Category Archives: book reviews

Christian Counseling or Spiritual Guidance?


Sorry for the absence. Grading and teaching, teaching and grading….soon to be over but not yet.

In chapter 5 of Christian Counseling, Malony and Augsburger address this question: How might Christian counseling help believers discern how faith works out in everyday life? The authors believe, “Christian counseling should provide an opportunity to explore faith in a manner that goes far beyond [living in a christian culture in an unconscious manner].” Using the analogy of walking (casual christian living) vs. hiking, they say, “The task of Christian counseling is to help walkers become hikers.” Continue reading

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What is the method of Christian counseling?


In chapter 4 of Christian Counseling, Malony and Augsburger attempt to prescribe what should happen in counseling, “after you say ‘hello?’ In other words, What do you do when the door is shut and there is nothing but space between you and another person?” (p. 26). Note that they do not intend to survey what Christians do, but what they should do.

So, what should they do? The authors suggest that like all counselors, Christians should listen first; advise second. The first part is universal to all counselors, the advising will need to be uniquely Christian. So far, so good. At this point, the authors detour into what behavioral essentials mark the Christian life: prayer, worship, bible study, acts of service to others. The question they undertake is to discern whether these activities are to be part of the counselor’s work with the client. The authors answer both yes and no.

Yes, these behaviors are important in reaching the “master motive” of Christian counseling: increasing and maintaining a sense of God (p. 28). To do so counselors help people encounter (not study) God AND to interpret that experience (just as Moses encounters God at the burning bush, so he also needs God’s words to understand. So, there are explicit uses of prayer, scriptures (not worship as they deem that a church role), and service.

No, the counselor does not always explicitly use these activities. They may incarnate Christ through modeling and not words.

So, how do the authors suggest that be worked out? Intentionality in the following way:
Action 1: Pray for the session prior to meeting with the client
Action 2: Invite the client to pray silently and end with a liturgical phrase such as, “The Lord be with you…”
Action 3: Proclamation: The risen Christ is with us (naming that Christ is present in the session)
Action 4: Creative middle: the heart of the counseling that may be following a particular counseling model. Mostly, there will be searching for insight and moving towards practicing new habits.
Action 5: Committing clients to God

Commentary: If I were more liturgical, I might like this. But I’m not. I’ve never done exactly what they say. However, I think it is helpful to remember why we are counseling (the superordinate goals). And so, I do pray for clients and for wisdom, we do have a middle part, and then we ask for God’s help at the end. My beef with this chapter is that the creative middle is massively important. How does one use the Word there, if at all. How does one listen and advise. Too little is given to that area. I understand that there will be differing opinions but a methodology chapter that focuses on starting and stopping sessions misses much.

What do you think about the essential behaviors of the Christian life? Somehow they cover most of it and yet of course it feels rather thin since lists never convey the rich vitality of living in community.

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Reconciliation Blues at Biblical last night


In last night’s Ethics/Cross Cultural Counseling class we had a phone interview with Edward Gilbreath, author of Reconciliation Blues.  I heartily recommend his book. See my side bar for a link to his blog. Here’s a couple of my personal take-aways: Continue reading

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What is the substance of Christian counseling?


In this third chapter, the authors consider the substance of Christian counseling. They present the apologetic that all counseling (secular to Christian) is evangelistic in nature. “It is now accepted that all counseling is impositional. Every counselor imposes a point of view on those who come for help. All counseling is rhetoric–that is, designed to influence clients…” (p. 18). They distinguish between overt and covert forms of “evangelism” but contend that all counseling makes metaphysical or quasi-religious claims about the nature of persons and the nature of change. They believe that “sharp distinctions between religious and psychological theories are ill-advised” due to the the subjectivity of theories (p. 20).

Since counseling theory is just that, not something provable in a grand sort of way (neither is it completely without objective data however), both christian and secular counseling theories share some commonalities:

1. Observations (subjective facts)
2. Intervening variables (meanings given to those “facts”)
3. Mediating constructs (higher level abstractions and assumptions made from steps 1 and 2)

So, for christian counseling, we have the intervening variable of God. God is. And God advocates, reconciles, heals and directs.

