Dr. Sosunmolu Shoyinka, Co-Founder of Curitan Foundation, originally authored this piece for The Punch Nigeria. We are honored to share it here.
In Nigeria, faith is more than belief; it is our way of life. Churches, mosques, and faith leaders are often the first places people turn to when they feel overwhelmed. In moments of emotional distress, many Nigerians are encouraged to “pray about it,” “have faith,” or “rebuke the spirit behind it”. While prayer and spiritual support can offer comfort, hope, and meaning, they should not be mistaken for complete treatment of mental health conditions.
Mental health challenges are not signs of weak faith, spiritual failure, or moral deficiency. They are legitimate health conditions that affect how people think, feel, behave, and function—just as diabetes or hypertension affects the body.
Yet, in many faith communities, emotional distress is still framed almost entirely as a spiritual issue. Anxiety is labelled “weakness’ or “fear”, depression is interpreted as “laziness” or “ingratitude,” and trauma is dismissed as something one should simply overcome through prayers alone. These responses are often well-intentioned, but they can delay appropriate care, increase shame, and deepen suffering.
Nigeria is facing a silent mental health crisis. Economic hardship, insecurity, unemployment, family pressures, and rising social expectations have created an environment of chronic stress. According to the World Health Organisation, millions of Nigerians live with mental health conditions, yet only a small percentage have access to professional care. Stigma remains one of the greatest barriers to seeking help—and faith spaces sometimes, unintentionally, reinforce this stigma.
This does not mean faith is the problem. On the contrary, faith communities can be a powerful part of the solution if we all work together to remove the stigma attached to mental health.
Prayer and therapy are not opposing forces; they serve different but complementary roles. Prayer provides spiritual grounding, meaning, hope, and communal support. Therapy offers evidence-based tools to understand emotions, challenge harmful thought patterns, process trauma, and develop healthier coping strategies. One nurtures the spirit, the other treats the mind. Both can work together.
No faith leader would advise a diabetic to abandon insulin and rely solely on prayer. Mental health should not be treated differently. Depression does not disappear through positive confessions alone. Post-traumatic stress does not resolve simply because someone fasts harder. Severe anxiety cannot always be silenced by scripture memorisation, no matter how sincere the faith.
Faith leaders hold enormous influence. Their words can either free people to seek help or trap them in silence and shame.
When a pastor or imam openly acknowledges mental health struggles, encourages professional care, or collaborates with mental health practitioners, it sends a powerful message: “You are not broken. You are human.”
Encouragingly, some faith communities are already leading by example—hosting mental health awareness sessions, inviting psychologists and counsellors to speak, training leaders to recognise warning signs, and creating referral pathways for those in distress. These efforts are not just progressive; they are lifesaving.
What is urgently needed is a broader shift in mindset. Mental illness must no longer be viewed as a spiritual failure. Therapy should be normalised as an act of wisdom, not weakness. Faith leaders should be equipped to recognise when spiritual support is not enough and professional intervention is necessary.
For individuals struggling silently, this must be said clearly: seeking therapy does not mean you lack faith or have stopped trusting God. It means you are taking responsibility for your well-being. Faith can sustain people through treatment, but it should not replace it.
In conclusion, the Nigerian faith communities sit at a powerful intersection of trust and influence. By openly addressing mental health, rejecting harmful stigma, and encouraging timely professional care alongside spiritual support, they can help close the country’s wide mental health gap. Healing should never be an either-or choice between faith and science. When prayer and therapy work together, the result is not diminished belief, but healthier individuals, stronger families, and more resilient communities.
Dr Sosunmolu Shoyinka, Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania and co-founder of Curitan Wellness Foundation, writes via curitanwellness@gmail.com