My recent review on The Body Keeps the Score noted that while it was an excellent work, as Christians there are other perspectives to consider that overlay secular thought. These include our view of God in the midst of suffering and pain, what forgiveness could look like, how our redemption in Christ changes us, and how ongoing sanctification could impact the person with trauma. To consider what it means to be a child of God and to trust in him as the God of comfort who truly loves and cares for us, even in our brokenness.
So I was thankful to be given this book which considers trauma from a biblical, theological and pastoral perspective. Paul Barker has edited this volume of 20 diverse essays from various scholars, pastors and trauma professionals. It has been compiled with the goal to "help, equip, and encourage pastors who are preaching, teaching and exercising care for people who face potential trauma or indeed have experienced trauma" (p.ix). However, its real distinction is its global perspective. So many resources concentrate on the developed and first world, with a focus on individual and personal traumas. Those are certainly real, significant, and require sensitive pastoral care. However, this book addresses larger scale traumas that communities face of civil war, conflict and natural disaster. These range from the war in Ukraine, civil war in the DRC, and the impact of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, to Typhoon Yolanda in the Philippines and extreme poverty in sub-Saharan Africa. As such, it encompasses a broader view of the impact on communities, not just individual people.
Chapter 2 - Praying the Psalms - using the Psalms devotionally to promote post-trauma resilience, for the Psalms are "God’s poetic gift to us that has a powerful therapeutic dimension when prayed in light of the Christian faith.” (p. 17). Indeed, post-traumatic growth and resilience include:
“in non-Western societies, where survivors usually experience suffering in spiritual, religious, family or community terms, there is a need for interventions that facilitate conditions for appropriate communal, cultural, spiritual, and religious healing practices" (Ch 12, p.192)While every chapter was valuable and had helpful perspectives, there were some that stood out:
Chapter 2 - Praying the Psalms - using the Psalms devotionally to promote post-trauma resilience, for the Psalms are "God’s poetic gift to us that has a powerful therapeutic dimension when prayed in light of the Christian faith.” (p. 17). Indeed, post-traumatic growth and resilience include:
“the ability to find meaning in adversity, gratitude, the ability to forgive, a willingness to seek special support and a capacity to follow one’s own inner moral compass. These resilience factors, in particular, would seem to be things that are part of a faithful Christian life.” (pp.13-14).
Chapter 7 on forgiveness succinctly explores what it might look light in our fallen and not yet redeemed world.
"The overall scheme and structure of the biblical story suggest that in order for humans to live in consonance with reality, and in order for human actions to respond appropriately to broken reality, they must be forgiving. Thus forgiveness is the most appropriate existential posture, mind-set and roadmap for negotiating through life in this world." (pp.121-122)
Numerous chapters further consider forgiveness, reconciliation, and healing:
"A Christian theological rhetoric of forgiveness ... is one that challenges and encourages people to be disposed to forgive without requiring prior repentance, because God in Christ forgave without requiring prior repentance” (Chapter 5, p.100)
“One of the techniques for processing traumatic memories is to repeatedly return to an envisaged place of safety. The idea of God as The Place in which the world dwells, and therefore as the dwelling place of God’s people and the the individual, offers a truly safe place.” (Chapter 4, p.61)
"Forgiveness is closely related to the themes of sin, repentance and new life and is perhaps the most essential task of Christian living. Nevertheless, forgiving and being forgiven are not simple but rather extremely complex practices...Christian forgiveness is “love practised almost those who love poorly”, which should be distinguished from pardoning, condoning or forgetting." (Chapter 9, p.141)
“God is interested in wholeness and wellness, He designed the human being in a marvelous way, interlinking the spirit, mind and body to work together perfectly. Such a worldview is more holistic and relational, interrelational and positive in nature” (Chapter 17, p.274)
There are also chapters that explore how churches and mental health workers can play a role in traumatised societies, with both practical and pastoral suggestions.
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