Healing Wounds, Renewing Faith


Book Description

In Healing Wounds, Renewing Faith: Confronting & Recovering From Church Trauma, Rev. Father Jason Carson Wilson, M.Div., offers a comprehensive guide for those who have experienced trauma within religious communities. This book provides a compassionate exploration of church trauma's emotional, spiritual, and psychological impact and presents a path toward healing and restoration of faith. Overview: The book opens with an in-depth analysis of the lasting effects of church trauma on individuals, exploring how such experiences can profoundly shake one’s spirituality, self-perception, and overall well-being. Rev. Wilson emphasizes acknowledging these wounds to begin the healing process. Structure: Divided into ten chapters, the book covers various aspects of church trauma and the healing journey: 1. The Impact of Church Trauma - This chapter examines the emotional and psychological toll that church trauma can take, discussing the loss of trust and self-esteem and the effects on mental health, including anxiety, depression, and PTSD. 2. Understanding Faith and Spirituality - The author delves into the role of faith and spirituality in our lives and their connection to healing, emphasizing the importance of rebuilding one’s spiritual foundation after trauma. 3. Recognizing the Signs of Church Trauma - This chapter highlights the common symptoms and behaviors associated with church trauma, including emotional distress, social withdrawal, and loss of trust, offering insight into how these manifest in affected individuals. 4. Unpacking the Causes of Church Trauma - Rev. Wilson explores the various causes of church trauma, including spiritual abuse, toxic leadership, and doctrinal conflicts, and how these contribute to the deep wounds experienced by survivors. 5. Navigating the Healing Journey - This chapter provides a roadmap for survivors, outlining the steps to acknowledge and heal from trauma. It emphasizes the importance of self-compassion, rebuilding trust, and reconnecting with spirituality. 6. Building Trust and Restoring Faith—This chapter focuses on rebuilding trust in religious institutions, oneself, and others. The author discusses strategies for faith leaders and therapists to foster transparent, respectful relationships that promote healing. 7. Addressing Spiritual Abuse - This chapter addresses the specific issue of spiritual abuse, offering guidance on how to recognize, confront, and recover from such experiences within religious settings. 8. Seeking Professional Help: Therapists and Faith Leaders - Rev. Wilson highlights the critical role of professional help in the healing process, discussing the benefits of therapy and the importance of collaboration between therapists and faith leaders. 9. Reclaiming Your Faith: Rediscovering What Matters - This chapter encourages survivors to rediscover their personal beliefs and rebuild their spiritual practices meaningfully. 10. Moving Forward: Embracing Hope and Restoration - The final chapter offers hope and encouragement for the future, emphasizing the possibility of restoring faith and finding a renewed sense of purpose and connection. Conclusion: Healing Wounds, Renewing Faith is a vital resource for anyone affected by church trauma. It offers a compassionate understanding of the profound impact of such experiences and practical guidance for healing and reclaiming one’s spirituality. Rev. Wilson’s approach is empathetic and empowering, making this book an essential companion for survivors and those supporting them on their journey toward recovery and renewal.




Healing Spiritual Wounds


Book Description

An effective plan to help those suffering from wounds inflicted by the church find spiritual healing and a renewed sense of faith. Raised as a conservative Christian, minister and author Carol Howard Merritt discovered that the traditional institutions she grew up in inflicted great pain and suffering on others. Though she loved the spirituality the church provided, she knew that, because of sexism, homophobia, and manipulative religious politics, established religious institutions weren’t always holy or safe. Instead of offering refuge, these institutions have betrayed people’s hearts and souls. “People have suffered religious abuse,” she writes, “which can be different from physical injury or psychological trauma.” Though participation and affiliation in traditional religious institutions is waning, many people still believe in God. Merritt contends that many leave the church because they have lost trust in the institution, not in God. Healing Spiritual Wounds addresses the church’s dichotomous image—as a safe space and as a dangerous place—and provides a way to restore personal faith and connection to God for those who have been hurt or betrayed by established institutions of faith. Merritt lays out a multistage plan for moving from pain to spiritual rebirth, from recovering theological and emotional shards to recovering communal wholeness. Merritt does not sugarcoat the wrongs institutions long seen as trustworthy have inflicted on many innocent victims. Sympathetic, understanding, and deeply positive, she offers hope and a way to help them heal and reclaim the spiritual joy that can make them whole again.




Finding Spiritual Whitespace


Book Description

Move beyond Coping and Surviving to a Rejuvenating Place of Soul Rest How many of us find ourselves exhausted, running on empty with no time for rest, no time for ourselves, no time for God? Bonnie Gray knows exactly what that's like. On the brink of fulfilling a lifelong dream, Bonnie's plans suddenly went off script. Her life shattered into a debilitating journey through anxiety, panic attacks, and insomnia. But as she struggled to make sense of it all, she made an important discovery: we all need spiritual whitespace. Spiritual whitespace makes room--room in one's heart for a deep relationship with God, room in one's life for rest, room in one's soul for rejuvenation. With soul-stirring vulnerability and heartbreaking honesty, Bonnie takes readers on a personal journey to feed their souls and uncover the deeper story of rest. Lyrical writing draws readers into Gray's intimate journey through overwhelming stress to find God in a broken story and celebrate the beauty of faith. Guided by biblical encouragement and thought-provoking prompts, Gray shows readers how to create space in the everyday for God, refreshment, and faith. She also offers practical steps and insights for making spiritual whitespace a reality, right in the midst of the stress-frayed stories in every season of life. "We live in a culture that brags and boasts about being busy. Into that reality steps Bonnie with a new idea. Whitespace is an important concept and Bonnie has captured it perfectly. If you're exhausted with being exhausted, read this book. If you feel too busy to read this book, then that's probably the best sign of all that you need it."--from the foreword by Jon Acuff, New York Times bestselling author of Stuff Christians Like




