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Spiritual Counseling in Colorado

Browse support for spiritual identity questions, faith-related stress, and religious conflict across Colorado.

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Find a Therapist

Use the filter options to find available therapists by specialty, insurance, location and age group.

Appointments may be available in as little as 48 hours. Many major insurance plans accepted.

How Spiritual & Religious Challenges Can Affect Identity & Emotional Wellbeing

Spiritual & Religious Concerns can affect emotional wellbeing, relationships, communication, confidence, routines, and the ability to feel emotionally present throughout daily life. Many individuals experience stress, emotional overwhelm, anxiety, frustration, exhaustion, avoidance behaviors, difficulty concentrating, or feeling disconnected from others while navigating challenges related to spiritual & religious concerns.

Over time, these experiences may affect work, school, parenting, intimacy, emotional regulation, self-esteem, decision-making, and overall quality of life. Some individuals notice ongoing strain connected to burnout, family dynamics, major life transitions, identity concerns, health-related stress, or difficulty balancing personal responsibilities and emotional needs.

Therapists across Colorado provide support for spiritual & religious concerns through approaches tailored to each individual’s experiences, goals, relationships, lifestyle, and emotional wellbeing.

How Therapy Can Help

Therapy can provide support, perspective, and practical tools for navigating challenges, improving emotional well-being, and building healthier patterns over time.

Better Understand Patterns & Behaviors

Therapy can help individuals recognize emotional patterns, thought processes, relationship dynamics, and behaviors that may be affecting daily life and overall well-being.

Develop Healthier Coping Strategies

Many people use therapy to build practical tools for managing stress, navigating challenges, improving communication, and responding to difficult situations more effectively.

Improve Emotional Awareness & Regulation

Therapy can support greater self-awareness, emotional balance, boundary-setting, and confidence in managing emotions across work, relationships, and everyday life.

Support Long-Term Personal Growth

In addition to addressing immediate concerns, therapy can help individuals strengthen resilience, improve self-understanding, and build healthier long-term habits and routines.

Evidence-Based Therapy Approaches for Spiritual & Religious Concerns

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) focuses on mindfulness, emotional flexibility, and values-based decision-making. ACT helps people respond to difficult thoughts and emotions more effectively while building healthier patterns that support long-term well-being and personal growth.

Learn more about Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) >

Psychodynamic Therapy

Psychodynamic therapy explores how past experiences, emotional patterns, and unconscious processes may influence current thoughts, behaviors, and relationships. Therapy focuses on building self-awareness, emotional insight, and long-term personal growth.

Learn more about Psychodynamic Therapy >

Internal Family Systems (IFS)

Internal Family Systems (IFS) therapy helps individuals better understand different emotional “parts” within themselves and how those parts influence thoughts, behaviors, and relationships. Therapy focuses on self-awareness, emotional healing, and developing a more balanced internal system.

Learn more about Internal Family Systems (IFS) >

Mindfulness-Based Therapy

Mindfulness-based approaches help individuals develop greater awareness of thoughts, emotions, physical sensations, and behavioral patterns without judgment. These techniques can support stress management, emotional regulation, self-awareness, and overall mental wellness.

Learn more about Mindfulness-Based Therapy >

Solution-Focused Therapy

Solution-Focused Therapy helps individuals identify strengths, set practical goals, and build on existing coping skills to create meaningful change. This collaborative approach focuses on progress, resilience, and achievable solutions rather than staying centered on problems alone.

Learn more about Solution-Focused Therapy >

Frequently Asked Questions About Spiritual & Religious Concerns

Questions about faith, spirituality, religion, meaning, purpose, values, and identity can have a significant impact on emotional well-being. For many people, these topics are deeply personal and closely connected to how they understand themselves, their relationships, and the world around them.

Therapy can provide a supportive space to explore spiritual or religious concerns without pressure to adopt, reject, or change particular beliefs. Depending on a person's needs and goals, therapy may focus on faith-related questions, spiritual growth, life purpose, values clarification, religious experiences, doubt, identity concerns, life transitions, grief, or emotional well-being.

