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David D, Eitzen ~E HONOR this month a long-time member of our Editorial Advisory Board, who has probably made a larger contribution than any one else to the development of pastoral psychology on the west coast. He is Professor of Pastoral Counseling at the School of Religion of the University of Southern California, where he has been a member of the faculty since 1938. He was one of the first teachers to offer current-type courses in a seminary on counseling and pas- toral psychology, and he remains one of the few who has shepherded some candidates for advanced degrees in this area. Although there is no mud on his shoes or seed in his hair, he has retained a strong positive feeling for the basic things about the rural life in which he had his early rearing. He was born and reared in Mountain Lake, Minnesota, where his father was a Mennonite min- ister. For some years past he and his family have lived on a six-acre plot twenty-three miles south of the School of Religion where, he writes, "we produce many of the things necessary for living by means of a small family orchard, vegetable garden, some chickens,
Pastoral Psychology – Springer Journals
Published: May 5, 2005
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