Counseling and the Human Condition Through the Lens of Scripture
David Powlison is an expert in both practicing and teaching counseling through the lens of Scripture. Biblical counseling is foundationally different than secular psychology because of how it deals with concepts, methods, institutions, and apologetics. In this book, Seeing with New Eyes, Powlison digs through the concepts that define ideals of human functioning. (This is the first book of a series that later unfolds methodological and institutional aspects, and lastly the apologetic component.) Powlison teaches “The Bible’s truth competes head-to-head with other models… Instead of defining change as an intra-psychic, psychosocial, or biological process of ‘healing’ or ‘growth’, we define change as turning to a Personal whom we trust, fear, obey, and seek to please. Instead of letting the goal of ‘health’ cue our system to a medical metaphor, we set the goal of being transformed into the likeness of this Person with whom we live in relationship.” Although I found the style of Powlison’s writing difficult to get through, he shares a goldmine of wisdom until the very last chapter. My natural (naturally flawed) thought-process was challenged as Powlison pinpointed the deception of our desires – and the great need for our feelings to be checked and reinterpreted! He emphasizes that “sin emerges from within the person” while secular psychology often blames our parents, environment, biology, etc for our current problems. Powlison writes:
The fact that a pattern of craving became established many years before – even that it was forged in a particular context, perhaps influenced by bad models or by experiences of being sinned against – only describes what happened. For example, past rejections do not cause a craving to be accepted by other any more than current rejections cause that craving. The occasions of a lust are never its cause. Temptations and sufferings do push our buttons, but they don’t create those buttons. That brings hope for change in the present by the grace of God.What a shattering counter-point to our natural and prideful blame-shifting! As sufferers and sinners we can’t hope to find victory until we understand correctly when and where our sin comes from! Powlison also walks though psychological definitions for human functions, and concludes:
But the Bible never views human problems as ontological but as relational or ethical at their cores. Problems exist between man and God and between man and man. That our psychs are unhinged – or futile, darkened, alienated, ignorant, hardened, deceived, and desire-ridden, as Ephesians 4 puts it – does not mean our problems are at their core psychological. The disorientation that manifests itself in our psychic life is only symptomatic of an interpersonal disorientation: our alienation from God.I was further challenged by Powlison’s description of a counselor’s role in the curing of souls, how we love others, and how all of this fits within the trends of psychiatry. His chapters seemed disjointed, and I started reading this book so long ago I don’t remember the beginning, but the way I see people has foundationally changed in a Biblical and insightful way. In the conversation about psychology and theology, Powlison can’t be overlooked.
1 comment:
I am going to be taking a look at these three books when i can! Just reading the few parts you posted from the book have also challenged my thinking! Thanks for the reviews of these books!
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