Spirituality in Session: Making Room for Faith in Family Therapy

Written by [Haythem Lafhaj]

For many families, spirituality isn’t a sidebar to healing—it’s central. Especially in Islamic, African, and African American households, faith is often intertwined with family identity, values, and resilience. Yet traditional therapy models sometimes treat religion as a liability or avoid it altogether. It’s time to change that.

As a PLMFT, I’ve seen the power of inviting faith into the room—not to lead, but to belong. Clients may express spiritual beliefs that guide their decision-making, shape their understanding of mental health, or provide comfort in times of struggle. For Muslim clients, therapy might intersect with beliefs about destiny (qadr), modesty, and the role of family in decision-making. Understanding these elements is essential for building trust and offering relevant support.

African and African American clients often draw on rich spiritual traditions—Christianity, Islam, ancestral rituals, or non-institutionalized forms of spirituality—that serve as sources of healing, resistance, and generational wisdom. These traditions are not “alternative”—they’re vital to how many people understand themselves and their communities.

Ignoring this aspect of a client’s identity is not neutral—it’s erasure. As Corey et al. (2018) note, ethical therapy includes attention to clients’ values and belief systems. Therapists don’t need to share the same faith—but we do need to honor it.

Culturally integrated therapy might involve adapting language, asking about spiritual support systems, or making space for prayer, scripture, or ritual when appropriate. It means seeing faith as a strength—not a clinical complication.

By welcoming spirituality into the process, we don’t compromise therapy—we enrich it. We give clients permission to heal as whole people, faith and all.

 

References:
Corey, G., Corey, M. S., & Callanan, P. (2018). Issues and Ethics in the Helping Professions.
Sue, D. W., & Sue, D. (2016). Counseling the Culturally Diverse: Theory and Practice.

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Holding Both: Navigating Trauma and Cultural Strength in Black and Muslim Families

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Therapy Across Cultures: Honoring Islamic and African American Values in the Room