Titus 2 Birthing
Frequently Asked Questions
I am frequently asked how the Titus 2
Birthing Programs differ from other doula and childbirth education
certification programs. I hope this page will answer a number of those questions and assist you in deciding whether this program or another is best for you.
I have divided this into four different
sections:
- How the Titus 2 Birthing program emphasis is different
- What makes the Titus 2 Birthing doula certification program different from other doula certification programs
- What makes the Titus 2 Birthing childbirth education program different from other childbirth education certification program
- Comments others have made about the Titus 2 Birthing programs
If you have questions not answered in this FAQ page, feel free to email them to me at titus2@quixnet.net and I will provide the best answer I can. Who knows, your question may spark something that needs to be added to the FAQ page.
The Titus 2 Emphasis
- What does Titus 2 mean?
- The Titus 2 principle is a mentoring
process. It gets it's name from Titus 2:1-8 where the older women
are told to teach the younger women how to be godly keepers of
their home, lovers of their husbands and children, and to exhibit
a lifestyle of moral chastity, wisdom and purity. The older women
must first be living a godly life in order to teach the younger
women by example and word. The older women must also be careful in
their teaching; insuring that it is correct and morally
sound.
- The Titus 2 Birthing principle is therefore
one where an older, more experienced and trained woman mentors or
disciples a younger woman in how to safely give birth, manage her
growing family, parent effectively, and be a good "help-meet" for
her husband. She teaches most effectively by modeling, teaching
from the Bible and current medical information, and by being
responsive to the needs of her client in a "What Would Jesus Do"
attitude.
- What difference does the Titus 2
principle make in terms of how clients are served?
- First and foremost, it changes our
motivation in service. Col 3:17
And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, [do] all in the name of the
Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father by
him.KJV Tit 2:9 Servants,be obedient unto your master, and
be pleasing and give satisfaction in all things.AB As servants of God's our first service and
obedience is to Him and we do that in part by submitting our
desires for a client's birth to Him and to the client.
- Secondly, because our first obedience is
to God, and we acknowledge Him as the Giver of Life; we bring to
the birth experience an appreciation of the miracle of birth, a
reverence for life, an acknowledgement that God is in control, and
a faith that He will bring all things together for our ultimate
good. This doesn't mean that everything goes smoothly or that we
are never puzzled by how something that seems to be so bad can
work for our good! It does mean that we pray about the matter,
trust Him to keep His promises, and acknowledge that we are not in
control and He is.
- Thirdly, it means that we seek wisdom
beyond just what is human; i.e. biblical wisdom and medical
wisdom. We look to the Bible to confirm that birth is basically
safe, that nutritional wisdom in Old Testament Law still has
something to say to New Testament Christians, that prayer and
faith still have the power to change the outcome, that God's mercy
often doesn't give us what we deserve, that sin and past
lifestyles can be overcome, and that God doesn't give us bad gifts
or more than we can handle. All of these things can enable us and
our clients to have a safe and joyous birth through faith in His
Word.
- How else does the Titus 2 principle
change our work?
- Networking with local churches,
ministries, crisis pregnancy centers, and other faith-based
programs can help the Titus 2 birth professional find a unique
niche in the community. Some churches are assisting some of our
members by providing classroom space, equipment, and even
assisting with the cost of training in an effort to minister to
young families in their body. This support and networking can
assist you in finding clients who are seeking a biblical approach
to the birth process.
- Working as a Certified Christian birth professional also enables you to use your
faith openly in working with clients. Advertising Christian
childbirth classes and/or Christian labor support allows your
clients to know what and Who you stand for. This usually means an
openness to a variety of activities not normally seen in
childbirth classes or labor support: devotions, singing of hymns
and praise music, sharing of prayer and praise reports followed by
group prayer, and assistance with needs through church and
ministry support. While each professional may not use all of these
activities, she may choose to incorporate any of these or other
expressions of her Christian faith in her service.
The Titus 2 Doula Difference
- How does the Titus 2 Doula program
differ from other certification programs?
- First, by a determined Christian
approach to the doula's role in birth. Secondly, by including
resources with an explicit Christian emphasis. Third, by
encouraging networking with churches and faith-based programs to
provide a Christian alternative in birth services. Fourth, by
providng support to the doula that includes prayer, biblical
counsel, and a training program that brings all of these
differences into focus.
- How does Christian labor support
differ in emphasis from a more secular option?
