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  "Growing Souls God's Way"

 
     
 
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"Caring for Souls in Jesus' Name," Session 5, March 2004
William Gaultiere, Ph.D., ChristianSoulCare.com

What effect do we have on people's lives?  As Christians we want to help people grow, to lead them closer to God.  But appearances can be deceiving.  Jesus' said that in heaven the first would be last and the last would be first.  This was the case with a pastor and taxi driver.

The pastor and a taxi driver both died and went to heaven. St. Peter was at the Pearly Gates waiting for them.

"Come with me," said St. Peter to the taxi driver.

The taxi driver did as he was told and followed St. Peter to a mansion. It had everything you could imagine from a bowling alley to an olympic size pool.

"Wow, thank you," said the taxi driver.


Next, St. Peter led the pastor to a rugged old shack with a bunk bed and a little old television set.


"Wait, I think you are a little mixed up," said the pastor. "Shouldn't I be the one who gets the mansion? After all I was a pastor, went to church every day, and preached God's word."

"Yes, that's true. But during your sermons people slept. When the taxi driver drove, everyone prayed."

Prayer

The Best is Yet to Come!

This past weekend I went with my wife and three children up to my in-laws cabin in Lake Arrowhead.  We're so fortunate that the cabin and surrounding forest weren't burned down in the fires last fall.  The fires came within a couple of blocks.  We thank God for our valiant firefighters and the rain that finally came. 

While we were at the cabin we all went sledding in the snow on a big hill in the nearby forest.  My son David, who is about to turn 13, and I had so much fun that we went back out just the two of us.  We really got into it.  We expanded the sled run and took it farther down the hill by going around a corner.  It was really steep.  I call it a big hill, but it's really the side of the mountain.  It was probably 150 yards long.  So we'd go flying down the hill in a two-person sled.  And I do mean flying!  There were parts that we were airborne.  It was so exciting for both of us. 

But the best part was the end.  That was the steepest, fastest part of the run and it headed straight for the street.  Picture this.  There we are both of us in this sled and we're soaring down the mountain and screaming with excitement, "Wooooo!"  Then at the last second David would yell, "Bail!" and we'd launch ourselves off the sleds and go sliding and laughing into the snow.

That was fun!  And I hope you're enjoying yourself and experiencing some adventure in this Soul Care Pre-Conference.  And the best is yet to come!  Because you didn't bail out before we turned the corner, you're waiting until the last second, getting all you can out of this sled run.

The Focus of Soul Care

Yesterday, I illustrated what I call "Christian Soul Care" to you with stories, songs, Scriptures, movies, and reflection times.  This morning let's come back at our subject a little more studiously.

What is the "soul" anyway?  What do you think?  Shout out a word or phrase and I'll write it down.

["Soul" Definitions]

So we'd say that "soul care" looks at the whole person - on the inside.  This isn't usually true with the other helping disciplines today, even amongst Christians.  Consider the focuses of theology, psychology, medicine, missions, family therapy, social work.  Let's illustrate this with a shape.  What shape might we choose?  Of course, a triangle!

Soul care is an integration of all this - especially counseling and spiritual guidance.  As we learned yesterday, it's an application of Jesus' Greatest Commandment to Love God, Self, and Others.  In other words, it's all about relationship.

Soul Care Opens the Eyes of our Hearts

At the age of 20 Rose Crawford from Ontario, Canada, was struck with blindness.  30 years later she underwent surgery and when the doctors removed the bandages from her eyes, the light shown in and she could see!  First the doctors, the room, and her family.  Then to step out of the hospital and into the blue sky, to see the flowers she had been smelling for 30 years.  She could see again after 30 years of being blind to the beauty of God's creation!  The sad part about this story was that this surgery was available 20 years earlier.  (Rev. Dr. Brent McCumons from the First United Methodist Church in Midland, Michigan told this story, www.fumcmid.org.)

You might say, "Oh, I wouldn't wait 20 years!  I'd find the money to get the surgery."  Maybe you would find a way to get the surgery.  And yet many of us refuse the surgery we need for the eyes of our hearts to be opened.  To see God and to see ourselves and our lives as He does our hearts need to be purified, they need to be cleaned and healed from the damaging and blinding effects of our sins and the sins of others against us.

To explain my point I'd like to share with you one of my favorite Bible verses.  It means a great deal to me personally and to my ministry as Christ's ambassador.  It's one of Jesus' beatitudes:

"Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God" (Matthew 5:8). 

In The Message Eugene Peterson translates it like this:

"You're blessed when you get your inside world - your mind and heart - put right.  Then you can see God in the outside world."

