
At Young & Brovet, we are committed to clinical practice that is theologically and psychologically integrated. As such, therapy is viewed as a dynamic relational process out of which change can occur. It is our vision that the work of the therapist not begin and end in the therapy room, but that it involve working with the Christian community to create a larger and more effective context of healing for the person(s) in need.
Traditionally, psychotherapeutic practices have been a place where churches refer congregants in the greatest emotional pain, but even people who function well experience guilt and pain which cause them to hide from God’s love. Growth toward maturity and personal responsibility involves understanding the complex nature of anxiety, accepting oneself and one’s history, and receiving God’s love through others.
Core Beliefs
We work together with you with the following basic convictions:
People have been created profoundly relational. We flourish most completely in relationship with others.
We are formed and shaped as individual people in the context of imperfect family systems, cultural networks, work and school environments, and faith communities. Understanding the rules, roles, and hierarchies that govern these contexts gives is great insight into who we are as individuals.
We are profoundly spiritual people who seek to make meaning out of our world as we relate to God, Self, and Others.
Emotional, psychological, and spiritual change happens in and through growth fostering relationships in which we are able to know others and be known by others.
Change in a therapeutic context is a dynamically relational process that requires an understanding of the internal, relational, and developmental factors that contribute to a person’s problems. Change in this sense is not simply behavioral, but is also emotional and spiritual.
Mission and Vision
At Young & Brovet, we are committed to clinical practice that is theologically and psychologically integrated. As such, therapy is viewed as a dynamic relational process out of which change can occur. It is our vision that the work of the therapist not begin and end in the therapy room, but that it involve working with the Christian community to create a larger and more effective context of healing for the person(s) in need.
Traditionally, psychotherapeutic practices have been a place where churches refer congregants in the greatest emotional pain, but even people who function well experience guilt and pain which cause them to hide from God’s love. Growth toward maturity and personal responsibility involves understanding the complex nature of anxiety, accepting oneself and one’s history, and receiving God’s love through others.
At Young & Brovet, we are committed to clinical practice that is theologically and psychologically integrated. As such, therapy is viewed as a dynamic relational process out of which change can occur. It is our vision that the work of the therapist not begin and end in the therapy room, but that it involve working with the Christian community to create a larger and more effective context of healing for the person(s) in need.
Traditionally, psychotherapeutic practices have been a place where churches refer congregants in the greatest emotional pain, but even people who function well experience guilt and pain which cause them to hide from God’s love. Growth toward maturity and personal responsibility involves understanding the complex nature of anxiety, accepting oneself and one’s history, and receiving God’s love through others.