- Christian labor support brings some
additional benefits to labor support these include:
- a woman-to-woman mentoring approach
- encouragement of the dad as priest
and head of his home and to facilitate his active
participation
- encouragment to include family prayer
and worship in the pregnancy experience
- accurate information from both the
medical model and from biblical wisdom
- banishment of fear from the birth
process by study of pregnancy and childbirth in the
Bible
- providing a model and information
regarding various Christian parenting models
- inclusion of faith, prayer,
scripture, biblical meditation, and Christian music as comfort
measures
- celebration of the spiritual aspects
of birth
- an appreciation and use of the
biblical principle of laying on of hands
- an acceptance of the servant nature
of this job
- a Christian witness and emphasis to
those in need
- additional resources from faith-based
sources to meet the needs of clients
- an encouragement of the discipling
process and community of faith outreach
- All of these things help the doula and
the client participate in the birth process from a spiritual,
physical, sexual, mental and emotional perspective.
- What are some differences in the
training component?
- The following topics are included in the
Titus 2 Birthing: Christian Labor Support As Ministry workshop,
but not generally covered in other kinds of labor support
certification training:
- What is Christian Labor
Support
- Why Christian Labor Support
- A Titus 2 Ministry Outlook
- Having a Servant's Heart
- Exercising Your Faith
- Encouraging the Father as Priest and
Head of His Home
- Spiritual Discernment and Dealing
with Past Abuse
- A Biblical Perspective on Pain in
Childbirth
- The Purpose of Christian Childbirth
Education
- Networking with Churches and
Ministries
- Family-Based Ministries
- Jail and Hospital Chaplaincy
Programs
- Presenting Your Faith in a Few Easy
Steps
- Additionally, each workshop session is
started with a devotional and prayer time. Trainings are often
held in churches and ministry offices with the support and
sponsorship of the local church. Significant time and thought is
also spent on inexpensive teaching tools and techniques for those
who want to teach, don't have a lot of extra capital, and want to
keep class cost down so they can offer scholarships and discounts
as needed.
-
- What are some differences in the
reading component?
- The following books are a part of the
reading component and are not normally found in the required
reading of other programs. We make no apology for their explicit
Christian tone.
- The Holy Bible
- Helen Wessel -- The Joy of Natural
Childbirth: 5th Ed. of Nat. CB & The Christian Family
- Helen Wessel -- Under the Apple
Tree
- Grantly Dick-Read -- Childbirth Without
Fear
- William & Martha Sears -- The Birth
Book
- William & Martha Sears -- The
Pregnancy Book
- Harriet Schiff -- The Bereaved
Parent
- Debra Evans -- Without Moral
Limits
- Debra Evans -- The Christian Woman's
Guide to Personal Health Care
- Debra Evans -- The Christian Woman's
Guide to Childbirth
-
- Are there any other differences that
make the Titus 2 Birthing Program different or unique?
- Much of the Titus 2 Birth program is
decidedly geared to natural childbirth. In some ways Titus 2
Birthing goes a step beyond some of the other programs. One
difference is a focus on ways that the medical model has trapped
women into a system that infers that God's method of childbirth
and infant nutrition is somehow inferior to the one that man can
devise. This is not to say that there are not legitimate needs for
medical intervention or artificial human milk. It does mean that
we acknowledge that God created women to give birth and feed their
babies in a certain way and that under normal circumstances, His
Way is still best. God's most creative work, human beings, were
the only part of His creation that He said was "Very Good" and the
only part created in His image.
- We encourage the use of midwives,
non-interventive doctors, traditional birth settings, and
environments which support women who want to birth normally and
naturally. We encourage women to work with their caregivers,
spouse, and support system to create the best possible birth
environment for herself and her baby. We encourage family-centered
birthing. We encourage attachment parenting, both before and after
birth.
- We do provide support to women who
choose to birth in hospitals with full medical technology,
including surgical births, and those who choose to feed their
babies artificial breast milk (formula). We provide information on
a variety of medical procedures, options and allow the client to
make an informed choice. We provide support in these circumstances
because we believe that all women who want support should get it.
We also believe that the individual has the right to consent or
decline any health option and the right to receive all of the
information available in making a decision. We do not make
decisions for our clients. We trust, however, that in most cases,
the least interventive and most natural option is often the
best.
- We encourage working with churches and
para-church ministries because we believe that one aspect of
church ministry should be to encourage and support families as
they grow. This should include a spiritual and biblical emphasis
on the responsibilities of parenting, sexuality, and family
communication. We also believe that the pro-life perspective
should be included when discussing choices in reproductive
technology, birth control, vaccination, and pre-natal
testing.
