A Word from Bob
Recently Sean Perron responded to Nate Brooks’s response to Keith Evans’s RTS Convocation speech, which was a response to how some biblical counselor’s respond to Herman Bavinck’s teaching. That’s a lot of responses!
In my post today, I continue the response-chain. My response focuses on two common misconceptions about God’s sovereign, Christ-glorifying common grace:
Misconception #1: That common grace is limited to certain domains of knowledge. Misconception #2: That common grace promotes “the wisdom the of world.” The Context for Sean Perron’s Tweet
Dr. Nate Brooks’s thread on X (Twitter) focused on common grace and biblical counseling methods.
Brooks was clear that, “secular psychology is woefully incomplete and does not transform the heart.” Brooks was clear that any potential method must be assessed theologically and reframed biblically. Brooks was clear that, “the Christian has a different fundamental aim (glorify and please God), different content (Scripture), and different power (Holy Spirit).” Sean Perron’s Tweet Reply
It was in this context of common grace and biblical counseling methods, that Sean tweeted:
“Everyone agrees about grammar and math. But those aren’t the issues when it comes to ‘the method of thought change’ in counseling. Counseling
To continue...read the full-length post originally published on this site.