Understanding the Art of Biblical Counseling
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About this ebook
It is a Biblical Counseling book that zeros in counseling people with HIV/AIDS in particular and any other general disease that has similar stigma in nature in general. The book discusses the counsel for sexual behavioral change, counseling children with HIV/AIDS, women, especially in Africa who face social inequality and are exposed to HIV/AIDS infections more than men.
The book also discusses a secular Rational Emotive Therapy as a model for interventions contrary to Biblical Counseling posing a question if Christian women can opt to use RET as alternative options. Counseling people with suicidal thoughts, the orphans and counseling the dying is part of the main thrust of this book. As a matter of fact, this book answers many questions for all Christians who are confronted by dire decisions to make about their health and lives. This is a highly recommended book gives practical guidance in making one’s decisions about health and choices in life for better future.
Dr. Sam S. Gasela-Mhlanga
Dr. Sam S. Gasela-Mhlanga has vast experience in Biblical Counseling, Education, Pastoring and Administration. He has lived in Africa, Britain and United States which gives him a unique experience from three cultural backgrounds which gives a voice of reason when it comes to various counseling experience. The practical experience he has ushers new perspectives on the lives of a variety of people going through life challenges and he gives clear biblical solutions to real life issues. This book is highly recommended to everyone as Dr. Sam outlines all the fabric social issues that hang on the balance and pose a threat to the 21st generation. Dr. Sam S. Gasela-Mhlanga holds various degrees, Bachelor of Divinity/M. Div., Masters in Theology, Masters in Educational Administration, Policy Studies and Planning, Doctoral in Educational Leadership and PhD. Clinical Psychology-Forensic (Cand.). He is also a member of International Association of Biblical Counselors.
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Understanding the Art of Biblical Counseling - Dr. Sam S. Gasela-Mhlanga
Copyright © 2020 Dr. Sam S. Gasela-Mhlanga.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF FIGURES
PREFACE
1. INTRODUCTION
Familiarity with the Literature
Void in the Literature
Thesis Statement
2. BIBLICAL AND THEOLOGICAL FOUNDATION FOR COUNSELING THOSE WITH HIV/AIDS
Analysis of HIV/AIDS Origin and Stigma
The Church in Response to HIV/AIDS
Practical Response to HIV/AIDS through Biblical Counseling
HIV/AIDS and Leprosy Compared
Embracing HIV/AIDS Positive People in the Church
Conclusion
3. SOCIAL RESPONSE TO HIV/AIDS THROUGH BIBLICAL COUNSELING
Counseling HIV/AIDS Church Members to Cope with Stress and Depression
Sexual Behavioral Change of HIV/AIDS Positive Members
Counseling Children with HIV/AIDS
Challenges Women with HIV/AIDS Face
Rational Emotive Therapy as a Model for Interventions
Counseling HIV/AIDS Church Members with Suicidal Thoughts
Counseling HIV/AIDS Orphans
Conclusion
4. THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL RESPONSE TO HIV/AIDS THROUGH BIBLICAL COUNSELING
The Value of Knowing One’s HIV/AIDS Status
Strategies to Combat HIV/AIDS in Families, Church, and Community
Conclusion
5. RESEARCH IMPLICATIONS, APPLICATIONS AND FURTHER RESEARCH
Research Implications
Research Applications
Further Research
Theological Reflection
Personal Reflection
Conclusion
BIBLIOGRAPHY
LIST OF FIGURES
1. Human composition
2. Triangular relationship between the family, the church, and Community
PREFACE
Counseling HIV/AIDS positive people in the church has become one of the job descriptions of local church pastors, but it has also become every member’s responsibility to respond to those who are infected. It is the most complex and challenging disease of the twenty-first century. In Africa in general and Zimbabwe in particular, it has awakened the church to a greater extent. It is in that context that this thesis was written to examine and investigate the biblical response to HIV/AIDS through biblical counseling. I would like to extend my profound gratitude to my professors, Dr. Michael Wilder, and Coleman Ford who have spent much of their time, resources, and patience to make this thesis possible. My editor, Dr. James Chancellor, did splendid work. I pray that this thesis will benefit Christians, churches, and non-governmental organizations to respond to HIV/AIDS positive people.
