EBOOK

Theology for Better Counseling

Trinitarian Reflections for Healing and Formation

Virginia Todd HolemanSeries: Christian Association for Psychological Studies Books
(0)
Pages
208
Year
2012
Language
English

About

At one time, Virginia Todd Holeman "Toddy" thought being biblically literate was all she needed and had little interest in what real theologians talked about. But in her counseling she found that clients pressed her for more. They didn't just want what she had gained through training in the best theories and practices available for counseling. They asked hard theological questions often related to their suffering. As she describes it, they experienced a kind of "theological disequilibrium . . . which left them discouraged, disoriented and often distraught." Holeman shows how deep and clear theological reflection can make a major difference in counseling practice. Not only can it shape who we are, it can also bring into greater alignment our theological commitments, our therapeutic practices and our professional ethics. All the while it can have the most practical effect on our counseling sessions. In this volume Holeman guides counseling students, pastoral counselors and licensed mental health professionals into becoming as well-formed theologically as they are trained clinically.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"Holeman has written a unique book in the integration literature. Her theologically reflective practice model is neither treatment-model-specific nor is it generically thin Christianity. It is not psychology with a 'side of Jesus' but is a genuine and successful attempt to allow theology (specific, thick and strong) to have a real impact. This book will be very useful for Christian clinical graduate training as well as pastoral care and counseling."
Brad D. Strawn, Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith, March 2014
"Going well beyond the questions of when and how to make use of explicit spiritual resources in counseling, Holeman's model of theologically reflective counseling provides a practical, user-friendly, integration tool for use by Christian counselors with both Christian and non-Christian clients--that is, not dependent upon particular theological or theoretical persuasions."
Heather Gingrich, associate professor of counseling, Denver Seminary

Extended Details

Artists