Faith and therapy
are not in conflict.
Your faith is part of who you are — not something to set aside when you come to therapy. We provide clinically rigorous, evidence-based care that respects and integrates your spiritual values rather than treating them as separate from your mental health.

Clinically sound therapy
that honors your values.
Faith-informed therapy does not replace clinical methodology with scripture or reduce mental health to spiritual failure. It means that your beliefs, values, and spiritual community are treated as real and relevant parts of your life — integrated into how we understand you and how we work together.
If your faith is a source of strength, we build on that. If there are areas where faith and mental health are creating tension — questions of scrupulosity, spiritual injury, shame, or moral injury — we address those with both clinical rigor and genuine respect for your beliefs.
"You should not have to choose between a therapist who understands faith and one who actually knows what they are doing clinically. You can have both."
We work with clients across faith traditions including Christian, Catholic, and non-denominational backgrounds. We do not impose any particular theological framework — our role is to understand yours and work within it, not to redirect it.
Moral injury — the specific wound of having acted in ways that violate one's moral code, or witnessed others doing so — is a particular area of focus for first responders and military personnel whose faith intersects with the ethical weight of their work. This is complex terrain that requires both clinical and cultural understanding.
We are not clergy and therapy is not a substitute for pastoral care. We work collaboratively with spiritual leaders when appropriate and with your consent.
Where faith and mental health
intersect.
Scrupulosity & Religious OCD
Intrusive thoughts, excessive guilt, or fear of moral failure that goes beyond healthy conscience. This is a specific clinical presentation that requires an informed approach.
Moral Injury
The wound of having done, witnessed, or failed to prevent something that violated your moral code. Common in first responders, military, and medical professionals. Faith often shapes how this is carried.
Spiritual Injury & Faith Crisis
Experiences that have damaged your relationship with faith — abuse within a religious institution, disillusionment, loss, or trauma that has shaken what you believed to be certain.
Shame & Forgiveness
The specific weight of shame filtered through a faith framework. The difference between guilt that motivates change and shame that paralyzes. Learning to extend to yourself what you extend to others.
Marriage & Family
Relationship concerns where faith values are central to how you understand marriage, family roles, and commitment. We work within your framework, not against it.
Anxiety & Trauma
All clinical concerns treated with full evidence-based methodology, integrated with your values. Faith does not replace treatment — it informs the relationship and the meaning-making.
"Your faith is not a complication. It is part of who you are — and it belongs in the room."
Faith-informed care
that actually works.
You do not have to choose between your beliefs and effective therapy. Reach out — we will meet you where you are.
