When we consider resources that a coach might suggest a client pursue in faith coaching, there are many! Please understand as I address this topic, I come from a Christian perspective (note the “a” and not “the”). However, there are rich spiritual resources connected to all religious faiths and to no particular religious faith. Perhaps a starting point comes from the Methodist or Wesleyan tradition. The Wesleyan Quadrilateral is credited to Methodist founder John Wesley. This model bases its teaching on four sources as the basis of theological and doctrinal development. These four sources are chiefly scripture (the Bible), along with tradition, reason, and Christian experience. As Christians, we are not bound by tradition, but we have two thousand years of tradition upon which we can draw. Tradition is not simply about organization or ecclesiology, but ways in which believers approach God—spiritual practices (such a...
On my wall is an icon of St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. As one might expect, much of the story of Patrick is shrouded in myth. The accepted story is that he was kidnapped from Britain by Irish raiders when he was 16 and taken to Ireland where he was a slave for six years. He eventually escaped and returned to his family, but he took vows with the Church and returned to his place of enslavement as a missionary. He is credited with converting the island to the Christian faith. By the seventh century, he had come to be revered as the patron saint of Ireland. The genius of Patrick seems to have been his ability to contextualize the faith to win converts. He took advantage of the well-developed stories, customs, and institutions of Ireland to present the Gospel in a powerful way. So significant was this approach that it gave birth to what we call Celtic Christianity, a movement that differentiated itself from the Roman form of t...