"God and Soul Care is a bold and courageous book. In it, Eric Johnson argues that Christian faith is fundamentally 'therapeutic' and that it provides tools that contribute to healing that secular counselors cannot make use of. Those tools require a deep and powerful understanding of Christian faith itself, rooted in the trinitarian understanding of God that God's revelation in Christ makes possible. Johnson recognizes the value of the knowledge gained by modern psychology and the helpful tools found there and in secular counseling as gifts given by God's common grace. However, he argues that these tools would be put to better use if they were used in the context of a distinctively Christian approach to human flourishing that differs radically from the worldviews implicit in much psychology and counseling. This is a book that will benefit both psychologists and theologians." (C. Stephen Evans, university professor of philosophy and humanities, Baylor University)
"Eric L. Johnson is one of the most thoughtful and thorough Christian scholars of our day. In God and Soul Care, Dr. Johnson once again demonstrates the profound continuity between Christian doctrine and Christian approaches to counseling, pastoral care, and psychotherapy. Each chapter of this text explores both the complex nuances of the Christian faith and why these nuances matter for those who care for souls. This volume will have both immediate value for the training of Christian counselors and longstanding value as a reference source as those counselors move through their careers." (Mark R. McMinn, professor of psychology, George Fox University, author of The Science of Virtue)
"Exercising meticulous analysis and demonstrating thoughtful synthesis of the book of God's work (the sciences) and the book of God's Word (the Bible) while drawing from his own breadth of exceptional scholarship, Johnson offers an impressive and much-needed contribution to the disciplines of Christian counseling and psychology. As a biblical counselor and licensed practitioner who daily enters in with those suffering from the complexities associated with severe psychological disturbance, enslaving sin, and spiritual confusion, I will consult this insightful volume often and for many years to come." (Jeremy Lelek, president, Association of Biblical Counselors)
"Augustine's Soliloquies includes a dialogue between himself and his Reason, who asks him what he wants to know: '"I want to know God and the soul." "Nothing more?" "Nothing at all."' Eric Johnson wants to know how God heals the soul. This book is his answer. It's a work of radical Christian scholarship that lets theology into the driver's seat of psychology from the start. The result is a salutary theology that features the psychological health-giving implications of various Christian doctrines, united by a common trinitarian framework. This is the main course for which Johnson's Foundations for Soul Care was the appetizer. Christianity as theo-therapy: Augustine would no doubt be pleased." (Kevin J. Vanhoozer, research professor of systematic theology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School)
"In our good but fallen world, few of us escape the need for counseling at some point in our journey. Caught amid the unexpected, we hope for wise counsel that will help us find our way in and through the darkness. Alas, too often we are faced with the dilemma of simplistic Christian counsel or secular psychology that refuses to take our deepest commitments seriously. This is one of many reasons that I am so grateful for Eric Johnson's work. He not only resists a false dichotomy between faith and the insights of psychology but has devoted his life's work to mapping the intricate networks between Scripture, faith, theology, and psychology. God and Soul Care is a gift, and if it is received as it should be, it will go a long way toward helping shape counseling and counselors so that when we need them they are well-equipped to work alongside God in pointing us down the road of deep healing, to the glory of God and our personal well-being." (Craig G. Bartholomew, Professor of Philosophy and Religion & Theology, H. Evan Runner Chair, Redeemer University College)
"God and Soul Care is a beautifully balanced book composed by one of the most generous hearts and capacious minds in Christian counseling. Eric Johnson is as much theologian as he is psychologist, and the result is a thoughtful and thorough application of the resources of the Christian faith (God, gospel, and church) to the broken stuff in our lives. There's nothing else like it in the Christian counseling compendium, and it therefore is a must-read for biblical and Christian counselors, pastors who take shepherding their people seriously, and thoughtful missionaries aiming to contextualize the gospel in any Western context." (Sam R. Williams, professor of counseling, coordinator of master's degrees in counseling, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary)
"Deftly building on his Foundations for Soul Care, Johnson erects a framework of systematic theology for those who counsel as Christians. He draws from a dazzling diversity of sources to help the reader think through the theological dimensions and implications of counseling, and this is vital in an age when many who counsel even in the name of Christ have little training in the deeply biblical worldview needed to counsel well. Johnson knows both the psychological and biblical sides of the story and weaves them together in a wonderfully coherent book. A must-read for Christians who counsel professionally or in pastoral and ministry contexts!" (Timothy A. Sisemore, director of research, professor, Richmont Graduate University)
"God and Soul Care shows how Christian theology characterizes human flourishing, and it alerts us to the cure of all ills and the cultivation of all facets of our human condition in and through Jesus Christ. We need counselors today―trained professionals, alert pastors, and wise laypersons―with deeper theological formation in the Catholic and Reformation traditions of doctrinal and exegetical reflection as well as a discerning engagement with the psychological field. Eric Johnson proves yet again to be a model and guide of the first order in summoning us to consider the ways in which knowing God reorients and renews our concern for faithful soul care." (Michael Allen, academic dean, associate professor of systematic and historical theology, Reformed Theological Seminary, Orlando)
"God and Soul Care by Eric Johnson is another deep and substantial contribution to the further development of a truly Christian psychology and to Christian counseling and soul care. He describes the therapeutic resources of the Christian faith by clearly explicating the implications of fundamental biblical truths for Christian psychotherapy and counseling. I highly recommend this book as essential reading!" (Siang-Yang Tan, professor of psychology, Fuller Theological Seminary, author of Counseling and Psychotherapy)
"When Eric Johnson's extraordinary magnum opus Foundations for Soul Care was published in 2007, I thought this would be the peak of his writing career, but as he says in the preface to this new volume, that was just 'a prolegomenon to the present work.' So now we have two weighty parts of a much-needed, wonderfully comprehensive Christian psychology that will stand for many years as the primary reference book on the relationship between Scripture, the character of God, the person of Christ, and insights from psychology. Johnson aims for 'the proper synthesis of all relevant biblical, theological, psychological, and philosophical forms of knowledge about human beings with the goal of understanding human beings as comprehensively as possible, that is, as much like God as we can.' His patient, diligent, and careful scholarship is an amazing gift to the church at a time when there are many significant advances in contemporary psychology and Christians need help to know how to think biblically about this area of life that affects us all―what he calls 'creation grace.' Johnson writes, 'Most of God and Soul Care… is focused on the use of redemptive grace resources that only Christian counselees can utilize.' Behind this work of scholarship is a man with a profound love for God, truth, people, and life who has poured all his resources into the task of developing Christian psychology. I will have no hesitation in recommending this valuable resource to my counseling and theology students." (Richard Winter, professor emeritus of applied theology and counseling, Covenant Theological Seminary, St. Louis)