Many individuals seek therapy because they feel conflicted, uncertain, disconnected, or overwhelmed by questions they have been carrying for a long time. Others want support navigating changes in beliefs, spiritual practices, relationships, or life circumstances.

The goal is not to tell someone what they should believe. The goal is to help individuals explore what feels meaningful, authentic, and important to them.

Spiritual and religious concerns can influence emotional health in ways that are not always immediately obvious. Some people experience persistent doubt, confusion, guilt, fear, uncertainty, or internal conflict related to beliefs or values. Others struggle with questions about meaning, purpose, belonging, identity, or how to reconcile different parts of their life experiences.

For some individuals, spiritual concerns contribute to anxiety, stress, loneliness, grief, or difficulty making important life decisions.

A useful question to consider is, "Are questions about faith, spirituality, meaning, or values taking up significant emotional energy in my life?" If the answer feels like yes, it may be worth exploring those concerns more intentionally.

One of the most common misconceptions is that spiritual concerns only matter for people who actively practice a religion. In reality, questions about meaning, purpose, values, identity, morality, connection, and personal beliefs can affect people regardless of their religious background.

Another misunderstanding is that experiencing doubt automatically means someone is losing faith or moving away from their values. For many individuals, questioning and reflection are normal parts of spiritual growth and development.

People are also sometimes surprised to learn that spiritual concerns can emerge during major life transitions, loss, grief, illness, relationship changes, or periods of personal growth.

Perhaps most importantly, there is no single "right" way to navigate spiritual questions. People often benefit from having space to explore these concerns openly and honestly.

Questions about faith, spirituality, meaning, and values often touch some of the most important parts of a person's identity.

These concerns may influence relationships, family traditions, community involvement, personal decisions, life goals, and a person's understanding of themselves.

As a result, exploring these questions can bring up strong emotions. Some people experience fear about disappointing others. Others struggle with uncertainty, guilt, grief, confusion, or a sense of losing something that once felt certain.

Many individuals find themselves pulled between competing beliefs, expectations, experiences, or values. The emotional complexity often reflects the importance of the questions rather than a failure to find answers. Therapy can provide a supportive environment for exploring these concerns while reducing pressure to immediately resolve them.

While these experiences can overlap, they are not the same.

Spiritual or religious concerns generally involve questions, uncertainty, growth, exploration, values, meaning, identity, or changes in belief systems.

Religious trauma typically refers to emotional, psychological, or relational harm that occurred within a religious context or environment.

Someone experiencing spiritual concerns may be questioning beliefs, exploring values, seeking meaning, or navigating changes in their faith.

Someone experiencing religious trauma may be coping with fear, shame, control, manipulation, abuse, exclusion, or other harmful experiences connected to religion. Understanding this distinction can help individuals identify what type of support may be most helpful for their situation.

Yes. A healthy therapeutic environment allows people to explore spiritual, religious, and personal beliefs without pressure or judgment.

Therapy is not about convincing someone to adopt specific beliefs or abandon existing ones.

Instead, it can help individuals clarify values, process experiences, explore questions, navigate uncertainty, and better understand what feels meaningful to them.

For some people, this strengthens existing beliefs. For others, it supports growth, change, exploration, or a deeper understanding of themselves. Many individuals find relief in having a space where complex questions can be discussed openly and respectfully.

Yes. Online therapy can provide accessible support for individuals navigating spiritual, religious, or existential concerns.

Virtual therapy allows people to discuss questions related to faith, meaning, purpose, values, identity, grief, life transitions, and personal growth from the comfort of their own environment.

For many individuals, telehealth improves access to therapists who are experienced in working with spiritual and religious concerns.

As with many therapy services, effectiveness often depends more on the quality of the therapeutic relationship, the therapist's expertise, and the individual's engagement than whether sessions occur online or in person. Many people find online therapy to be a comfortable and effective option.

