While reading this article, I initially didn't realize the profound connection between the history of church counseling and modern psychology. However, as the author recounted the history, I began to understand why "Bible counseling" is considered a "rediscovery." For me, the most insightful point was the author's observation that while the church preserved orthodox doctrine, it gradually lost the practical wisdom of helping people.
The author states, "The church lost that crucial component of pastoral skill that can be called case-wisdom: wisdom that knows people, knows how people change, and knows how to help people change" (page 27). This statement resonated deeply with me. Often, the church emphasizes teaching correct theology, but when faced with people's struggles, emotional issues, or life problems, it doesn't know how to truly accompany and help them. Sometimes I also reflect that our focus shouldn't just be on preaching the truth, but on understanding how to bring the truth into people's life situations.
Furthermore, the sentence, "The Christians took the Bible, and the psychologists took people; not a happy situation for needy people in either camp" (page 27), also struck me as very thought-provoking. The author directly points out that while the church possesses biblical truth, it sometimes remains distant from people's actual problems; and while psychology focuses on emotions and difficulties, it often neglects the aspects of God, sin, and redemption. Reading this, I suddenly understood why the author consistently emphasizes the importance of biblical counseling—true help should address both "human life problems" and "God's truth."
These reflections constantly remind me that in my future ministry and service, I cannot simply focus on "teaching the right doctrines" while ignoring people's actual life
circumstances. I need to learn to listen more attentively to others' stories, understand their struggles, rather than just providing standard answers; in terms of thinking, I need to change my tendency to "simplify people's problems." Previously, I thought that simply reminding people to trust in God and to pray was enough, but this article showed me that true counseling requires wisely applying truth to specific situations. Therefore, I feel that what I can begin to do is cultivate deeper spiritual empathy. I need to observe more closely how people face sin, stress, and suffering in their daily lives, and learn how to help them change.
Finally, this article is not just a historical introduction, but also a reminder that in our future ministry and life, we need to learn to apply God's word more wisely to people's real-life situations, accompanying and helping them with love and truth.
Subject: Introduction to Biblical Counseling
Published by: Fang-Yu R, Hsu (Betty)
Hello.
Welcome to Hive.
Thank you for publishing your content and for being part of the community and publishing on Hive. We’re glad to have you here!
To help you make the most of your experience, I recommend checking out these quick guides:
Hive Guide 101: Hive 101
AI Guide: AI-Generated Content = Not Original Content
Plagiarism Guide: Why and How People Abuse and Plagiarise
Also, please read this important guide about phishing threats in the Hive ecosystem:
Fake Hive Aidrops And Scams
Thank you.