-
- What is the Titus 2 position on herbs
and nutrition?
- We encourage our birth professionals to
learn all they can about nutrition and herbs, based on Gen. 1:29,
and to learn to use that knowledge effectively, appropriately, and
safely. (A list of recommended resources is available.)
It does not mean that we certify
our birth professionals to use herbal medicines or to prescribe
herbs to treat their clients or certify them as
nutritionists. It does mean that
we encourage them to get additional training and to know what
constitutes healthy nutrition and which herbs are safe in
pregnancy, which are not and which should be used with caution. It
also means that we encourage our birth professionals to provide
the client with true informed consent regarding any health
option.
-
- What is the Titus 2 position on
clinical skills?
- We acknowledge that many applicants who
come to us have a variety of experiences and training. Many of our
workshop attendees are midwives, student midwives, nurses,
childbirth educators, and other birth professionals. We know that
many of them have training beyond that of the traditional doula
providing emotional and physical support. Titus 2 does not certify
these professionals as qualified to perform clinical skills. It
does however allow the birth professional to use skills obtained
through other training, with proper and complete skills
verification and where the skill is required.
- This does not mean that we encourage the
doula to do vaginal exams in the hospital, for example, where
there are numerous persons (nurses, doctors, midwives, etc.) to
provide this skill. However, with the full knowledge of
the primary caregiver, and with a client laboring at home, she
might provide limited clinical skills provided that she has the
following: documented skills
training and compentence for the task (a copy of her competency
documentation must be in her Titus 2 permanent file, signed by a
licensed professional authorized to guarantee compentency),
approval from the primary caregiver, full informed consent from
the client, and a documented need for the skills provided. Full
and complete documentation of the above must be included with
birth notes from every birth where clinical skills were used. The
client, birth professional, and primary caregiver must be clear
that Titus 2 Birthing does not certify the competency of the doula
to provide clinical skills.
- We remind the birth professional that
most clinical skills are still interventions and should be used
sparingly, if at all, by labor support. Clinical skills performed
by non-trained individuals is neither wise nor responsible
behavior. Any intervention and/or clinical skill should only be
used in the event of a legitimate need for safe care of mom and
baby, and with full informed consent of the client and full
knowledge and approval of the primary caregiver.
- Additionally, we require that all Titus
2 applicants and certified professionals maintain CPR
certification and know emergency birth procedures. We
encourage birth professionals to use all the skills they have in
an emergency where the life of mom and baby are at risk, in
addition to calling EMS or 911.
-
- Explain the Titus 2 policy on sanctity of life issues.
- Titus 2 maintains that God, and God alone, determines when a
life begins and ends. Children are a gift from Him, and the fruit
of the womb is His reward. (Ps. 127: 3) We do not support the use
of medical technology to abort a child at any stage from
conception through birth. We support the full use of medical
technology to save the life of mother and baby when they are in
danger. We encourage parents to explore the risks of benefits of
all pre-natal testing and be aware that a significant number of
those tests include risks to the life of the baby, are offered so
that parents have the option to abort imperfect babies, and
encourage a moral climate that supports eugenics.
- We also encourage full informed consent regardingbirth
control options so that parents are aware of which methods can
and do cause the death of a fertilized ovum. We encourage parents
who choose to plan their family size to consider non-abortive
options such as Natural Family Planning and barrier methods. We
also encourage parents to consider the connection between the
birth control use rate and the divorce rate and seek God as to
what He would have them to do in regards to this matter.
The Titus 2 Childbirth Education
Difference
- How does the Titus 2 Childbirth
Educator program differ from secular certification
programs?
- First, by a determined biblical approach
to the pregnancy and birth experience positioned alongside the
medical information. Secondly, by including resources with an
explicit Christian emphasis. Third, by encouraging networking with
churches and faith-based programs to provide a Christian
alternative in birth services. Fourth, by providng support to the
educator that includes prayer, biblical counsel, and a training
program that brings all of these differences into focus.
- How is the program learning
structured?
- The Titus 2 Birthing childbirth educator
program includes nine module question sheets which cover at least
three different topics per sheet. Applicants begin the process by
completing the registration form, sending their fees in. They
receive a Participant's Workbook, Presenter's Manual and a
reference manual along with the module question sheets. Each
module sheet is turned in, checked and returned with any comments
or corrections. Somewhere past the mid-point in the module
process, the applicant attends a 4-day intensive training with
other applicants for some in-depth training and mentoring. Upon
completion of the last module, applicants who have successfully
completed all of the other requirements can teach one class
provisionally. When the provisional series is complete, all of the
evaluations and paperwork is returned for a final review, and full
certification is granted.
