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James W. Fowler’s Faith Development Theory

James W. Fowler’s Faith Development Theory. Presented by Claire Dahlman and John Weiser. Biography of James Fowler. Graduate of Duke University and Drew Theological Seminary

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James W. Fowler’s Faith Development Theory

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  1. James W. Fowler’sFaith Development Theory Presented by Claire Dahlman and John Weiser

  2. Biography of James Fowler • Graduate of Duke University and Drew Theological Seminary • Earned his Ph.D. at Harvard University in Religion and Society in 1971, with a focus in ethics and sociology of religion • Pursed post-doctoral studies at the Center for Moral Development at the Harvard Graduate School of Education • Taught at Harvard Divinity School, Boston College and Emory’s Candler School of Theology

  3. Biography of James Fowler • His best known book, Stages of Faith: The Psychology of Development and the Quest for Meaning is in it’s 40th printing and has been translated into German, Korean, and Portuguese. • Has written or edited 10 other books and more than 60 articles • Has won several awards for contributions to religion, psychiatry, and psychology • Currently a minister in the United Methodist Church

  4. In Fowler’s book Stages of Faith: The Psychology of Human Development and Quest for Meaning, Fowler outlines the six stages of development he believes a person goes through as they mature from infancy through adulthood.

  5. Stage Zero: Undifferentiated Faith • “Pre-stage” refers to growth from infancy through two years old • The infant is developing basic trust with the people providing him care • Toddlers are learning the safety of their environment, ideally safe, secure and nurturing

  6. Stage 1: Intuitive-Projective Faith • Focuses on children between the ages of two and six or seven. • The child is egocentric, self-aware, and easily influenced by examples, moods, actions and stories. • The child has difficulty understanding the difference between what is real and what is fantasy

  7. Stage 2: Mythic-Literal Faith • Typically focuses on school-age children • The child begins to understand the difference between realities and make believe. • During this stage, the child will have strong beliefs in fairness and justice • Often gives humanistic qualities to the idea of God and believes heaven and hell are actual places.

  8. Stage 3: Synthetic-Conventional Faith • Usually occurs during puberty • A person’s experience of the world now extends beyond the family. Many areas demand attention: family, school, work, peers, street society, the media, and perhaps religion. • This is a “conformist” stage. People are aware of their expectations and judgments but choose not to question them in order to stay connected to their peer group.

  9. Stage 4: Individuative-Reflective Faith • Typically occurs in people in their mid-twenties but may never occur for some adults • The individual is no longer concerned with the judgments or opinions of their peers • Has an overwhelming sense of self-identity, critical reflection, and world views. • Typically translates symbols into conceptual meanings. • A stage of “demythologizing”

  10. Stage 5: Conjunctive Faith • Typically occurs before mid-life. • This is experienced when the person realizes what was suppressed or unrecognized in stage four. • “Complex” stage, and “difficult to adequately describe.” • The person moves away from the idea of either/or and can see both sides of an issue at the same time. • Realizes and understands the rational explanation behind symbols and traditions but re-engages with it anyway.

  11. Stage 6: Universalizing Faith • Reached only by a few: Gandhi Martin Luther King, Jr. Mother Teresa • “Subversive” meaning their views are very different from those typically found in society. • Amongst all the negative and evil, visions are born of “what life is meant to be”

  12. Criticisms of Fowler’s stages • Stage 1: Possible exploitation of child’s imagination for evil purposes. • Could have contradictions between valued authority sources; Catholic church changing the Mass from Latin to English or no longer require abstinence from meat on Friday. • One cannot advance or skip stages i.e. move from stage 2 to stage 5 • Stage 6 is nearly impossible to attain. • The study was not published in a journal, so was not peer-reviewed

  13. Cognitive Structural Development • Each stage becomes increasingly complex during development from infancy through adulthood. • The person takes in information, perceives their experiences and gives meaning to the information • It is a faith-based theory, spiritual development • Hierarchical, one cannot skip a stage and move on without attaining it first.

  14. Applying Fowlers Theory to Higher Education • Student Identity Development • Role of spirituality Who we are at our core How we understand ourselves Understanding religious differences

  15. References • Fowler, James W. Stages of Faith: The Psychology of Human Development and the Quest for Meaning, New York, Harper-Collins, 1978 • Schuh, J.H. Jones, S.R., Harper S.R., and Associates. Student Services: A handbook for the Profession (5th ed.), San Francisco, Jossey-Bass, 2011 Chapter 8: The Nature and use of Theory by Susan R. Jones and Elisa S. Abes • http://ethics.emory.edu/people/Founder.html • http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+22%3A1-14&version=NIV

  16. Any questions? Any questions?

  17. Class Activity • Read the provided story from the book of Genesis. Chapter 22, versus 1-14. • How would someone in your stage understand this story? • What meaning can we expect them to find in this story?

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