To provide general education and acculturation services that help meet the practical needs of refugees and to share with them the gospel of Jesus…
Christian ministries that walk with people through anxiety, depression, trauma, marriage struggles, addiction, and the full weight of being human — combining the work of skilled counselors with the truth and hope of the Gospel.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
To provide general education and acculturation services that help meet the practical needs of refugees and to share with them the gospel of Jesus…
Free Chapel is a nondenominational church based in Gainesville, GA, founded in July 1953. Our mission is to inspire people to live for Jesus. We have…
Handi*Vangelism Ministries International (H*VMI) is a ministry of compassion. We started in 1973 within another organization and launched a 501(c)(3)…
We are a fellowship of followers of Jesus Christ, motivated by His model and mandate to establish His Spiritual Kingdom personally, locally, and…
Haven of Rest Ministries exists to see those bound by life-dominating problems rescued, restored, and released while experiencing the love of Jesus…
The mission of Healing Thine Hearts Ministries (HTHM) is to restore and strengthen families by building healthier relationships through educational…
Heartland Community Church exists to train people how to experience the life their heart longs for and that Jesus promises. Our mission is “…to make…
The mission of the Heartlight Ministries is to provide as many resources as possible to help parents as they walk with their child through the…
Help the Persecuted exists to Rescue, Restore, and Rebuild the lives of persecuted Christians, and works toward a vision where the persecuted Church…
Helps Ministries ("Helps") is a nonprofit, inter-denominational Christian ministry headquartered in Asheville, North Carolina. Helps exists to…
His Mansion Ministries is a Christ-centered healing and discipleship community. We serve young men and women, ages 18-40, who are struggling with all…
Hope for the Heart is a worldwide biblical counseling, coaching, and caregiving ministry founded by June Hunt in 1986. We’re passionate about helping…
308 nonprofits
Christian counseling takes many forms — from clinical therapy to pastoral care, from intensive marriage retreats to 24-hour crisis hotlines. The best ministries meet people where they are, with the help they actually need.
Licensed Christian therapists, psychologists, and clinical counselors providing evidence-based mental health treatment — integrating faith with the best of modern clinical practice for individuals, couples, and families.
A distinct movement emphasizing Scripture's central role in counseling — often offered through churches and biblical counseling centers, focused on heart-level transformation rooted in biblical truth.
Specialized counseling for couples and families — including intensive marriage retreats, family therapy, and ministries focused on restoring relationships before they reach the breaking point.
Specialized counseling for survivors of abuse, assault, exploitation, and complex trauma — using trauma-informed methods that honor both the depth of the wound and the possibility of real healing.
24-hour phone, text, and chat support for people in mental health crisis, suicidal ideation, or acute spiritual distress — staffed by trained Christian counselors and lay volunteers ready to listen.
Training programs for Christian counselors and lay caregivers — and specialized retreats, sabbaticals, and counseling for pastors, missionaries, and other ministry leaders bearing weight no one else sees.
We are living through a mental health crisis. Rates of anxiety, depression, suicide, and addiction have climbed steadily for two decades. One in five Americans experiences a diagnosable mental illness in any given year. Marriages strain under pressure they were never designed to bear. Children carry trauma they cannot name. Pastors burn out. Families fracture quietly behind closed doors.
And much of this suffering happens in silence. Many people who most need help can't afford it — therapy can cost hundreds of dollars per session, with waitlists measured in months. Many in the church remain reluctant to seek help, uncertain whether faith and therapy can coexist. Many counselors trained in secular frameworks feel unequipped to engage the spiritual dimensions of their clients' lives. The gap between need and care is enormous.
Christian counseling ministries exist to close that gap. They walk with people through the actual realities of being human — anxiety that won't quiet, marriages that have lost their way, traumas that won't release their grip, addictions that have stolen years. The best of them combine the truth of Scripture with the wisdom of skilled clinical practice, recognizing that humans are whole people — body, mind, soul, and spirit — and that healing usually requires attention to all of these together.
This work matters because it meets people where the rubber of faith meets the road of real life. A theology that cannot speak to someone in the depths of depression has not yet earned the right to call itself good news. Christian counseling ministries refuse the false choice between faith and clinical care — and in doing so, they offer the church a model of love that takes both Scripture and suffering seriously.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to Christian counseling ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Christian counseling includes meaningfully different approaches — clinical integration (faith combined with evidence-based therapy) and biblical counseling (Scripture as primary resource), among others. Neither is necessarily wrong, but they are different. Excellent ministries are transparent about their approach so donors and prospective clients know what they're supporting.
Some Christian counseling ministries employ licensed clinical professionals (LCSW, LMFT, LPC, psychologists); others use trained pastoral counselors; others use lay biblical counselors with specialized certification. All can be appropriate for different needs — but only when the credentials match the work being done. Beware of ministries offering clinical-level services without clinical credentials, or vice versa.
The mature Christian counseling movement recognizes that mental illness is real, complex, and often requires more than spiritual response — including medication, professional therapy, and sustained clinical care where indicated. Beware of ministries that frame all mental health issues as primarily spiritual problems to be repented of, or that discourage clients from medical care.
Ministries serving trauma survivors should use trauma-informed approaches — recognizing that trauma reshapes the brain and body, requires specific therapeutic modalities, and cannot be resolved by willpower or faith alone. Look for ministries staffed by trauma specialists, not generalist counselors handling trauma cases.
Many people who most need counseling cannot afford it. Excellent Christian counseling ministries address this — offering sliding-scale fees, free counseling for those who qualify, or subsidized care funded by donors. Look for ministries that make access part of their mission, not just an afterthought.
No single counselor or ministry can handle every need. Excellent ministries know the limits of their expertise — referring clients to specialists when appropriate, partnering with medical providers for psychiatric care, and recognizing when something exceeds their training. Beware of ministries that claim universal competence or resist outside referrals.
Explore verified Christian counseling ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.