- What material is covered in the
childbirth education workbook?
- The following list includes all topics
listed by the class number in the series. This outline is from the 2004 revised workbooks.
- Class 1: Pregnant Anatomy/Physiology,
Pregnancy Old Wives Tales, Nutrition, Harmful Substances
Overview, Taking Time for Important Things, The Partner's Role,
Exercise and Relaxation Pt. 1, Suggested Reading List
- Class 2: Informed Consent, Pregnant
Patient Rights & Responsibilities, Prenatal Care, Pregnancy
Discomforts, Breathing in Labor, Exercise & Relaxation Pt.
2, More Toxic Substances
- Class 3: Gestational Cycle and the
Bible, Gestational Landmarks, Pain in Childbirth and the Bible, Maternal/Fetal Screens, Birth Concerns, Transports, Cesarean Sections
- Class 4: Childbirth definitions, Getting Ready for Labor and Delivery, Stages of Labor, Birth Analogies, Emergency Birth
- Class 5: Labor and Birthing
Positions, Comfort Measures, Partner Helps - Suuport in Labor and Birth, Pain
Medication at the Hospital
- Class 6: The Many Birth Options Available, Newborn Options
to Consider (Feeding, Circumcision, Vaccinating), Post-partum Care, Post-partum Depression, Birth Plans
- The Newborn Class (2 session series): Postpartum Care, Post-partum
Blues and Depression, Feeding Your Baby, Newborn Testing,
Newborn Care, SIDS Prevention, Frugal Baby Tips, Safety First,
First Year Milestones, Family Planning Options, Parenting Styles, Life Changes, Sibling Issues
- Breastfeeding Class: Getting Started Right, Common Breastfeeding Concerns, Attachment Parenting and Breastfeeding, Breastfeeding and Family Planning Options, Breast Pumps and Other Supplies, Co-Sleeping, Breastfeeding and Immunity
- The Titus 2 Birthing workbooks are put
together for the educator so they come ready for handout at the
first class.
-
- What are some differences in the
reading component?
- The following books are a part of the
recommended reading component and are not normally found in the
required reading of other programs. We make no apology for
explicit Christian tone or for those materials that encourage
natural options in health care.
- The Holy Bible
- Helen Wessel -- The Joy of Natural
Childbirth: 5th Ed. of Nat. CB & The Christian Family
- Kathleen Hickling -- What to Expect from
God When You're Expecting
- Zola Levitt -- The Seven Feasts of
Israel
- William Sears -- Becoming a
Father
- William & Martha Sears -- The Birth
Book
- William & Martha Sears -- The
Pregnancy Book
- William Sears -- The SIDS Book
- William & Maartha Sears -- Parenting
the Fussy Baby and the High Needs Child
- William Sears -- Becoming a
Father
- William Sears -- Parenting and Child
Care
- William Sears -- The Ministry of
Parenting Your Baby
- William Sears -- Nighttime
Parenting
- Klaus, Kennel & Kennel -- Bonding:
Building the Foundatins of Secure Attachment and
Independence
- Dobson & Smalley -- Seven Promises
of a Promise Keeper
- Smalley and Trent -- The Language of
Love
- Wheat & Perkins -- Secret Choices:
Personal Decisions That Affect Your Marriage
- Ed and Faye Wheat -- Intended for
Pleasure
- Harriet Schiff -- The Bereaved
Parent
- H. Norman Wright -- Recovering from the
Losses of Life
- Bruce Flamm -- Birth After
Cesarean
- Robert Mendohlson -- MalePractice: How
Doctors Manipulate Women
- Robert Mendohlson -- How to Raise a
Healthy Child In Spite of Your Doctor
- Neil Miller -- Vaccines: Are They Really
Safe and Effective
- Ken Freeman -- Free Me to Live
- David Reardon -- Aborted Women: Silent
No More
- Florence Littauer -- Hope for Hurting
Women
- Debra Evans -- Without Moral
Limits
- Debra Evans -- The Christian Woman's
Guide to Personal Health Care
- Debra Evans -- The Christian Woman's
Guide to Childbirth
- Debra Evans -- The Christian Woman's
Guide to Sexuality
- Kippley -- The Art of Natural Family
Planning
- George Grant -- Grand Illusions: The
Legacy of Planned Parenthood
- H. Norman Wright -- Questions Women Ask
in Private
- Cline & Faye -- Parenting With Love
and Logic
- Tim LaHaye - The Spirit-Controlled
Temperment
- Ross Campbell -- How to Really Love Your
Child
-
- Are there any other differences that
make the Titus 2 Birthing Program different or unique?
