Tacoma Christian Counseling Logo

  • ServicesRead about the expertise available
    • Individual ServicesAddress your personal concerns confidentially
      • ADHD
      • Aging and Geriatric Issues
      • Anger Management
      • Anxiety
      • Autism Spectrum Disorder
      • Bipolar Disorder
      • Chemical Dependency
      • Counseling for Children
      • Counseling for Teens
      • Codependency
      • Depression
      • Eating Disorders
      • EMDR
      • Grief and Loss Counseling
      • Individual Counseling
      • Infidelity and Affairs
      • Lifespan Integration Therapy
      • Men’s Issues
      • OCD
      • Pornography Addiction
      • Personal Development
      • Psychological Testing
      • Relationship Issues
      • Sexual Abuse
      • Sexual Addiction
      • Spiritual Development
      • Trauma
      • Weight Loss
      • Women’s Issues
    • Christian Couples CounselingWork through challenges together
      • Couples Counseling
      • Premarital Counseling
      • Marriage Counseling
    • Family CounselingEstablish the peaceful home you desire
      • Couples Counseling
      • Counseling for Teens
      • Counseling for Children
      • Family Counseling
    • Group CounselingBenefit from the support of others
      • Men’s Sexual Addiction Recovery
        Group
      • All Counseling Groups
    • Online Counseling
    • Anxiety
    • Depression
    • Sexual Addiction
    • Marriage Counseling
  • LocationsWe have offices at various locations
    • Bellevue Office FrontBellevue
    • Bothell Office Front EntranceBothell
    • Edmonds Christian CounselingEdmonds
    • Everett Office Front EntranceEverett
    • Federal Way 2Federal Way
    • HansvilleHansville
    •  1Kent
    • Kirkland Christian CounselingKirkland
    • Lacey 2Lacey
    • Mill Creek Office Waiting RoomMill Creek
    •  1Monroe
    • Oak Harbor OutsideOak Harbor
    • Poulsbo
    • Puyallup Christian CounselingPuyallup
    • Redmond OfficeRedmond
    • Seattle Downtown Christian CounselingSeattle Downtown
    • Seattle Greenlake 1Seattle Greenlake
    • Silverdale Office FrontSilverdale
    • Tacoma Office FrontTacoma
    •  1Vancouver
    •  1Online Counseling
  • CounselorsFind out more about our counselors
  • CareersJoin our team of Christian Counselors
  • (253) 777-1997Please give us a call, we are here to help
header-image

Codependency: A Closer Look from a Christian Perspective

Tacoma Christian Counseling
https://tacomachristiancounseling.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/codependency-a-closer-look-from-a-christian-perspective-6.jpg 1711 2560
https://tacomachristiancounseling.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/Mount-Rainier.jpg
https://tacomachristiancounseling.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Tacoma-Christian-Counseling-Logo-Fill-Stacked.jpg
621 Pacific Ave, Suite 302
TACOMA, WA 98402
United States
621 Pacific Ave, Suite 302
TACOMA, WA 98402
United States
Photo of Lisa Coleman

Lisa Coleman

Feb
2022
15

Codependency: A Closer Look from a Christian Perspective

Lisa Coleman

CodependencyCouples CounselingIndividual CounselingRelationship Issues

“Keeping up with the Joneses” is a phrase most of us have heard and many have attempted, in one form or another. Besting our neighbors or at least trying to keep pace with other people’s lifestyles predates social media and reality television. However, as internet outlets abound and technologies advance, an existing human bent toward “othering,” preoccupying ourselves with others, is ever noticeable.

Codependency: A Closer Look from a Christian Perspective 4On one hand, we view others through a skewed lens: to blame, to idolize, to envy, to emulate. We consume, binge, and even judge their habits, appearances, choices, and more.

On the other hand, we are preoccupied with devoting our efforts and energies to pleasing and placating others. We forfeit God’s supreme role, mistakenly pinning the weight of our hope and happiness on frail, ill-equipped humanity.

Like us if you are enjoying this content.

Culture baits, luring us into other-centeredness. It dangles shiny baubles of the world in front of our starstruck gaze. It spawns an appetite, deceiving us that a little more of “this” acceptance or “that” coveted approval will satisfy the void.

Every human is created with a unique God-shaped space. Aside from Him, no one and nothing can ever fill it. Hence, our futile efforts fall on infertile ground when we try to substitute idols, whether people’s approval or accumulated substance, into the heart space intended for God alone.

Codependency

When we codependently rely on others to dictate our value, we bury ourselves under false loyalty and expectation. These mountains require intentional faith and action to remove, with God, and a trusted therapist.

Let’s dialogue and reflect, focusing our attention on codependency, what the Bible says and shows about codependency, as well as some practical steps to walk a new path.

How did we get here?

We didn’t stumble into these wayward ways without precedent. The first generation of humans, Adam and Eve, fell prey to the same. They reached for the serpent’s offer instead of the permissible abundance God had lavished. We can see the evidence of their choices in many aspects of life, including relationships.

