Digital Logos Edition
For nearly 30 years, the Journal of Biblical Counseling (previously the Journal of Pastoral Practice) of CCEF (the Christian Counseling and Educational Foundation) has provided a forum for biblical counseling’s development and application. The journal’s mission is to develop clear thinking and effective practice in biblical counseling through articles that faithfully bring the God of truth, mercy, and power to the issues faced by ministries of counseling and discipleship.
“Typical reactions to traumatic events can be divided into five categories: physical symptoms, altered thinking patterns, emotional reactions, behavioral changes, and spiritual struggles.” (Page 9)
“Ultimately, self-pity is self-worship, and that is what makes it so deadly, so evil. At heart, self-pity expresses the idolatry of ‘Me, Me, Me.’ It demands center stage. It seeks to be worshiped. And it dethrones God.” (Page 17)
“What is the difference between a normal response to a traumatic events and a response given this label? The PTSD label is a quantitative descriptor on a spectrum: the length of time a person experiences the stress response, and the degree to which they experience it.” (Page 10)
“When a diagnosis of bipolar is given, it inadvertently releases the person from self-responsibility. But the behaviors on this list (carried to the extreme by the bipolar person) are ungodly behaviors. The mania experience doesn’t erase personal moral responsibility, but it does alert you to look for other possible contributing influences.” (Page 44)
“First, encourage the affected person to take care of himself physically” (Page 11)