To understand this beatitude you need to know that this word "pure" is related to the word "catharsis."  More importantly, you need to have experienced catharsis.  It's the peace that comes when a friend listens with compassion and patience as you pour out your heart. 

I lived mostly without this peace for the first 20 years of my life.  I was blind until I underwent surgery for the eyes of my heart in college and my first mentor and counselor spent an hour every week listening to me share my feelings.  The surgery wasn't instantaneous, but with the help of this woman and other counselors, pastors, and friends who followed her and picked up where my parents left off, my eyes were opened.  Slowly my self, my life, other people, and God were enlightened and came into focus. 

Now, to maintain my heart's peace and vision and I regularly talk about what's going on in my soul with God and my friends.  It's how I keep growing.

You see, in life our souls gather toxins from our sins and others sins against us and from the stresses that we encounter.  It's natural and healthy for us as Christians to feel sad, hurt, scared, or angry in these instances.  But, if we repress our feelings about our struggles and stresses and isolate then in time guilt, anxiety, self-criticism, resentment, doubt, and a host of other negative emotions are sure to get clogged in our emotional piping, sapping our soul's energy, dragging down our bodies, and blinding our hearts to God's goodness. 

We need to verbalize our struggles and feelings to a friend and to God in prayer and receive God's grace from a compassionate listener.  And when we do there is a cleansing that occurs.  Our souls are awakened and alerted, refreshed and renewed, made hole and holy.   The eyes of our hearts are opened to see and receive God's goodness so that the sky seems bluer, the birds sound more beautiful, our friends and family are appreciated as lovelier, and the present moment is enjoyed as more precious.   

Now that I can see and maintain my vision I find such joy in helping others to see by offering the compassionate listening that facilitates their cathartic, cleansing, eye-opening process.  And so with the Apostle Paul I pray for you:

"I pray also that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you, the riches of his glorious inheritance in the saints, and his incomparably great power for us who believe. That power is like the working of his mighty strength, which he exerted in Christ when he raised him from the dead and seated him at his right hand in the heavenly realms" (Ephesians 1:18-20).

Reflection

"That the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope."  This is such a marvelous prayer.  Let's take some time to pray it.  Let's each us go to God in prayer and ask him to open the eyes of our hearts - right now, right here.

To help us do this I'm going to play a worship song by Michael W. Smith, "Open the Eyes of My Heart."

[Music: Michael W. Smith, "Worship": "Open the Eyes of My Heart," #5]

What the Research Says About How People Grow

There's actually been scientific research done to understand how it is that people grow personally.  What helps hurting, struggling people make positive changes?  What factors explain the help that people receive from psychotherapy?  And, by application, all forms of relational helping including ministry and lay counseling? 

At last year's, "International Conference on Care and Kindness," Siang Yang Tan reported on this research in his address on "Messengers of Love."  He summarized what the research says on why clients receiving psychotherapy from counselors of various theoretical orientations make positive changes. 

The research says that regarding the help people receive.

  • 40% is due to client factors like motivation, faith, friendships, support groups, personal study, and other things they do to help themselves outside of their counseling
  • 30% is due to relationship factors like warmth, empathy, caring, congruence, and therapeutic alliance (client and counselor working together to care for and help the client)
  • 15% is due to counselor techniques, which includes skilled interventions and advice
  • 15% is due to client expectations (hopes and beliefs) of getting well

This means that whether or not someone receives the needed help from a counselor is 55% up to them (motivation and expectations), 30% up to their relationship with their counselor, and 15% up to the counselor. 

We tend to reverse it.  We think that our helpers need to do more for us and focus on their part too much.  Instead we need to take responsibility for our own growth and what we're doing to get the most of our counseling or support group or friendship.

Let's talk about four implications of this research for us as people helpers and givers of soul care.

  1. We need to focus on empowering people to take ownership of their concerns, to mobilize their problem-solving abilities toward positive action.  This means not trying to fix or rescue people.  If counselors take too much responsibility for people's concerns then it undermines the helping!  Instead, we need to recruit people's motivation and other problem-solving resources.
  1. And we need realize that the most significant area that counselors have direct influence is in the counseling relationship.  By being friendly, seeking to understand feelings, showing concern, being genuine, and collaborating with people on what's important to them we build the relational connection that is the context for them to be helped.  This is the heart of soul care.    
  1. Even though our counseling techniques or specific ways of helping people may only account for 15% of the reason why people are helped by us they are still important.  And they are the only factor in the helping relationship that we are solely responsible for!  Furthermore, through our skilled interventions we can influence the client factors and relationship factors that are the primary agents of change.  For those of you who are New Hope Counselors this is why the basic interventions we make (reflecting feelings, summarizing, inviting self-disclosure with questions and probes, engaging problem-solving ideas and energies with questions, prayer, and offering referrals or resources) should be focused on the first two factors that the research identified as leading to change: Demonstrating care in the relationship and empowering people to use their own resources for positive action.
  1. Last, and not least, we ought to encourage people to have specific expectations for their help.  I think a better word here is hope.  My observation is that people to get much help without hope.  We'll be talking more about hope later this morning. 
How Jesus Helped People Grow

