Author: Brad Hambrick

Building a Culture of Care in Your Church: Where? When? and How?

Where does the vast majority of care happen in a local church? It happens in the weekly rhythms of natural relationships: small groups, ministry teams, conversations between parents whose children are the same age, and relationships that emerge from various men’s or women’s discipleship contexts. Most of the care provided in a church does not happen in conversations that resemble counseling: set appointment times, intake forms, meetings in an office, or well-defined helper and helpee roles. Continue Reading →

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Acknowledging Levels of Offense in Destructive Relationships

In Christian circles, we are fond of saying, “The ground is level at the foot of the cross.” This is true. No one needs a double dose of Jesus’ blood to cover their sin. However, it would be a false conclusion to infer that this means all our sins are equally destructive or should have the same temporal consequences. We can be equally sinful and not equally destructive. Continue Reading →

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Friendships with Non-Christians: Being Intentional Without Being Weird

Repeat after me: “My non-Christian friends are not projects.” Too often, the good Christian desire to be evangelistic can make friendships with non-Christians awkward. We should want to be evangelistic, and it is right to care about the souls of our non-Christian friends. But our non-Christian friends shouldn’t feel like we are their friends just to convert them. Continue Reading →

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Partiality: Not a Victimless Sin

When we think about partiality, our minds may go back to our middle school days and “the cool kids” everyone was willing to please. We remember all the advantages that came to them for being the socially elite. While that is a valid example, if it’s our primary reference for applying this passage, we will likely miss James’ primary point. Continue Reading →

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Three Life Cycles of Group-Based Counseling

This week’s mini-series on the Grace and Truth blog addresses group counseling. In this first article, Brad Hambrick describes the three life cycles of group-based counseling. In other contributions to the series, Ellen Dykas explains how facilitators can guard the group dynamic while at the same time caring for the individual members, and Nate and Kate Brooks share about their experience with the chronic pain and illness counseling group started by Kate. Continue Reading →

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