Codependency: A Closer Look

Codependency attaches our value to how people esteem us, for example, by drawing worth from their need for us. Codependency pulls our attention away from God, our Source for identity and affirmation.

Rooted in fear, codependency is at the heart of people-pleasing. When driven to cater to others’ whims and wants, aside from what God wants for us and what He wants us to desire for ourselves, we set up idols. This unintentionally swaps devotion to our unchanging Savior to human puppeteering that is finite and fickle, at best.

Codependency: A Closer Look from a Christian Perspective 5Do we tend to the needs of others as a badge of personal identity or token to subversively bargain for what we want, even if we mean well? This cycle of deception masks manipulation and disguises control.

Here, codependency leverages discontent or other emotion to muscle others into bending to the will of our highest hopes instead of bowing to God. Codependency and the fear that feeds it, shade our view of the perfect God, thereby tinting genuine love, acceptance, and approval with our false need to perform.

However, God loves and gives because He is Love. We are as infinitely loved as we’ll ever be. He chose, adopted, and accepted us (Ephesians 1:4-6). Consequently, salvation is not attributed to performance. Rather, we are saved for showing works, the outgrowth of God’s love-in-action.

Sometimes, we Christ-followers confuse Christlikeness with serving every person’s agenda and every cause, always and in all seasons. If we want to be Biblically accurate, we need to check the text and the Christ within, at the center of it all.

Codependency: Bible Show and Tell

Jesus’ example illuminates a path to live above codependency. He teaches us to live dependent on Him, and interdependently with others. His covenant of peace anchors this truth.

Peace I leave you, My peace I give you; not as the world gives, do I give to you. Do not let your hearts be troubled, nor fearful. – John 14:27 (emphasis added)

Mind the Man/Woman

People, places, and things cannot provide the validation, peace, and purposefulness that we require. Jesus, as God and man, exemplified this, remaining firm in His identity and authority, refusing the temptation to placate others, even when He was most vulnerable (Luke 4:1-13).

Get to know who you are in Christ by getting to know Jesus. Grow in grace with Him and align with your identity. Learn to exercise godly authority by studying His example in the Word.

Mind the Mission

Jesus had one aim. He was bold and verbal about doing nothing less and nothing different than the Will of His Father. He committed, at all costs, including the expense of His own life.

“My food,” said Jesus, “is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish his work.” – John 4:34

Jesus rejected pressure from religious leaders, his disciples, and his family from distracting his Father-focused mission. Though He loved people, Jesus did not permit anyone to push him into an earthly agenda or restrain Him from following the Spirit into the unfamiliar.

Stay Connected

 

A stroll through the gospels will post landmarks where Jesus drew away from crowds large and small. Countless miracles displayed God-on-Earth manifestations, but these public wonders proceeded from secret place prayer and worship with His Father. This sensitized Jesus to the Holy Spirit’s pioneering into places where His disciples (then and current) would have avoided.

But Jesus replied to the one who was telling Him and said, “Who is My mother, and who are My brothers?” And extending His hand toward His disciples, He said, “Behold: My mother and My brothers! For whoever does the will of My Father who is in heaven, he is My brother, and sister, and mother.” – Matthew 12:48-50

Codependency: A Closer Look from a Christian Perspective 6Remain in Rest

It is not God’s will for us to be subsumed in other people’s worlds that we can’t engage in the “unforced rhythms of grace” with Him (Matthew 11:28-30). Envision yourself serving others from an overflowing place of love (not codependent manipulation). Refresh in His Presence through prayer, worship, and study, so you are well-nourished for your own life and abundantly enabled to release to others.

A Soul Check-up

Codependently pleasing people can germinate a root of bitterness when we feel that our efforts go unnoticed or unappreciated, especially if we have unmet needs and lingering expectations. When we overspend time and energy outside of the sphere

and season that God has graced, we bankrupt the resources He furnished for a balanced, meaningful life.

Consider the following questions for a codependency heart check:

  • Are you simmering in unresolved anger or secretly stashing resentment?
  • Are you agreeing to do more for others than they are willing to do for themselves?
  • Are you committing more to others’ agendas than to walking in holiness?
  • Have you extended energy, time, and resources to support others with your initial yes, but now you can’t manage their wants and your needs?

Biting more than we can reasonably chew leaves us bloated, sick, and regretful. We may need to remove some commitments from our plates, and perhaps save for another day, delegate, outsource, or share with others whose capacity and capability match the current task.

Healthy Othering

Codependency: A Closer Look from a Christian Perspective 7

The Bible narrates God’s love story as one in which His people continually turned from Him, in pursuit of other gods. Relentlessly and repeatedly, He wooed and redeemed them from their proclivity toward idolatry and self-destruction.

While modernized idolatry may not always resemble a shrine in the living room, it can mimic the “Joneses” or strive to please others more than prioritizing God’s Heart. The eternal God still wants to rescue us from the idolatry of codependency and people-pleasing.

God wants a version of “one another-Ing,” in its proper place. Scripture encourages other-oriented activities that flow from Christ-centered focus, distinguishing interdependence from codependency.

