Infatuation Rules
Photo: Brett Sayles
In this study Fowler, a psychologist and theologian, develops a six-stage theory of faith development. Stage 1 – Intuitive-Projective Faith, Stage 2 – Mythic Literal Faith, Stage 3 – Synthetic-Conventional Faith, Stage 4 – Individuative-Reflective Faith, Stage 5 – Conjunctive Faith and Stage 6 – Universalizing Faith.
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Read More »Fowler’s six stages of faith are seen as “relating” in differing ways to the developmental theories of Piaget, Kohlberg and Erikson. They differ in terms of applicability to the whole-life cycle. An individual does not necessarily attain all the stages of faith. “Faith stage transitions are not automatic or inevitable” (276). The final parts of this book focus on a single case study, a lengthy interview (22 pages) of a woman named “Mary.” Fowler states that he finds this the most efficacious way to enable the reader to “gain a working understanding of the stage theory of faith development” (217). Fowler personally conducted this interview. It is puzzling that for this important role Fowler chose an interview that he admits deviates from the standard set for the study. Fowler initially interviewed this woman in his role as a “counselor” at the request of the woman’s family. This choice might lead one to be suspect of the scientific degree and quality of the overall research and data collection. Fowler states that the stages of faith development he describes are part of the universal human condition and therefore are applicable to faith development within any religious tradition or outside of a recognizable tradition. However, there clearly is a Judeo-Christian, Western bias that begins with the author. Fowler states in his introduction that this will be a “personal book—personal for me as a writer, personal for you as a reader (xii.) He writes the book as a psychologist but also, less directly, as a theologian and a person of Christian faith. It is the author’s hope that follow-up studies will address the cross-cultural applicability of this theory. Published in 1981, there are already citations in the book of further study based on Fowler’s theory and so one must imagine that there is a large body of scholarly literature that modifies this work.
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