Jesus is referred to as the "Wonderful Counselor" in Isaiah 9:6.  And Jesus played out a counseling role in some of his interactions with people.  And he had many other important helping roles like healer, deliverer, preacher, teacher, discipler, leader, and spiritual director.  By looking at how Jesus cared for people we gain the best model that we could for giving soul care.

And when we look at how Jesus helped people 2,000 years ago we realize that the research I just mentioned is merely confirming what he's already shown us!  The people he ministered to changed dramatically.  What did he do?  He did the same four things:

  1. He gave people personal responsibility for getting well, eliciting their motivation and empowering them to action.  For instance to the paralytic at the Sheep Gate Pool he said, "Do you want to get well?" and challenged him to pick up his mat and walk (John 5:1-14).
  1. He sought to work with people to help them.  He sought to establish a focused, trusting relationship with those he ministered to.  An example of this is when he asked two blind men beside the road, "What do you want me to do for you?" (Matthew 20:29-34)
  1. He used many basic counseling techniques to minister to people: Listening (to the Samaritan woman at the well, John 4:1-42), empathy (for Mary and Martha when Lazarus died, John 11:1-16), focusing questions (to Nicodemus who snuck to talk to at night about faith, John 3:1-21), affirmation (to the Roman centurion with a sick daughter, Matthew 8:5-13), analogies (telling the parable of the "Good Samaritan" to the religious leader asking about love, Luke 10:25-37), prayer (taught Lord's prayer to spiritual seekers), teaching truth (Sermon on the Mount to expand on the commandments for spiritual seekers, Matthew 5-7), confrontation (to rich young ruler seeking more meaning: "Sell your possessions." Luke 18:18-30), boundaries (to woman caught in adultery: "Go and sin no more," John 8:1-11).
  1. He inspired hope and positive expectations in people.  For instance, to the blind man at the Pool of Siloam he asked, "Do you believe?" (John 9:35-41).
Spiritual and Psychological Growth

Spiritual and psychological growth are connected; inseparable in my view.  Both are personal and relational.  Can we grow without God's help?  No.  If God grows us shouldn't it change us on the inside, psychologically?  Yes, of course.  So one should lead to the other.  Along these lines, in "How People Grow," Henry Cloud and John Townsend said, "All growth is spiritual growth."

I prefer to say that all growth is soul growth, because the term "soul" more clearly integrates the spiritual and the psychological.  The soul is the eternal, essential you on the inside.  It's who you are and who you're becoming.  It's your personality, gifts, values, mind, will, emotions, spirit all wrapped together into your being.  It's YOU!

Despite the unifying aspect of the soul I think it's helpful to our understanding to separate out spiritual and psychological growth. 

Imagine a person who has experienced tremendous psychological growth (self-awareness, healing, bondedness, good boundaries, an integration of fragmented parts of self, the abilities to care for others and achieve important things) has no connection to the Living God.  I meet people like this all the time when I go to my continuing education classes as a psychologist.  They have psychological growth, but not true spiritual growth.  Their overall maturity is limited by not having faith in Christ.  They're benefiting from God's grace in general and unacknowledged ways, but they're not transformed into the glorious image of Christ.

Now imagine a different person: a Christian who loves the Lord.  Regularly, he reads his Bible, prays, goes to church, and serves people in Jesus' name.  By most measures we'd say he has quite a bit of spiritual growth.  But, he's rather cut off from his feelings.  Psychologically, he hasn't grown much.  (We could also say that he's lacking in inward spiritual formation.)  His overall growth is limited by his psychological defences.

True maturity comes when we grow spiritually and psychologically by growing in love for God, others, and self.

The Pattern of Spiritual Growth

In his book "Renovation of the Heart," Dallas Willard identified three points in what he calls "the general pattern of spiritual change": Vision, Intention, and Means or "VIM" for short.  "VIM" as in the phrase "vim and vigor."  He's saying that in order to grow spiritually we need to envision the change, be motivated to do it, and take action to accomplish it.

