Kevon Owen offers individual clinical psychotherapy in Oklahoma City with explicit Christian theological grounding, serving adults and adolescents who want mental health treatment aligned with their faith perspective rather than secular or neutral frameworks.
This is a private practice psychotherapy service, not a psychiatric clinic or medication-management facility. Owen holds credentials as a licensed professional counselor and operates from a clinical model that integrates Christian worldview into the therapeutic process. The scope includes depression, anxiety, trauma, relationship issues, identity questions, and life transitions. This is distinct from pastoral counseling (which operates under pastoral authority) and from generic secular therapy; it targets people for whom faith integration is not supplementary but central to why they seek care.
Owen provides individual psychotherapy sessions, typically 50 to 60 minutes. The practice uses evidence-based clinical approaches (cognitive behavioral therapy, trauma-informed methods) within a Christian interpretive framework. Sessions address presenting issues through both psychological and faith lenses, which can mean exploring how belief affects coping, how trauma intersects with faith questions, or how spiritual practices interact with symptom management.
Specific pricing was not independently verified; prospective clients should contact the practice directly. Many private psychotherapy practices in Oklahoma City charge between $80 and $150 per session; insurance reimbursement and out-of-pocket cost depend on plan design and network status. Confirm current fees and whether Owen participates in your insurance plan before scheduling.
Oklahoma City has secular individual therapists (through providers like Mercy Oklahoma City's behavioral health network and private practices throughout Midtown and Edmond), religiously integrative but non-denominational counselors, and explicitly Christian practices. The difference is not quality but framework. A client at a secular practice works within psychological terminology and neutrality on spirituality; a client at Owen's practice works within a system where faith is treated as clinically meaningful and part of the treatment structure. This matters most for clients who find secular therapy either incomplete or ideologically misaligned. For clients for whom religious integration is irrelevant or unwanted, a secular therapist or a practice like the Norman-based Counseling and Wellness Center may be a better fit.
This practice suits Christians (particularly evangelical, non-denominational, or conservative Protestant clients) who experience mental health struggles and want a therapist who shares their theological framework and can speak that language directly. It is also appropriate for adolescents with faith questions who benefit from adult guidance that does not position faith and psychology as contradictory.
It does not suit clients who prefer secular treatment, those from non-Christian traditions, or those who have experienced spiritual abuse or religious trauma and need therapy that creates distance from faith institutions. A client with trauma rooted in church experience may require a therapist trained specifically in religious trauma, regardless of the therapist's personal faith.
Initial sessions typically include a clinical intake, assessment of presenting concerns, psychiatric history, and medication history (if relevant). In faith-integrated practice, the intake also explores the client's spiritual background, current faith engagement, and whether they want their spirituality addressed in therapy. This clarifies expectations and consent early. The first visit establishes whether the therapeutic fit feels right and whether the client's goals align with the practice's approach.
Specific office hours and appointment availability should be confirmed directly with the practice. Most private psychotherapy practices in Oklahoma City offer evening or early-morning slots to accommodate working clients; many also offer telehealth, which reduces travel. Parking depends on office location; confirm whether the practice is in a dedicated office suite, shared professional building, or other setting when you schedule.
OKC's counseling landscape is dominated by large systems and secular independent practices; explicitly faith-integrated clinical psychotherapy is less common and requires deliberate searching. Kevon Owen fills that niche for a specific population: clients who refuse the false choice between their faith and competent mental health care.
