SoulCare Foundations I: The Basic Model
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Lesson OneIntroduction to SoulCare: Getting Started on the Journey3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson TwoThe First Task in Learning to Provide SoulCare: Knowing What You're After and What It Takes to Get There3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson ThreeA Personal Search: Beginning with an Inside Look3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson FourThe Concept of Ruling Passions: What Energy Carries You into the Life of Another3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson FiveBrokenness: The Key to Releasing the Power of SoulCare3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson SixThe Good and the Bad in the Human Soul: Self-Need vs. Soul-Thirst3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson SevenEntering the Battle for Another's Soul: The First Step3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson EightWisdom: A Roadmap for Entering the Soul Without Getting Lost3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson NineGetting into the Battle: Moving Below the Waterline from the Presenting Problem to the Story of the Soul3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson TenAgents of Growth: What SoulCare Can Do in Our Lives3 Activities|1 Assessment
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion1 Activity|1 Assessment
Participants 1
Discussion Questions
Christian Learning Center › Forums › Dr. Crabb talks about our tendency to keep relationships shallow using the image of “not turning our chairs toward one another.” Why is it so difficult for us to “turn our chairs”? In other words, why are we reluctant to let anyone really know us? As you think about your answer, consider these possible reasons: Don’t have time. Don’t want to get involved. Don’t care. Feel inadequate and awkward. Don’t know how to form deeper relationships. Not culturally acceptable. Explain several possible reasons (using your own or from the list above) and then give an example from your experience that demonstrates which reason most often keeps you from turning your chair towards others.
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Dr. Crabb talks about our tendency to keep relationships shallow using the image of “not turning our chairs toward one another.” Why is it so difficult for us to “turn our chairs”? In other words, why are we reluctant to let anyone really know us? As you think about your answer, consider these possible reasons: Don’t have time. Don’t want to get involved. Don’t care. Feel inadequate and awkward. Don’t know how to form deeper relationships. Not culturally acceptable. Explain several possible reasons (using your own or from the list above) and then give an example from your experience that demonstrates which reason most often keeps you from turning your chair towards others.
Austin replied 2 months ago 200 Members · 207 Replies
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I believe the struggle to turn our chair towards another for help is there because of fear of man. “What will they think about me if they know…?” “What will they do if they find out…?” For the one helping I believe the struggle may be in the cost of time, emotions, and grit. For me personally I’m resistant to seek help because I fear rejection and being misunderstood. It feels risky. I’m reluctant to help, even though there is a big part of me that really wants to invest in someone, because I feel inadequate to help and emotionally exhausted.
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Most people fear to let others into their soul level (emotions, feelings, thoughts..). The main reason is; they have lost their trust on people because of past hurtful experiences. They think, by doing so, they can protect themselves from getting hurt again. But by doing so, they actually close the door for healing. God, through His Spirit, is doing the deep healing inside of us, but God also uses people aa part of our healing journey.
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The reasons that stand out to me the most revolve around trust. The deepest betrayals come from those that we have most trusted, whether they meant to hurt us or not. If we share nothing, then there’s nothing that can be turned back against us as a weapon. So we hide behind our carefully crafted masks that are designed to hide our insecurity, fear of others, and doubts of our own abilities. It would crush most of us to be seen as weak, not up to the task, or otherwise “less than,” which is of course another reason we fail to have the courage to turn our chairs toward one another. We simply avoid these moments, and go about our busy lives, because in the busyness is safety. We’re so busy in fact that we don’t leave ourselves the time to care for others, or when we want to care, we simply don’t have the time.
Sometimes, as in my case, we are aware of this in others. We all have those people in our lives that always seem to be too busy to care, not just family and friends, but unfortunately, pastors and others that we would expect to do so. Not always, but sometimes. When that happens, I tend to retreat, and turn my chair instead toward things that don’t require the effort of interpersonal relationships.
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I mainly don’t turn my chair towards others as I find it hard to trust others. I tend to be fairly open and enjoy venturing deep but I remain guarded at the same time. My experience has been most people don’t have time to really meet each other as there are too many other things in life that have to be accomplished. I really believe our world/ culture/ even church culture has possessed time more for their busy lives much more than receiving time as God intended as a gift from the Lord to love Him and others…( not isolating time for just our own lives )
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I think it is mostly a comfort level with vulnerability. I am connected with many people socially and through my job, but there are only certain people I feel like really opening up my heart to. It can be exhausting to share struggles with so many people, and as people, we try to control the situation by keeping the input limited (even when wisdom from others is healthy and best). I think for me the depth of the relationship really determines how ready I am to turn a chair towards them. It can be nice and refreshing to share, have someone listen, and to receive input or care. But it can also feel tiring and uncomfortable to do so. It often feels much easier to close the circle and to just be surface-level with others outside of the circle. As a human, I care about what people think about me, and this (along with trust) often drives what I share with what people. I recently was struggling with a relationship and when people would ask about it, I would mostly say “it is going ok” to those I did not want to let in too deeply, but to my deeper and trusted friends, I would go into much detail and share the struggles and how I felt.