I think the reason the church is not good at telling stories is because we’ve not taught people that they have a powerful story to tell.

Practitioner #4 (via mikerusch)

Hanging with mommy (Taken with instagram)

Hanging with mommy (Taken with instagram)

Big Themes Work out in Small Scenes

When you get to know a person well, you come to know both the panorama and the details. But change walks out in the details. The patterns, themes, and tendencies are like the view from the observation deck of the Empire State Building. From one hundred floors up, everything spreads serenely before you. But the action and noise of life happens at the corner of 5th Avenue & 34th Street and takes the Lincoln Tunnel home to Hoboken. Our lives work as stories, in a running series of scenes. Like a novel or movie, big themes work out in small scenes. This is how God has made it to be. This is how He works. This is something that would-be counselors often don’t get. It is something that preachers who do not counsel— and counsel well—often don’t understand. When you counsel (or preach) in great and good generalities, people will nod, but they rarely change. They rarely really change. Jesus works for a turn-the-world-upside-down reorientation and redirection. Ministry needs to know the big picture, but it always takes the elevator down to “G.” Get involved on the corner. Talk into the traffic noise. Drive over to Hoboken at rush hour. Change actually takes place in the watershed moments, choice points, and decisive incidents of everyday life.

David Powlison, ‘Think Locally, Act Globally,’ The Journal of Biblical Counseling, Fall 2003

Great morning for some Counter Culture La Forza in the French Press (Taken with instagram)

Great morning for some Counter Culture La Forza in the French Press (Taken with instagram)

Perfect night for grilling (Taken with instagram)

Perfect night for grilling (Taken with instagram)

Matt Chandler discusses sin, suffering, and hope in a fallen world for the upcoming conference by the Association of Biblical Counselors - ‘The Groaning Cosmos: Sin, Suffering, and the Gospel.’

Find out more at christiancounseling.com