Counseling
![]() | Instruments in the Redeemer's Hands: People in Need of Change Helping People in Need of Change (ResoAuthor: Paul David TrippBinding: Paperback List price: $16.99 USD Amazon price: $11.55 USD |
Book Description
In many ways, the church today has more consumers than committed participants. We see church merely as an event we attend or an organization we belong to, rather than as a calling that shapes our entire life.
Many of us would be relieved if God had place dour sanctification in the hands of trained professionals, but that simply is not the biblical model. God%u2019s plan is that through the faithful ministry of every part, the whole body will grow to maturity in Christ.
Tripp explains how his work follows an "all of my people, all of the time" model. If you followed the Lord for a thousand years, you would still need the ministry of the body of Christ as much as you did the day you first believed. This need will remain until our sanctification is complete in Glory.
![]() | Perfil de Tres MonarcasAuthor: Gene EdwardsBinding: Hardcover List price: $6.99 USD Amazon price: $6.99 USD |
From the Back Cover
Many Christians around the world have been helped, counseled and healed from the pain, damage and anguish they have suffered as a result of unjust treatment by other believers. This book is an extraordinarily helpful tool with thought-provoking discussions for meetings of pastors and spiritual leaders about leadership approved by God.
![]() | PsychoBabble: The Failure of Modern Psychology--and the Biblical AlternativeAuthor: Richard GanzBinding: Paperback List price: $15.99 USD Amazon price: $10.87 USD |
Reviewer: Steven A. Slauson (Wake Forest, North Carolina)
I've been on both sides of the fence concerning integration (Psychology and Christianity), and I've always believed that the two could coexist; however, I was wrong despite my sincerity. Psychobabble: The Failure of Modern Psychology and the Biblical Alternative opened my eyes. Richard Ganz shows his readers that Psychology and Christianity cannot be united. Throughout this book Ganz shares insights from his own personal journey, and encourages his readers to take a bold stance for Christ. This is a book that confronts modern psychotherapy with the Word of God.





