From Assessment to Activism: Utilizing a Justice-Informed Framework to Guide Spiritual and Religious Clinical Interventions.- Integration of Self and Family: Asian American Christians in the Midst of White Evangelicalism and Being the Model Minority.- Protecting Family Bonds: Examining Religious Disaffiliation Through a Spiritually Informed Family Systems Lens.- Colliding Discourses: Families Negotiating Religion, Sexuality, and Identity.- Before You Were Born I Consecrated You (Jeremiah 1:5, NRSV): Spiritual Resilience and Resistance within Transgender Families and Communities.- A Light in the Closet: A Spiritually Informed Conceptual Model for Religiously Derived Mixed Orientation Marriages.- Reconnecting After an Affair: Relationship Justice, Spirituality, and Infidelity Treatment.- Finding a Way Through: Integrating Spirituality and Sociocultural Meaning in the Face of Infertility and Perinatal Loss.- Finding the Hidden Resiliencies: Racial Identity and Spiritual Meaning in Transracial Adoption.- Fostering Security: Spiritually Informed Attachment Based Therapy for Infants and Caregivers.- Making Each Moment Count: Supporting Justice-Informed, Whole-Person Health in Hospital-Based Brief Therapy for Acute Illness.- Supporting Whole-Person Health: Socially Just Application of Religion and Spirituality in an Outpatient Care Facility for Individuals with Chronic Illnesses.
Elisabeth Esmiol Wilson Ph.D., LMFT is an Associate Professor and Director of Clinical Training at Pacific Lutheran University. She has an MA in Spiritual Formation and Soul Care and practiced as a spiritual director before becoming a family therapist. Her research focuses on couples’ experiences of gender, power and spirituality, and on clinical training issues including attending to larger contextual issues and integrating client feedback into treatment. She enjoys running an active private practice focusing on sexual and spiritual issues in couple therapy and continues to practice as a spiritual director.
Lindsey A. Nice Ph.D., LMFT, RN is an Assistant Professor and Clinic Director at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, WA. Before becoming an MFT, she worked as a nurse at a small hospital in OR, and still enjoys learning about the intersection of physical, mental, and relational health. Her research interests include medical family therapy, religion and spirituality in therapy, MFT pedagogy, experiential teaching interventions, and relational equality. In her free time, she enjoys working on the 1930's farm she and her husband are renovating.