My heart-felt thanks to my dear wife, Judith, and our children, Blessing, Shalom, Prosper, Emmanuel, and Joseph-Sam, Jr., who gave me all their support spiritually, socially, and morally. I am grateful to the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, a great Christian institution that trains and educates minds, nurtures spiritual growth, and empowers and commissions students to fulfill the Great Commission (Matt 28:18-20 NKJV), led by my friend, Dr. R. Albert Mohler who has championed the reformation of SBTS since 1994 for the glory of God. Many thanks also to Dr. Terry Seelow who has been a friend and colleague at St. Matthews Baptist Church as I interned under him for four years. Above all, I am thankful to God the Almighty, for giving me the strength and good health to serve Him and to write this thesis that I pray will help thousands of people, churches, and organizations to respond to HIV/AIDS positive people. To God be the glory, honor, and praise from generations to generations and forever and ever, Amen.
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
The result of the fall in Eden has brought all kinds of sufferings in human history. Diseases are some of the predicaments that human beings face as a result of sin. Leprosy is a disease that has a similar stigma to HIV/AIDS. The thesis will have a comparative analysis between leprosy and HIV/AIDS, the causes, the social impact, and the stigma of the two diseases. Although no specific texts in the Bible that mention HIV/AIDS, the analysis of the texts in the context of leprosy will highlight the similar stigma of HIV/AIDS that patients face today. This thesis is a comparative case study about the social response in the Old and New Testaments to lepers as it relates to modern AIDS concerns. Gill writes,
It is not possible to find, in the Bible, an exact parallel to stigmatization of those with HIV/AIDS: and yet within the biblical tradition, there are many examples that point to the way in which the stigmatized of the day were treated. We need to learn from the manner in which Jesus related to and responded to the stigmatized, for example, to the lepers, Samaritans, a menstruating woman, and those with physical and emotional disabilities.¹
The thesis will expound on leprosy in the Bible and its similarities with HIV/AIDS. The church has become a refuge for those who are HIV/AIDS positive as they offer hope and moral support to the infected. After one finds out that he or she is HIV/AIDS positive, society rejects and stigmatizes them. Hoffman contends, HIV disease is not simply a physical entity. Rather, the impact of the disease is reflected in many other important ways, such as in emotional responses, copying strategies, self-image, and changes in life goals. But the physical aspects of the disease often lead to the first awareness that something is amiss; then they become markers of the relentless progression of the disease.² Almond concurs with Hoffman that HIV is not simply a physical issue: AIDS raises a number of ethical and social problems which must inevitably be confronted by the whole community, by people with AIDS and their relatives, and by those professionally involved.
³ It is a physical, moral, and emotional disease; when one is infected with HIV/AIDS, the family, relatives, church, and community all are affected. When the virus destroys the infected person’s immune system, the person is prone to various other diseases. Shepherd and Smith propound,
The virus is matter which border by definition between living and nonliving material. They are actually replicable protein matter which exists in a parasitic sense and can survive only as long as their hosts exist. HIV belongs to a class known as retroviruses because its reproduction process involves the virus using its reverse transcriptase enzyme to replicate its RNA into DNA molecules. ⁴
Available HIV/AIDS drugs (antiviral drugs) do not effectively kill the HIV virus, but instead they can only slow down the progression of the disease in the body. Smith alludes to that effect:
The white blood cells that the virus attacks are T4 lymphocytes, monocytes, and macrophages. The invading virus turns the monocytes and macrophages into virus-producing factories for the rest of the individual’s life but does not significantly damage the cell. Meanwhile, the T4 lymphocytes are systematically killed off over time.⁵ When the virus destroys the infected person’s immune system, the person is prone to various other diseases. AIDS is a complex disease in which the virus is unpredictable in how it mutates and it continues to change its structure and generic so much that it has been difficult to find a medication that could destroy and eliminates its incubation in the body.