When I came across Dallas Willard's "VIM" model just a couple of months ago I couldn't stop thinking about it for days.  I realized that I had been operating on a similar theory without knowing it.

We teach our volunteer New Hope Counselors what we call the A-B-C's of Counseling, which are Active Listening, Brainstorming Action Steps, and Closing with Prayer or Referrals.  Active Listening gives people the vision to see their hurts and struggles and needs in the light of God's caring.  Brainstorming action steps is a way to elicit people's intention or motivation to take action to make positive changes.  And closing in prayer is a spiritual means of helping people to connect with God's care and power so that they can change.  (New Hope Counselors also use goal-setting, referrals, and resources as means.)  VIM: Vision, intention, and means.  Did you see it?

It's also in Dr. Ken France's model (Psychologist, Author, Professor, and New Hope volunteer mentor and counselor), which is really the basis of New Hope Crisis Counseling, only in the A-B-C's the "C" for "Close in Prayer" is stressing our primary spiritual resource and integrating the spiritual guidance role with the counseling role (which we'll discuss in a minute).  Ken's model is: Exploration of thoughts and feelings, Considering Alternatives, and Negotiating a Plan that's specific, concrete, realistic, and current.  I think you can see that Exploration is like Vision, Considering Alternatives taps into Intention, and Negotiating a Plan is all about Means.

Spiritually what we want to do for people to as lay counselors or friends is to help them grow - and what we are in fact doing with the New Hope A-B-C's - is to shine God's Light, be Salty to increase people's thirst for God and motivation to follow his good purposes, and give people keys (as in plans of action and resources like support groups and prayer) to open doors of opportunity. 

[Light.  Salt.  Keys.] 

[Vision.  Intention.  Means.]

This pattern of change is everywhere in life.  Not just in counseling and ministry as we've discussed.  But also in any process of growth or learning.  For instance, Dallas Willard shows how VIM is the basic structure of Alcoholics Anonymous and language learning. 

You didn't realize it, but I've been using this pattern with you in these seminars on soul care!  I'm trying to give you a vision of what soul care looks like, inspire you to seek it and give it, and then show you how to do it.  I want to be Light, Salt, and Keys for God all the time!

We can also see this pattern of VIM or Light, Salt, and Keys in the Bible.  I'd like to share with you just one example: The Paul met the Christ and was transformed from Saul the Zealot Pharisee who murdered Christians to Paul the Apostle Christian who built Christ's church.  Here's the story from Acts 9:1-18 in the Acts Visual Bible.

["Acts Visual Bible": Acts 9:1-18]

Did you see how Saul's metamorphosis into Paul began with a vision of Christ in a blinding light

Then, as the parallel account of this story later in Acts records, Paul asked, "Lord, what do you want me to do?"  In other words, Paul developed the intention to serve Christ.  So salty was his encounter, so thirsty was his soul to know God's will that he fasted from food and water for three days. 

Next, he followed the means of spiritual growth that God led him to, he used the keys that God gave him to open the door to a new future: He sought prayer and instruction from Ananias.

The Complementary Roles of Counseling and Spiritual Guidance

So what we're doing when we help people grow through soul care is as an integration of counseling and spiritual guidance.  What I'm saying is that I think the most effective help we can give people is both psychological and spiritual.  To be truly impactful, our care must connect with people's souls with God.

I think this applies, in different ways, not only to the work of psychotherapy that I do, but also lay counseling, being a small group facilitator, leading a discipleship group, ministering to someone in the hospital, or supporting a friend who needs to talk about a problem.

Let me quickly diagram for you the complementary roles of counseling and spiritual guidance.

In counseling the Ambassador represents or mediates God to people.  Often, God or Scripture are not even mentioned.  God is in the background working through us.  The focus is on the person's relationship with the counselor and other people.

In spiritual guidance or ministry the Ambassador emphasizes a different role.  Of course, the Ambassador still mediates God's care, but the focus for receiving help is on the person's relationship with God more than the relationship with the Ambassador or other people.  And the Ambassador facilitates that connection with God.

In David Benner's book, "Sacred Companions," he makes the distinction that in counseling we listen to people's feelings and in spiritual guidance we listen to God.

In reality, as Christ's Ambassadors we may do both when helping people.  We may go back and forth. 

Let's look at an example of the complementary work of counseling and spiritual guidance in terms of their goals and techniques and the four possible interactions represented by the four boxes on the chart, "Counseling and Spiritual Guidance."  (Based on the table by Gary W. Moon in "Psychotherapy and Spiritual Direction.")

 

Example 1

I was helping a young man in his early 20's with an addiction to pornography.  I'll call him Brendon.  Brendon had been doing 12 Step work to maintain sobriety and had made some progress in his psychotherapy, but lust continued to have a hold on him. 

