Wanted to comment on your remarks Anthony. If I am incorrect (to Lauren and Tim) please correct my interpretation of your statements and thoughts.
I think maybe what Tim and Lauren might be referring to is a counselor/psychologist who can help reconcile issues of faith to PTSD to reduce the conflict with their faith, values, etc. A deep, spiritual connection in many believers in Christian religions makes it difficult to reconcile questions about God's love and presence when things happen as a result of historical (watershed) PTSD event(s) and current PTSD events, for instance, " can I hate the person who did this to me" because some feelings may be considered sinful. Or "why did God let be in this situation when I have been faithful to my religious and spiritual values?" For those of use who have religious beliefs some things about PTSD don't make sense in our worlds, i.e., if we are good Christians. Anger is a big one--how do we be angry and sin not when this horrible thing has made me suffer? When trying to live a Christ-centered life it is very difficult to know what to do about the anger, hatred and temptations such as relying on drinking/drugs and other addictions which are part of trying to numb PTSD. For example, the church I attended for years and am a member of doesn't believe in drinking, dancing, smoking or tobacco use of any type, premarital sex, divorce or cinema. If you used some of things things to be self-destructive when your PTSD was really active it could damage many things connected with your faith and become a source of confusion and conflict.
Many non-believers have a picture of faith-based counselors as solving everything on faith and prayer alone but it is more than just prayer and faith--clinical skills are involved also. I don't think that counselors/psychologists who are from a faith-based angle are trying to enable behaviors but rather just understand them in the Christian framework and encourage healing without destroying that value structure. One's beliefs can be a very powerful change agent and can augment healing as would other other views. I know my current T (Christian oriented approach) has pushed me harder and farther than the last secular T I had so my healing has moved forward and I have improved. A lot of it is about getting the right fit in the relationship and a faith-based approach may be just as challenging (or more so) as a secular one because preserving spirituality as part of the human psyche is very hard sometimes. Understanding the spiritual component is a way of showing empathy for the sufferer within the religious orientation to counseling. We all have different needs and faith-based orientations can really fill the bill for a number of sufferers. Just something to ponder in the vast world of opinions.
Gina