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Mending the Soul
Mending the Soul: Understanding and Healing Abuse | Steven R. Tracy
2 posts | 1 reading
This book provides a well-researched biblical and scientific overview of abuse. A broad overview, it deals with the various types of abuse, the various effects of abuse, and the means of healing. Abuse can be sexual, physical, neglect, spiritual, and verbal. The chief arguments pursued throughout the book are: (1) abuse is far more rampant than most Christians realize, but due to human depravity and satanic influence, widespread abuse is predicable. (2) All types of abuse create profound, long-term soul damage due to the way abuse perverts various aspects of the image of God. (3) God is the healing redeemer. Human salvation came through horrible physical abuse. (4) Healing must take place in the context of relationships. Humans are deeply impacted by others due to being made in the image of God. Just as surely as abusive relationships have tremendous power to wound the soul, so healthy relationships have tremendous power to nurture and heal the soul. Questions answered in the book include: - How can a genuine believer abuse a child? - Why would someone abuse a child? - How can parents and childrens workers identify abusers? - How can abuse victims heal? - What does genuine healing look like? - Is anger appropriate or hurtful for abuse victims? - Where does forgiveness fit in? Helpful sample child protection policy, application, screening interview, and warning signs of potential abusers equip ministry leaders. Illustrations, case studies, and art therapy drawings.
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EvaPriest
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Ever find a book so full of timely truth that you want to inhale it?

“Over and over, parents, congregations, and religious leaders deny abuse reports regardless of the weight of the evidence…Unspeakable damage can occur when we deny the possibility that a pastor who powerfully communicates God‘s word on Sunday could beat his wife or molest his daughter on Monday.“

Recognizing that evil might be resident among us is Step 1: Opening our eyes.

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EvaPriest
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In only the first half hour this book, I can tell I‘m going to love it. If you‘ve ever experienced abuse, you‘ll find it validating from the first pages. It addresses the spiritual roots of abuse—of evil—and calls on the Church to “stop revictimizing survivors and begin facilitating their healing.” (James R. Beck) In Light of the #metoo and #churchtoo movements, the Church has a second chance to champion victims and call abusers to account.

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