have children...that it was medically impossible. So, God definitely intervened. And when I was delivering [my child]...[the doctor] cut me open and saw all this endometriosis, and she said, “It is a miracle you have any children.”
I think a challenge that has changed me was when our first child was born....[My wife] went into labor...and then 22 hours later, she still hadn’t given birth....We needed to have an emergency C-section. The fear of losing my wife, the person I had loved from the first time I met her, was humungous...[Realizing] that [she] might not survive was an experience that changed me for the better. It made me realize...that I needed to be more aware of the gift that was given to me and not just take it for granted.
Having kids and becoming a father has helped me understand what my Heavenly Father must feel and go through watching me. You...would do everything for your kids if you could...[but] there are times that you can’t...and [they need to] learn from experience....When [my son] was sick, I felt how our Heavenly Father must feel whenever one of us is sick....It’s...made me appreciate what being a loving father is like. It’s made me appreciate that aspect of God as a father and the sacrifice He made for his Son to come to Earth. I can’t imagine what that was like.
7.2. Outcome 2: Increased Relational Depth
It was certainly a wonderful and humbling experience...to realize that no matter what we do, it [could be God’s] will...that this baby may not live....[T]here was a greater power who was...mindful and understood [and] helped me to just trust...that even if our baby died, that was not the end, that we [would] see the baby again....[L]ooking back, I am grateful for that. It made me a stronger person...it made our family stronger.
I just remember sitting there in the hospital room thinking, “I’m too young to be a widow.”...[T]he [congregational leader]...showed up and...I literally saw the power of Heaven descend. I tell you it was just amazing....Everything turned out well....I think it made us stronger together and just really made us appreciate life a lot more.
One of our children was...born with gastroschisis...his bowels were formed outside of his body....It was the greatest stress....I think we had to rely on each other more. I think that’s why we became closer. We were going through it together....It extend[ed] to the rest of the family too, not just [my wife] and I....We had people back home [gathering together] for prayer. Even [my wife’s] grandmother who wasn’t [in] our religion was lighting candles and asking her priests to pray for us. It was unification for the family to come together.
I go back to my mom’s death. I think that was the most difficult situation that I’ve ever, ever had to contend with....We’re still dealing with it and struggling with it, but I think knowing that I can lean and depend on God and go to Him in prayer has sustained me and my family, and I think it helps to bring my family closer together and brings some members of my family closer to Him.
We had a still-born child several years ago. I look to that experience, just how painful that was...and the comfort and the strength that we found....[W]e really went through [it] together....We really had to rely on each other during that time....It was...an experience that...really strengthened our faith and...brought us closer together.
7.3. Outcome 3: Healed Relational Hurt
When I was younger, I had an experience with an extended family member that was border-line sexual abuse...[I]t was a traumatic experience for me....the power of prayer really helped me get through it. Talking to [God] about it every night,...having that listening ear, and knowing that He cared about what had happened definitely helped me get through that difficult time.
My [first] husband...had extramarital affairs....I was so unhappy, one time I wanted to just jump out of a window.... It was like I didn’t have nothing to live for....I started going to this church...[and] learned about God. That was the greatest life changing experience that I had...when I got saved and filled with the Holy Ghost.
There have been several times where...the sacrament [of the Lord’s Supper]...will humble [my wife and me]. [I ask myself], “How can I be upset with [my wife] when the Savior sacrificed His life for us?” It humbles you, and it makes you realize that [the] little thing that we were arguing about at home [isn’t] that important in the whole scheme of things. It’s more important to forgive and to move on and have a strong relationship.
7.4. Outcome 4: Encouraged Relational Action
I let God lead where I was going to go....One of our sons had some real difficulties, and if we had moved away and he had stayed here at [the local university], we might have lost him completely. He went through severe depression and suicidal thoughts....In retrospect, I can go back and see major [job] disappointments [were] turning me to something else that ended up being much better.
I [was] misusing my family,...but when I accepted God that night, my life...began to change....I was at a strip club one night. [I was] high, had been drinking, high as a kite, me and my buddy, and he was sitting just like me and you....I heard a voice [tell me to leave], and I said [to my buddy], “Man, stop playing.” He said, “I ain’t call[ed] you.”...I heard that voice three times, and it was so soft....I told my buddy,...I said, “I love you, but I can’t roll with you no more.” That was the challenge of my life, to give up the streets in order to come to where I needed to be. I thought it was a challenge, but it really wasn’t no challenge....God had to change my life...and once God lined my priorities up, then everything started working the way it was supposed to...in my marriage.
I felt that...I should make contact with [my current wife] after my...divorce....It was sort of a manifestation to me while I was sleeping [that] I should check this out, so I did....It was pretty loud in my ears the direction I was [to go].
My [first] marriage had fallen apart and I had been praying...to feel whole again....I had been sort of dating somebody...it hadn’t been going anywhere. I finally just asked God in prayer if this was the relationship for me, and the answer was immediately, “No.” And I thought, “Oh, well I didn’t ask right. . . .” So I tried again....And the answer came, “No.” And I...burst into tears.
