Pastor John. Brian N. Tebbutt. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Brian N. Tebbutt
Издательство: Ingram
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Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781532693144
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just been made president of the Young Wives Club, a large fellowship of fifty or so members, and she felt the weight of responsibility. After a long pause, one by one, each shared what they felt. Just that! It was a most moving occasion. I realized the agenda was in the people. It was my “conversion to a life of dialogue” (Buber). It was a different style of ministry—open, trusting, intimate, moving, real, creative of deep relationships, healing of felt inadequacies—which also trained people in their own style of deep pastoral care. If you can talk about yourself in a mutually caring group, you can listen to others, you are empowered to offer the ministry you have received and receive the ministry you have offered. It was a breakthrough.

      6. The Need for a Model or Models

      I am using the basic model created by a deeply committed Christian, Dr. Frank Lake (1914–1982), a former parasitologist and medical missionary, who faced the clamant needs of the human psyche and trained and practiced as a psychiatrist. He was a key pioneer of pastoral counseling in the UK. He developed what he called “Clinical Theology,” the basic insights of which we use because they are invariably helpful. He founded the Clinical Theology Association in 1962 (now the Bridge Pastoral Foundation). His aim was to train people in the churches to exercise fine, skilled pastoral care to each other and in small groups. An understanding of personality, its strengths and weaknesses, was essential and was held in the Christian experience.

      1. Paulus Gerhardt, “O sacred Head sore wounded,” MHB 202, H&P 176, STF 280.

      2. Witkamp, Some Specific Johannine Features, 43.

      3. Green, Hearing the New Testament, 240–41.

      4. Bartlett, “Interpreting,” 55–56.

      5. Culpepper, Anatomy, 4–5.

      6. Ashton, Studying John, 208.

      7. Philip Brockbank cited by Cox and Theilgaard, Mutative Metaphors, 28; and Shakespeare as Prompter, 231.

      8. Iser cited by Tompkins, Reader Response Criticism, 51.

      9. Arieti cited by Cox and Theilgaard, Mutative Metaphors, 39.

      10. Culpepper, Anatomy, 151.

      11. Culpepper, Anatomy, 231.

      12. Ridderbos, Gospel of John.

      13. Sloyan, John, 57, italics original.

      14. Sloyan, John, 53.

      15.