Wounds That Heal


Book Description

Balancing sound biblical exposition with sensitive pastoral care, Stephen Seamands shows that because Jesus experienced abuse, shame and rejection, he understands the hurts we experience today. And Jesus' response to pain and suffering gives us hope that we too can experience forgiveness and new life.




Be Healed


Book Description

“Somewhere deep inside each one of us is a burning desire to finally become the person God created us to be.” Do you suffer from spiritual or emotional wounds that are keeping you from reaching that goal? The bestselling book Be Healed is based on retired Catholic therapist Bob Schuchts’s popular program for spiritual, emotional, and physical healing. Incorporating elements of charismatic spirituality and steeped in scripture and the wisdom of the Church, this book offers hope in the healing power of God through the Holy Spirit and the sacraments. Schuchts, founder of the John Paul II Healing Center, sensitively shares his own journey of healing after enduring a series of betrayals in high school—his father’s infidelity, his parents’ divorce, his older brother’s drug addiction—and his subsequent periods of struggle with God and faith. Be Healed includes helpful tools such as charts, tables, lists, reflection questions, and personal challenges to guide you on your journey of healing. Schuchts’s trusted process for finding inner peace and healing is boldly Christ-centered, maintaining focus on the person of Jesus as “the life-giving and ever-present physician of our souls.” Schuchts will help you recognize your brokenness and find your hope and healing in the risen Christ.




The Holiness of God


Book Description

Central to God’s character is the quality of holiness. Yet, even so, most people are hard-pressed to define what God’s holiness precisely is. Many preachers today avoid the topic altogether because people today don’t quite know what to do with words like “awe” or “fear.” R. C. Sproul, in this classic work, puts the holiness of God in its proper and central place in the Christian life. He paints an awe-inspiring vision of God that encourages Christian to become holy just as God is holy. Once you encounter the holiness of God, your life will never be the same.




Blessing or Curse


Book Description

Life's trials and triumphs can seem accidental. One person may feel that life is a constant struggle in which pitfalls abound and someone seems out to get him. Another may feel that every day is a gift from God with special blessings just for her. That's because forces are at work in our lives: the blessings of a loving God or the curses of our spiritual adversary. This hugely popular classic work of Derek Prince helps readers recognize if there are curses at work in their lives and shows them how to get out from under those curses to live under God's blessings. This third edition of Blessing or Curse includes an extensive new study guide for small group or individual use.




Healing


Book Description

The million-copy bestselling introduction to the healing ministry, re-issued with a beautiful new cover. Does healing happen today? Why is there prejudice against the healing ministry? Why are some people not healed? These topical and vital questions are just some of the issues addressed by Francis MacNutt in Healing. A wideranging and broad-based overview, it is essential reading for all involved in the healing ministry. 'Prayer for healing is so central to the gospel, ' writes MacNutt, 'that it should be an integral part of the life of every community of believers. My heart cries out to see it restored to the place it had in the early Christian church.




Healing the Original Wound


Book Description

For anyone who knows something about the imperative need, the restlessness, the hunger we all have to find unfailing love in the brief reality that we call our lives.




Healing Invisible Wounds


Book Description

In these personal reflections on his thirty years of clinical work with victims of genocide, torture, and abuse in the United States, Cambodia, Bosnia, and other parts of the world, Richard Mollica describes the surprising capacity of traumatized people to heal themselves. Here is how Neil Boothby, Director of the Program on Forced Migration and Health at the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, describes the book: "Mollica provides a wealth of ethnographic and clinical evidence that suggests the human capacity to heal is innate--that the 'survival instinct' extends beyond the physical to include the psychological as well. He enables us to see how recovery from 'traumatic life events' needs to be viewed primarily as a 'mystery' to be listened to and explored, rather than solely as a 'problem' to be identified and solved. Healing involves a quest for meaning--with all of its emotional, cultural, religious, spiritual and existential attendants--even when bio-chemical reactions are also operative." Healing Invisible Wounds reveals how trauma survivors, through the telling of their stories, teach all of us how to deal with the tragic events of everyday life. Mollica's important discovery that humiliation--an instrument of violence that also leads to anger and despair--can be transformed through his therapeutic project into solace and redemption is a remarkable new contribution to survivors and clinicians. This book reveals how in every society we have to move away from viewing trauma survivors as "broken people" and "outcasts" to seeing them as courageous people actively contributing to larger social goals. When violence occurs, there is damage not only to individuals but to entire societies, and to the world. Through the journey of self-healing that survivors make, they enable the rest of us not only as individuals but as entire communities to recover from injury in a violent world.