A Contemporary Approach to Spiritual and Theological Reflection from the Perspective of Kahneman’s System Thinking
Abstract
1. Introduction
Conceptual Case Study: Caroline
Caroline has an MA in psychology and has a private practice in psychotherapy. She receives regular consultation for her clinical work. In the last few years, Caroline has experienced a spiritual yearning and has taken several courses in spirituality. Caroline does not belong to any particular faith group but sees herself as spiritual but not religious. She is convinced from research that spirituality can be a help to clients. She also realizes that in some cases it can be detrimental. She likes the research of Ken Pargament and Julie Exline on the influence of spiritual and religious struggles on mental health. Caroline spends time each day using mindfulness to reflect on herself, her family, friends and clients. She wants to learn more about spiritual reflection and wonders if her dreams, emotions and intuition have any role in spiritual reflection. She has sought out a spiritual companion and did a weekend retreat under the direction of her spiritual companion. She found the retreat helpful. Caroline wants to learn how to do spiritual reflection.
2. Method
3. Literature Review
3.1. Contemporary Spiritual and Theological Reflection
3.2. System Thinking in Spiritual and Theological Reflection
3.2.1. Kahneman’s System Thinking
3.2.2. Separate Systems
3.2.3. Systems Working Together
3.3. Emotions in Spiritual and Theological Reflection
Caroline, recognizing that there are different ways of thinking and reflecting on spiritual experiences, begins to focus on noticing her emotions as they arise, and on what her body responses are when she feels things or even leading up to a feeling, and she sits with these feelings for a moment before acting on them. She gradually learns to reflect on what they mean for her and consults with her spiritual companion sometimes to help with her process of reflection. She also begins to put more emphasis on including emotions and “felt senses” with her clients and allows space for them to work through reflective processes with her that include more spiritual components when they are interested in this type of reflection.
3.4. Dreams in Spiritual and Theological Reflection
(1) Create a quiet, safe place (pp. 96–97)
(2) describe the dream in the present tense (p. 97)
(3) ask questions about specifics (pp. 97–98)
(4) explore the most extraordinary elements (pp. 98–99)
(5) explore the dream’s root in the past (p. 99)
(6) explore the dream’s vision for the future (pp. 99–100)
(7) honestly contemplate resistance (pp. 100–101).
(1) Reconstructing the dream, with a focus on images and emotions; (2) getting insight into the dreamer’s spiritual values and principles and their meaning of the dream; and (3) identifying a plan or changes based on insights from the dream
Caroline learns about and researches Bulkeley’s seven-step process of dream reflection and tries this out after having a really vivid dream one night. She walks herself through the steps of reflection and identifies ways the dream provided guidance about her experience, and her aspirations for the future. She discusses her reflection with her spiritual companion, and further refines her goals based on the dream. She finds this very meaningful for her own spiritual processes and decides to offer this method to her clients for dream reflection when they are interested.
3.5. Intuition in Spiritual and Theological Reflection
Caroline notices one day during a session with a client that she has a very quick, intuitive feeling of knowing a specific question to ask. When she does, the client is able to see a link between something they have been trying to figure out for a while, and they experience a breakthrough in their therapy process. Caroline feels surprised at herself for “knowing” what to hone in on, and explores more about intuition. She finds in her research that she experienced a form of “expert intuition” and was able to trace back how all her training and life experiences helped her “know” what was needed in the session to help her client work through their issue. She decides to practice paying attention to her “felt sense” more often in everyday life as a spiritual practice itself and finds this to be helpful in her professional work as well. Her intuitive sense begins to work more effectively to tell her when she is off-course and needs to realign herself, and when she is working in good professional balance, and is in balance with herself and others, including her clients. At the same time, Caroline is aware of the skepticism in the research about intuition being wish fulfillment. She proceeds slowly with intuition in clinical work and brings this to her supervision sessions for feedback and support.
4. Answer to the Research Question
5. Limitations of the Research (Cautions)
6. Gaps
7. Conclusions and Future Applications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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| Emerging Themes in Contemporary STR (Brouillard-Coyle et al. 2025) | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Experience is the dominant force of reflection |
| 2 | Meaning making is the way of understanding the purpose of reflections |
| 3 | Growth in the number of texts using spiritual reflection and the overlap between spiritual and theological reflection |
| 4 | No emphasis on methods in the text reviewed |
| 5 | Rise in spiritual reflection is connected to the rise in people who identify as spiritual but not religious |
| Themes Found in Literature Review | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Methods of reflection in the more recent past tended to focus more on System 2 (analytical) processes of thinking but now seem more open to System 1 thinking |
| 2 | System thinking is recognized across disciplines as a dual process that requires both for a balanced human/spiritual experience |
| 3 | Emotions, dreams and intuition are recognized to have purpose and enrich the human experience across disciplines and cultures |
| 4 | Creative expression is present and valued for spiritual and theological reflection |
| 5 | Intentional use of System 1 thinking in spiritual and theological reflection speaks to the contemporary needs for a wider experiential, flexible and “spiritual not religious” exploration of spirituality |
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Robertson, J.; Haroon, S.; O’Connor, T.S.J.; Dale, J. A Contemporary Approach to Spiritual and Theological Reflection from the Perspective of Kahneman’s System Thinking. Religions 2026, 17, 475. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040475
Robertson J, Haroon S, O’Connor TSJ, Dale J. A Contemporary Approach to Spiritual and Theological Reflection from the Perspective of Kahneman’s System Thinking. Religions. 2026; 17(4):475. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040475
Chicago/Turabian StyleRobertson, Julie, Sehrish Haroon, Thomas St. James O’Connor, and Jeffrey Dale. 2026. "A Contemporary Approach to Spiritual and Theological Reflection from the Perspective of Kahneman’s System Thinking" Religions 17, no. 4: 475. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040475
APA StyleRobertson, J., Haroon, S., O’Connor, T. S. J., & Dale, J. (2026). A Contemporary Approach to Spiritual and Theological Reflection from the Perspective of Kahneman’s System Thinking. Religions, 17(4), 475. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040475