Commentary: I’m surprised by several things in this chapter. It is good to hear their dictum that all counseling is impositional. I remember saying that in my doctoral program and being pooh-poohed for saying such. Biblical counselors have been saying this for years but it is good for others to “catch up.” I think they are basically advocating a presuppositional view of counseling. There are no “brute” facts but observations that are immediately interpreted and supported by interpretations on a higher scale. Unfortunately, this chapter is quite short and not much in the area of substance as it is supposed to be about. Really, it should be entitled, The starting point of Christian counseling. Further, God is active in our day-to-day lives in the roles they list. But so much could be said beyond their few paragraphs. Next they plan to look at the process of christian counseling.

I’m getting the feeling that this is an apologetic for these two authors to stake their claim. But, it doesn’t have that much substance yet.

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What is Christian Counseling? Chapter 2


In this chapter of Christian Counseling, Maloney & Augsburger articulate the differences between those who want explicit Christian counseling and those who want Christians who counsel. They detail many reasons why clients seek out Christians. Continue reading

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What is Christian Counseling? Chapter 1


Returning to Maloney & Augsburger’s, Christian Counseling: An Introduction (see initial post on 5/22/07) we see them tackle the topic of what makes Christian counseling Christian. This chapter sets an overview for the remaining chapters in this section on foundational assumptions. Here are some points they make: Continue reading

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What is Christian Counseling, anyway? A review


Today I’m going to start a careful review of a new book by H. Newton Malony and David Augsburger entitled, Christian Counseling: An introduction (Abingdon Press, 2007). Malony and Augsburger are well established professors at Fuller Seminary. In this book they attempt to answer the question, What should Christian Counseling look like? How will they try to answer this? “We have no intention of doing a survey and, on the basis of the results, describing what Christian counselors do. In an unapologetic manner, we intend to detail the parameters of what we firmly believe should be the foundations and applications of Christian counseling” (viii). Since this is a question that has been on many students minds, I’d like to summarize and comment on their short book of 14 chapters (some 160 pages of text).

I’ll start with their preface… Continue reading

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What’s your favorite parenting book and why?


There are tons of parenting books on the Christian market at the present time. I’ve read many of them, though there seems to be a new one every week. I confess that I have a bias against a lot of Christian advice books. I read many of them as trying to offer us a path to the easy life. “If you follow my proven ideas, your kids will turn out well.” That said, there are some books out there that contain some good advice as long as you don’t buy the whole thing hook, line, and sinker. Here’s a few I have found helpful (not in order of value, importance, or anything but as they come to my mind): Continue reading

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Back to Volf


Sorry for the long hiatus from Volf. The semester is heating up and some knucklehead agreed to several outside speaking engagements this spring. Ugh. Anyway, Volf starts provides a good reminder of where he is at the beginning of chapter 9 of End of Memory:

My thesis is the third part of this book has been simple: memories of suffered wrongs will not come to the minds of the citizens of the world to come [when they get to that world!], for in it they will perfectly enjoy God and one another in God….Indeed, the offender ceases to be an offender, for non-remembrance has taken away the very being of the offense… (177)

So, he is interested in thinking about the “transition from the world as it is to the world of perfect love…” (178) He starts by reminding us that on the final judgment, our sins against God and neighbor must be brought to light in a social event before we are freed from our guilt and finally transformed. He goes on to suggest that each person will “joyfully appropriate the results of the judgment.” I think he means those who are on their way to heaven.

Its here I want to stop and consider two points. (1) Most of us do not want any, much less all, of our sinful actions against God and neighbor to be brought to light, and (2) many of us do not want offenders really released from all guilt. But I think it will be much like Aslan’s dealings with various individuals. We will be so focused on God’s grace and mercy that our shame will be short lived and we will have no time to even consider someone else’s wrong doing. We will be healed of all jealousy and bitterness and second-guessing.

Can’t wait for that!  

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The impossible gift of forgetting wrongs done to you


Sorry for the brief hiatus from The End of Memory. Starting a new semester plus am looking at two books that I may review in some detail right after (Jimmy Carter’s new book on the Palestinian/Israeli conflict and Ed Gilbreath’s book on being a black man in white evangelical organizations–both have to do with dealing with longstanding conflict and hurts).

Volf in Chapter 7 begins a new section entitled, How Long Should we Remember? Continue reading

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Filed under Abuse, book reviews, christian psychology, Forgiveness, memory, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Repentance, suffering