I had to be patient and try not to be too judgmental....to see him again the way that Heavenly Father saw him....[I had this feeling] that Heavenly Father was very pleased with the efforts that [Ben] was making, [and that God] was happy that [my husband] was trying to make the right decisions, and He didn’t expect [Ben] to be perfect.... The Savior taught us to love each other as we love ourselves and to be kind to each other.... That has been an important part of our marriage, to try to follow these teachings.
There was a point a few years back where there was a lot of stress...in our marriage...we were just so busy all the time....[W]e were able to see that we needed to...spend more time together. [So] we started going out on dates more frequently and putting a lot more emphasis on our relationship....It was just very clear that God was trying to help us understand that we had to put our relationship first and make sure we were strong before we could give what we needed to [give] to the kids.
I saw God working when I was with my mother....And that for me was a tremendous thing because...I got to spend that time with my mother, and most people just...call someone and say, “Oh, she’s not well” and a month goes by and...she’s gone. But I was there.
[My wife] felt like she had nobody...like she lost her closest [friend]. She just didn’t feel like she could go on, and I was just at a loss. I didn’t know what to do. And the Lord said, “Just be there. Just be there.” That’s all I had to do, just be there.
8. Discussion
8.1. Did Religious Experience “Cause” Relational Effects?
8.2. Connections with Previous Research and Theory
8.3. Implications for Future Research and Clinical Practice
8.4. Can Transcendent Experiences Transcend Even Traumatic Experiences?
8.5. The Positive Potential of Transcendent Religious Experience
8.6. Clinical Practice: Transcendence as Treatment?
8.7. Support from Clergy
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- What are some of your beliefs relating to marriage/family?
- Are there practices or traditions that hold special meaning for you as a couple/family?
- Has your relationship with other important people in your lives influenced your relationship with each other? If so, how?
- What are the greatest challenges (external/internal) to your marriage and family being all you want it to be?
- All couples have some conflict. Are there ways that your beliefs or practices help avoid or reduce marital conflict?
- In trying to be a good marital partner and a good parent, from whom or where do you seek guidance?
- What values or beliefs are most important to the success of your marriage/parenting?
- As parents, do you strive to share your deepest beliefs with your children? If so, how?
- Have your deepest beliefs helped you when your kids have struggled for meaning or guidance?
- Has your relationship with others influenced your relationship with your children? (vice versa, example?)
- How important to you is it that your child(ren) follow in your beliefs?
- What are your deepest hopes for your child(ren) in relation to their future family life?
- To parents: What do you consider to be the most important things for you to be or do as a mother/father?
- What do your most meaningful conversations with your child center on?
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5 | In most of our published work, we identify participants using pseudonyms and demographic information such as race, religion, and occupation. However, for this study, we want to emphasize participants’ inner experiences and their identity as family members. Thus, we have chosen not to attach social labels to our participants but instead refer to them with familial relational titles, for example, as “a mother” or “a husband” or “a daughter.” |
6 | As is typical in qualitative research, when providing direct quotes from participants, in order to improve clarity and concision, quotes may be edited by the authors. Ellipses reflect removed words that included verbal pauses, extraneous thoughts, redundancies, thinking out loud, and other words not directly relevant to quote. Brackets within quotes indicate additions by the authors for clarity or concision, or to protect participant anonymity. The authors strove to retain the original meaning of the fuller quotes and to reflect the original phrasing as closely as possible. |
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Dollahite, D.C.; Marks, L.D.; Witting, A.B.; LeBaron, A.B.; Young, K.P.; Chelladurai, J.M. How Relationship-Enhancing Transcendent Religious Experiences during Adversity Can Encourage Relational Meaning, Depth, Healing, and Action. Religions 2020, 11, 519. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100519
Dollahite DC, Marks LD, Witting AB, LeBaron AB, Young KP, Chelladurai JM. How Relationship-Enhancing Transcendent Religious Experiences during Adversity Can Encourage Relational Meaning, Depth, Healing, and Action. Religions. 2020; 11(10):519. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100519
Chicago/Turabian StyleDollahite, David C., Loren D. Marks, Alyssa Banford Witting, Ashley B. LeBaron, Kaity Pearl Young, and Joe M. Chelladurai. 2020. "How Relationship-Enhancing Transcendent Religious Experiences during Adversity Can Encourage Relational Meaning, Depth, Healing, and Action" Religions 11, no. 10: 519. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100519
APA StyleDollahite, D. C., Marks, L. D., Witting, A. B., LeBaron, A. B., Young, K. P., & Chelladurai, J. M. (2020). How Relationship-Enhancing Transcendent Religious Experiences during Adversity Can Encourage Relational Meaning, Depth, Healing, and Action. Religions, 11(10), 519. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100519