A Biblical View of Mental Health (with Chris Adams) [Think Biblically Podcast]

How does a Christian view of mental health compare and contrast with a secular perspective? Are we in a mental health crisis today? And how do we best love our family and friends who are suffering from mental illness. In this video and podcast, Sean and Scott talk with Rosemead Professor Chris Adams about these questions and more. Dr. Adams shares about the new Flourishing in Ministry resource that helps pastors and churches address mental health. See www.flourishinginministry.org.
Rev. Chris Adams, PhD, is a third-generation pastor's kid, ordained minister, clinical psychologist, and certified wellbeing and leadership coach. He has served in pastoral care and counseling roles in a large congregation and a large Christian university. He specializes in the wellbeing of ministerial students, clergy, and their families. Chris currently serves as Professor, Chaplain, and Executive Director of the Mental Health and the Church initiative at Rosemead Graduate School of Psychology, Biola University. Chris teaches pastoral care and counseling, Christian leadership formation, and psychology and Christianity integration courses for Rosemead and several seminaries. Chris is a consultant to numerous denominations and seminaries in the areas of clergy candidate formative evaluation, clergy health and flourishing, and pastoral leadership formation. He is the lead researcher for the Flourishing in Ministry project, and is currently participating as a consultant and researcher with the Duke Clergy Health Initiative. Chris is a frequent lecturer at seminaries, retreats, and conferences. He was awarded the Archibald D. Hart Counseling Pioneer Award for excellence in Research and Scholarship in Training and Educating the Next Generation of Leaders in Mental Health and Caring for Others in 2023.
Download a guide to the Flourishing in Ministry Wellbeing Model at flourishinginministry.org/dow...
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Пікірлер: 8

  • @marylamb6063
    @marylamb6063Ай бұрын

    I had severe depression and decided to go to a Chinese doctor who had a reputation for curing hard cases. The first thing she asked me was about my diet. I wasn't surpised. I had known that five foods were behind the depression. But she traced it to bad gut bacteria. She prescribed three courses of antibiotics to kill the bad gut bacteria and the depression was cured. Then I had months of muscle spasms from a back injury. I had very mild depression, but I went back to her to have it completely cured.

  • Ай бұрын

    I wish I could find more resourses on this subject like books etc. I mean from the Christian perspecive like Chris Adams does here.

  • @rebeccahayhurst442
    @rebeccahayhurst4424 ай бұрын

    Excellant conversation and answered a lot of questions for me in mental health.

  • @karenl4543
    @karenl45434 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this podcast & yes I am sharing it. Excellent!!!

  • @karenl4543

    @karenl4543

    4 ай бұрын

    Just another reminder of the excellence at Biola & why I’m happy to be a donor!!

  • @Keepitkind7
    @Keepitkind717 күн бұрын

    The fact that you're even having this conversation tying sin to mental illness, but not physical illness IS THE STIGMA!

  • @Keepitkind7
    @Keepitkind717 күн бұрын

    The brain is part of the body and things can go awry. What's so hard to understand about that? Bipolar is a spiritual problem?, a brain tumor is a medical problem, anxiety-spiritual, demensia-medical, etc., etc. The stigma you allude to is only for those things you don't understand. If medical researchers can show you brains scans in the future, you'd change your tune. If you suffered, you'd know.

  • @joelacona6057
    @joelacona6057Ай бұрын

    Boring