Avert Organization reports,
The first reported case of AIDS in Zimbabwe occurred in 1985. By the end of the 1980s, around 10% of the adult population was thought to be infected with HIV. This figure rose dramatically in the first half of the 1990s, peaking at 26.5% in 1997. But since this point, the HIV prevalence is thought to have declined, making Zimbabwe one of the first African nations to witness such a trend. According to government figures, the adult prevalence was 23.7 percent in 2001, and fell to 14.3 percent in 2010.⁶
As cities, churches, and communities grow rapidly, HIV/AIDS infections also spread in an alarming rate. Avert Organization reports,
Despite years of HIV/AIDS education programs in Zimbabwe, there are still misunderstandings about the disease, its’ genesis, and its effects on the body. HIV/AIDS increased with poverty in the last decade, as those infected with the disease engaged in prostitution.⁷
The church must have a strategy to respond to the disease. Avert Organization states, When AIDS first emerged in Zimbabwe, the government was slow to acknowledge the problem and to take appropriate action. Discussion of HIV and AIDS was minimal.
⁸ The government of Zimbabwe introduced an HIV/AIDS policy and levy to try to curb the spread of HIV/AIDS in the country in 1999. Efforts to prevent the spread of an HIV in Zimbabwe have been spearheaded by the National AIDS Council (NAC), non-governmental, religious, and academic organizations.
⁹
The government of Zimbabwe has been in the forefront to deal with the disease, but the church has lagged behind for some decades. The church should be the salt and light of the world. There are very few books, articles, and documents that have been written by the church to respond to HIV/AIDS in a biblical way. The government and the church have different views as to how to respond to HIV/AIDS:
The government’s main tool for the prevention of an HIV/AIDS is the use of condoms, male circumcision, and abstinence before marriage, prevention programs aimed at behavioral change and the prevention of mother to child transmission which have been instrumental in bringing about a decline in HIV prevalence.¹⁰
The church has similar methods, but argues that the only solution to this epidemic is abstinence, faithfulness within marriage, behavioral change, righteous lifestyle, and the fear of God. This thesis will pursue that thought of the church and Christian moral principles. It will also advocate for voluntary counseling and testing for HIV/AIDS.
Bread of International Fellowship Baptist has initiated programs in the past five years to meet the challenges of HIV/AIDS under a ministry called ‘Hope for All.’ The ministry’s main function is to care for the orphans of those who die of HIV/AIDS. It trains volunteers, raises funds for school fees of orphans, guides the orphans for vocational training, provides home-based care, and supplies programs for HIV/AIDS prevention.
The thesis seeks to examine the biblical response to HIV/AIDS positive church members through biblical counseling. With the influx of church members being infected, it has become a church crisis, and it is crucial to find a solution to this problem. Twenty years ago, the disease was not yet discovered and the church did not know about it. Now it has come into the church and needs to be addressed, squarely.
It is in this context that there is an urgent need to examine and investigate the biblical response to the disease. The thesis will examine how leprosy in both New and Old Testaments was regarded and how Israelites treated those with leprosy. By standard, prejudice, and stigma, HIV/AIDS is the closest to leprosy. The Bible provides a good case study in comparative analysis between leprosy and HIV/AIDS. Ultimately, Christ reveals how the church should respond to HIV/AIDS positive people in contrast to the Israelites’ responses to the lepers. The thesis will make a comparative analysis of how leprosy was regarded and shunned in comparison to HIV/AIDS today.
Familiarity with the Literature
A great amount of literature is written about HIV/AIDS and counseling. There has been vigorous research on this complex disease, HIV/AIDS, and there is a desperate desire to