Living interdependently, as members one to another, sees the Body of Christ as vibrant and functioning, as each unit contributes to the others, causing the whole to thrive. We are empowered for healthy interdependence: to love, serve, teach, admonish, forgive, and pray for one another.

Affirmation and Next Steps

Tend your garden. Steward your God-given purpose and responsibility without overreaching and robbing people of the opportunity to make their own choices and engage in their relationship with Jesus Christ, the only Savior. Cheer others on. Afford them the agency of owning their choices by living dependently on God as Father and interdependently with you as sister or brother in Christ.

Nurture the good God has placed in you. How effective can you be for God, yourself, and the others you may be codependently addicted to pleasing? Embrace the discomfort and delight of allowing your own unique light to shine, bringing God’s heat and warmth to cold and dark spaces by simply being yourself, with no performance motives attached. You are enough, as who He created and called, apart from what you can do for others.

Performance will never harness more of the Father’s love or acceptance, and lack of performance will never diminish or dilute it. God is concerned with conforming you to Christ’s image. He desires that you maximize your godly potential by being all you were created to be.

Maybe bringing the change that’s needed in others first appears by being the change for your own life, without trying to produce an internal or external change in others. Trust them and yourself to God’s capable hands. Are you ready to live free from codependency? Reach out to us today to activate that momentum. Our therapists are equipped to journey the next leap with you.

Photos:
“Meadow Flowers” Courtesy of Jakub Kriz, Unsplash.com, CC0 License; “Free Spirit”, Courtesy of Javier Allegue Barros, Unsplash.com, CC0 License; “At the Cliff’s Edge”, Courtesy of Kal Visuals, Unsplash.com, CC0 License; “Boardwalk”, Courtesy of Todd Quackenbush, Unsplash.com, CC0 License

DISCLAIMER: THIS ARTICLE DOES NOT PROVIDE MEDICAL ADVICE

The information, including but not limited to, text, graphics, images and other material contained on this article are for informational purposes only. No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Please contact one of our counselors for further information.

  • Share on Facebook
  • Tweet it
  • ↑ Back to top
Photo of Lisa Coleman
Lisa is currently not accepting new clients

Lisa Coleman

Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker
(253) 238-0321 lisac@seattlechristiancounseling.com

I am here to support you through whatever conflict you are facing. Through our sessions together, I will teach you the tools you need to be the best version of who God created you to be. As a Christian counselor, my desire is to serve my clients as a vessel for Christ, using the gifts the Lord has given me to heal brokenness and restore hope, with God’s help. With integrity and compassion, I will listen carefully to your story and experiences and work closely with you to develop a treatment plan to meet your needs. Read more articles by Lisa »

Other articles that might interest you...

Codependency, Addiction, and Your Relationship: A Christian Counselor’s Perspective   
Tacoma Christian Counseling

Codependency, Addiction, and Your ...

Crystal Andrus said it best when she said, “Imagine saying this: I love you so much I will no longer...

continue reading »
What is Premarital Counseling? 1
Tacoma Christian Counseling

What is Premarital Counseling?

Amongst the laundry list of pre-wedding “To-Dos” someone, somewhere along the way may have mentioned “premarital counseling.” However, if you...

continue reading »
Premarital Christian Counseling in the 21st Century 1
Tacoma Christian Counseling

Premarital Christian Counseling in the ...

Taking the fig leaves off the relationship. The subject of premarital counseling comes on the heels of an ever-approaching wedding...

continue reading »

About Lisa

Photo of Lisa Coleman

Lisa Coleman, LICSW

Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker

I am here to support you through whatever conflict you are facing. Through our sessions together, I will teach you the tools you need to be the best version of who God created you to be. As a Christian counselor, my desire is to serve my clients as a vessel for Christ, using the gifts the Lord has given me to heal brokenness and restore hope, with God’s help. With integrity and compassion, I will listen carefully to your story and experiences and work closely with you to develop a treatment plan to meet your needs. View Lisa's Profile

Recent articles by Lisa

  • Nov 5 · Help with Teen Anger Management
  • Oct 4 · 6 Bible Verses to Help Anxiety in Children
  • Sep 6 · Codependent Behavior: Peacekeeper or Peacemaker
See all articles by Lisa »

Related Services

  • Codependency
  • Couples Counseling
  • Individual Counseling
  • Relationship Issues

Lisa's Office Locations

  • Photo of the Kent office

    Kent

    Washington

    General Office Number

    (253) 656-5454
    24909 104th Ave SE,, Suite 101-A Kent, WA 98030

    View Office Details
  • Photo of the Online (WA only) office

    Online (WA only)

    General Office Number

    (206) 388-3929
    ,  

    View Office Details
Tacoma Christian Counseling Logo
Tacoma Christian Counseling
Professional help with faith-based values
We are an association of professional, independently licensed Christian counselors experienced in helping people of all ages find healing for a wide variety of issues.
© 2025 Tacoma Christian Counseling. All rights reserved.
621 Pacific Ave,, Tacoma, WA 98402. Tel (253) 777-1997.
Facebook Twitter Online Counseling About Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use Feel free to contact us!
We are open for business. In person and online counseling are available now.