Abstract
This article discusses religion, faith, and spirituality (RFS) and transactional analysis (TA) psychotherapy and counseling as well as what may be called the beyond. It reviews the literature on RFS within TA in terms of the basic assumptions and principles of TA as well as its four main areas of theory (transactions, ego states, scripts, and games) and categorizes the interplay between TA and RFS. Taking issue with the argument that RFS is and/or should be separate from psychology, the article offers an inclusive view of RFS within TA and TA within RFS and briefly discusses the implication of this for practice, including the personal development, supervision, and education and training of psychotherapists and other TA practitioners.
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