A useful question to consider is, "Have these questions about faith, meaning, spirituality, or values become difficult to navigate on my own?"

Many individuals seek support when uncertainty, conflict, guilt, grief, confusion, or emotional distress begin affecting daily life or overall well-being.

Others pursue therapy because they want a safe place to explore important questions without feeling pressured toward a particular answer.

You do not need to be experiencing a crisis to benefit from support.

Therapy can be valuable whenever spiritual or religious concerns are affecting emotional health, relationships, identity, decision-making, or quality of life.

Seeking support is not about finding the "right" answer. It is often about creating space to better understand yourself and what matters most to you.

We Work With Your Insurance

Westside Behavioral Care works with many major insurance providers to help make therapy more accessible and affordable. Coverage for counseling may vary depending on your plan, therapist availability, and whether you are seeking virtual or in-person sessions.

You can filter therapists based on your plan to find covered care quickly.

Browse Therapists

View the full directory of therapists who meet your selected criteria, including those with availability beyond the soonest openings shown above.

Steffanne Ferris
Steffanne Ferris

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Not offering family therapy.

Steffanne uses trauma-informed care and EMDR to help adults and couples navigate anxiety and life transitions, fostering a holistic path to emotional growth and self-discovery.


  • Trauma, Anxiety, and Depression
  • 1 In-Network Plan
  • In-Person · Arvada, CO 80002
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Kristen Pellow
Kristen Pellow

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Kristen uses EMDR and DBT to help young adults and adults heal from trauma and anxiety, providing an empathetic, person-centered approach focused on her clients' unique mental health goals.


  • Trauma, Anxiety, and Depression
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Brooke Green
Brooke Green

Licensed Professional Counselor

Only available during business hours.

Brooke supports adults and elders navigating anxiety, grief, and life transitions through a relational approach that fosters self-compassion and acceptance for highly sensitive individuals.


  • Anxiety, Stress, and Grief & Loss
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Tess Rose
Tess Rose

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Tess empowers young adults and adults to navigate anxiety, trauma, and identity using curiosity and CBT to help them find wholeness and live authentically.


  • Anxiety, Trauma, and LGBTQIA+
  • Humana and Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Sara Nieder
Sara Nieder

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Sara helps adults overcome eating disorders and anxiety by providing a nurturing space to build self-esteem and find peace through her specialized, perspective-shifting approach.


  • Eating Disorders, Anxiety, and Depression
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Misty Peery
Misty Peery

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 3 reviews

Prefers online sessions, but offers some in-person.

Misty provides trauma-informed, integrative therapy for youth and adults, using yoga and mindfulness to help clients overcome PTSD and relationship issues through a holistic, somatic approach.


  • Trauma, PTSD, and Anxiety
  • Aetna and Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Marjorie Laird
Marjorie Laird

Licensed Professional Counselor

5.0· 1 review

Seeing children over 8 years old.

Marjorie specializes in trauma and suicide prevention for ages 8 and up, using CBT and DBT to help her clients build on their strengths and achieve meaningful recovery.


  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Suicide Prevention, and Trauma
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Lakewood, CO 80214
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Elizabeth Fulton
Elizabeth Fulton

Licensed Professional Counselor

Elizabeth uses a holistic, EMDR-trained approach to help adults and young adults navigate trauma, anxiety, and life transitions, empowering them with practical tools for lasting healing.


  • Trauma, Anxiety, and Spiritual Concerns
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80236
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Susan Goodenberger
Susan Goodenberger

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist

5.0· 5 reviews

Susan provides inclusive, evidence-based support for children and adults managing trauma, ADHD, and chronic illness, helping them achieve lasting healing through practical, holistic care.


  • Trauma, Chronic Illness, and Anxiety
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado

Need Help Finding the Right Therapist?

Searching for a therapist can sometimes feel overwhelming, especially when looking for support that feels comfortable and aligned with your needs. Our team can help answer questions, explain therapy options, and connect you with therapists based on preferences like communication style, areas of focus, scheduling, availability, and insurance coverage.