- Much of the Titus 2 childbirth education
program is decidedly geared to natural childbirth. It includes a
focus on ways that the medical model has trapped women into a
system that infers that God's method of childbirth and infant
nutrition is somehow inferior to the one that man can devise. This
is not to say that there are not legitimate needs for medical
intervention or artificial human milk. It does mean that we
acknowledge that God created women to give birth and feed their
babies in a certain way and that under normal circumstances, His
Way is still best. God's most creative work, human beings, were
the only part of His creation that He said was "Very Good" and the
only part created in His image.
- We encourage the use of midwives,
non-interventive doctors, traditional birth settings, and
environments which support women who want to birth normally and
naturally. We encourage women to work with their caregivers,
spouse, and support system to create the best possible birth
environment for herself and her baby. We encourage family-centered
birthing and attachment parenting, both before and after
birth.
- We have chosen to explore the efficacy
and safety of vaccines because many parents may never see
information on the risks or disease statistics. We also look at
options in vaccine exemptions. Other newborn options covered
include circumcision, Vitamin K injections and eye ointments. The
material is presented to give parent's a full picture of the
benefits, risks, and alternatives to these newborn
pprocedures.
- We present options in parenting styles
including: discipline, breastfeeding, kangaroo care, attachment
parenting, family beds, family planning, and marriage enrichment.
Family communication skills, bonding, newborn massage, and
mentoring are all presented as methods to increase the attachment
between parents and children and ways to strengthen the family in
an age where families are under attack.
- We encourage working with churches and
para-church ministries because we believe that one aspect of
church ministry should be to encourage and support families as
they grow. This should include a spiritual and biblical emphasis
on the responsibilities of parenting, sexuality, and family
communication. We also believe that the pro-life perspective
should be included when discussing choices in reproductive
technology, birth control, vaccination, and pre-natal
testing.
What Others Are Saying About the Titus 2
Difference
- A novel, and biblically grounded
approach to the birth process. I think this program has a lot of
merit. It is well-thought out, well-written, profession in
appearance, and up-to-date. It is hands-down the winner in my
opinion. Carol Howard,
CBE
- I would heartily recommend this
workshop. I had been to about 30odd births when I attended the
workshop, and I had already been a student of midwifery for three
years. I learned so much about hospital labor support, which I
have only done on occasion. Kathy is a consummate professional,
with a heart for labor support. The workshop was well organized,
had wonderful handouts, excellent advice for comfort measures for
the mom (for both hospital and homebirths,) and fun fellowship -
and it was only the first time the workshop had been presented!
Allison Ratliff, CPM
- (The labor support workshop) was a
well-presented, Christian view that is very helpful. The Christian
emphasis and visual demonstrations were good for myself and my
daughter. Sherri and Ashley
Hydor
- There is a need for as many women to be
trained from this perspective, and the training can be used in all
aspects of life. Thank you so much! Anne Barron
- The "Heart" intent behind the purpose of
everything was great, as well as the skills I learned. I am very
thankful for this training. Kathy was cler and to the point. She
delivers information very well! Sarah Jacobs
- Everything was covered thoroughly. The
props and tools used for labor support comfort measures was
extremely useful. I am feeling much more confident and capable
than before I came. All of the information was great and the
spiritual perspective was the best of all. Rebekah Barney
- Good biblical perspective. We had a
wonderful instructor with a lot of knowledge and a passionate
zeal. Kim Marshall
- And finally, a word from the
author:
- "It does take the rebel approach to
some birth and newborn options. That's not necessarily bad. Better
to be a Rebel With a
Cause than a rebel without a
cause. The intent is to equip parents to make well-informed
choices for themselves and their children. If the rebel approach
works to accomplish this, then I'm not ashamed to be considered a
rebel. Kathy Rateliff
(in response to a comment about
the program appealing more to the rebel or radical birth
professional than the main-stream through support of homebirth,
homeschooling, non-vaccination status, natural health options, and
quiverfull lifestyles.)
If you would like more info on any of the
Titus 2 Birthing programs, you can contact Kathy Rateliff at:
titus2ed@aol.com
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