What a wonderfully practical yet theologically rich and
gospel centered training manual for the pastor or layperson offering the
comfort of Christ to suffering people. “Gospel
Conversations” is the second book in the Equipping Biblical Counselors Series
designed to provide local churches with comprehensive relational training. It
is best used in a group setting, but has been written to accommodate individual
study.
A core thread in this book is the belief that all Christians
are called to some level of caring that involves daily encouraging one to love
and good deeds, and directing suffering and tempted sinners back to Christ and
his gospel of grace. Toward that end “Gospel Conversations provides an
intensive, relational, hands-on equipping manual. Through it you will develop
twenty-one biblical counseling relational skills so you can care like Christ (p15)”.
At the outset, I found the model for these competencies difficult
to grasp. There are two guideposts (Soul
Care for Suffering and Sanctification, and Biblical Spiritual Direction for Sin and Sanctification) and four
compass points (Sustaining, Healing, Reconciling and Guiding). Kellemen does
take some time, rather successfully, to flesh out these concepts. In the
process he makes some distinctions which, as a novice, I find difficult to
grasp. For example, the common approach
in biblical counseling is to consider the counselee’s story as Sufferer, Sinner
and Saint. Kellemen prefers to expand the approach to include the privileges
and responsibilities, so the approach becomes a consideration of saints, sons,
sanctification, suffering and sin. This does turn out to be helpful, but I
wondered how necessary this refinement is, given the complete treatment and
explanation he gives to the twenty-one competencies.
Each chapter has
questions to help the participant mature as a Biblical Counselor as well as
exercises in counseling others. Each chapter very helpfully has a tweet-size
summary. I found the competencies very well illustrated and explained and
profited a great deal from the model used in this book.
I would recommend for the inexperienced counselor or
layperson, that he read Michael Emlet’s “Crosstalk: Where Life & Scripture
Meet” before “Gospel Conversations”. Kellemen’s approach and terminology will then
make much more sense and be easier to grasp. Since I haven’t read the first
book in this series, it may very well be it also would provide this foundation.
I received this book
from Zondervan through Cross Focused Reviews in exchange for an honest review.