The writers move easily between theological concepts such as guilt, sin, and ritual and psychological constructs such as object relations theory, the neurophysiology of religious experience, and the psychosocial factors that influence religious development. This movement is done without syncretism or triumphalism. Each discipline's strengths are portrayed with sensitivity but not zealotry. If there is an "evangelical" cast to the book, it appears to be this: good things, even healing, happen to the patient when the practitioners of religion and psychiatry team up to provide competent care.