When we disagree with other self-described biblical counselors, how could we handle those differences biblically? Here are three posts on this important topic:
5 Biblical Counseling Principles for Addressing Disagreements Among Biblical Counselors 6 Types of Biblical Self-Examination Questions to Ask Before Criticizing Fellow Biblical Counselors Are We Reasonable or Unreasonable in Our Interactions in the Biblical Counseling Movement?
Of course, I’m not the first, nor the only, or even the primary person asking biblical counselors to consider how we engage with other counseling systems. Long before me, Jay Adams’s colleague and good friend, John Bettler, confronted nouthetic confrontation about how nouthetic counselors confront others.
In the first post below, I outline Bettler’s three concerns.
In the second post below, I collate sixteen questions we can ask ourselves as we engage with those who differ from us.
In the third post, Nate Brooks affirms David Powlison’s model of humility and charity in biblical counseling interactions.
3 Nouthetic Cautions about Nouthetic Critiques of Others: From John Bettler 16 Self-Assessment Questions to Ask Ourselves as We Evaluate Other Counseling Models Humility and Charity in Biblical Counseling: A Guest Post by Nate Brooks on David Powlison
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