I suggested that Brendon consider fasting and praying about this issue and said that'd I'd also fast and pray with him if he wanted.  Along with this I offered him some "Hungry Heart Scriptures" to meditate on from the psalms that highlight our longings for God.  I explained to him that lust was crowding out love in his life and porn stars were replacing God in his heart at times.  What he really hungered for deep in his heart was God's love, not immoral sex, but in order to overcome his lust he needed to affirm his need for God and renounce his desire for lust.  He did this and indeed he experienced a stronger connection with God that diminished his lust desires. 

The experience also elicited waves of grief from Brendon's childhood injuries that he shared with me and received comfort for through my listening, empathy, and validation of his pain and anger.

Of the four boxes where would you place fasting?  Prayer and meditation on Scriptures?  Answer: Box 3.  He had a Psychological Goal to decrease pornography and we used the Spiritual Techniques of practicing spiritual disciplines.

How about his 12 Step Recovery program?  Grief work?  Answer: Box 1.  He had a Psychological Goal to decrease sexual addiction symptoms and we used Psychological Techniques of recovery program and grief therapy.

Example 2

Let's look at another example of the relationship between counseling and spiritual guidance.  I was helping a businessman with burn out.  I'll call him Terry.  Terry needed help with depression connected to overworking and doing things that he wasn't excited about.  So I worked with Terry on learning to set boundaries with his work and setting limits because he couldn't do everything he was doing and needed to focus his work on what he was best at.

Later we were discussing how Terry felt his life was consumed with his work and he wanted more fulfillment.  I learned that he missed being involved in ministry in his church.  So I had him take some Spiritual Gifts Tests and then to pray about what he discovered and how he might use his gifts.  He was reminded how much he loved to teach the Bible and so he taught a Bible Study.

Which box would we place using the Spiritual Gifts Test?  Answer: Box 4.  He had a Spiritual Goal of getting involved in ministry and to achieve this we used the Spiritual Technique of taking Spiritual Gifts tests.

And what about the earlier work we did on his workaholism?  Answer: Box 1.  He had a Psychological Goal to decrease symptoms of depression and to help him I used Psychological Techniques like boundary setting, prioritizing, and empathic support.

Example 3

Let's take one more example.  Imagine a woman calls 714-NEW-HOPE and talks with one of our volunteer counselors.  She calls the hotline complaining because she feels distant from God; she wants to feel his love. 

As we discussed, our New Hope Counselors are taught to respond with the A-B-C's of Active Listening, Brainstorming Action Steps, and Closing in Prayer.

So first, the counselor tries to understand the woman's need by asking her questions and listening.  She empathizes with the caller by summarizing what she's hearing and reflecting her feelings.  We call this Active Listening.

Then she engages the caller to Brainstorm a Positive Action Step.  She asks her questions, like, "What do you think would help you to feel closer to God?  What have you tried in the past?  What other ideas come to your mind?"  They help the woman to develop a specific plan to carry out right away.

Finally, the counselor Closes in Prayer for the woman, lifting up her feelings and needs to God and calling on God to encourage her.  She may also offer her a referral.

In this example of a woman wanting to feel closer to God, what boxes in our counseling and spiritual guidance table describe the A-B-C's of New Hope Counseling?  Answer: Active Listening and Brainstorming would be Box 2 (Spiritual Goal of increased closeness with God and Psychological Techniques of listening and brainstorming).  Closing in Prayer would be Box 4 (Spiritual Goal of increased closeness with God and Spiritual Technique of prayer.)

Reflection

One of the most important questions that you can answer is, "What do I want?"  Similarly, when you're caring for someone else you always want to tune into the desires of the heart by asking, explicitly or implicitly, "What do you want?"  This is how Jesus helped people.

For instance, watch this scene from Matthew 20:29-34 in the Visual Bible.

["Matthew: Visual Bible," Matthew 20:29-34]

Do think that Jesus knew these two men were blind?  Of course he did.  It would've been obvious to anyone.  So why did he ask them, "What do you want me to do for you?"  To help them express their heart's motivation.  People don't heal, grow, or change without motivation.

If Jesus asked you, "What do you want me to do for you?" how would you answer?  What do you want Jesus to do for you?  I'll put on some background music for you to reflect on this.

[Background Music: "The Gospel of John," #1 3:05, #2 2:55]

Small Group

Share what you want from Jesus or some other issue in your life that you need support with.  Limit your sharing to a few minutes so that everyone gets a turn. 

 

CE Exam Growing Souls God's Way

 
     
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