Jay E. Adams: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{Short description|American Presbyterian author (1929–2020)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=February 2013}} {{Infobox person | name = Jay E. Adams | image = JayAdams.jpg | birth_date = {{birth date |1929|01|30}} | birth_place = Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. | death_date = {{nowrap|{{death date and age|2020|11|14|1929|01|30}}}} | occupation = Counselor, writer, founder of The Institute for Nouthetic Studies }..." |
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{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
| name = Jay E. Adams | | name = Jay E. Adams | ||
| image = JayAdams.jpg | | image = JayAdams.jpg | ||
| birth_date = | | birth_date = January 30, 1929 | ||
| birth_place = [[Baltimore | | birth_place = [[wikipedia:Baltimore, Maryland|Baltimore, Maryland]] | ||
| death_date | | death_date = November 14, 2020 | ||
| | | death_place = Unknown | ||
| affiliations = [[The Institute for Nouthetic Studies]] (founder) | |||
| occupation = Counselor, writer, founder | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Jay Edward Adams''' (January 30, 1929 – November 14, 2020) was an American Presbyterian preacher and author who was known for his development in the mid and late 20th century of counseling based on Biblical scriptures. He published more than 100 books related to this topic, which have been translated into 16 languages. | |||
'''Jay Edward Adams''' (January 30, 1929 – November 14, 2020) was an American Presbyterian preacher and author who was known for his development in the mid and late 20th century of counseling based on Biblical scriptures. He published more than 100 books related to this topic, which have been translated into 16 languages. | |||
After decades in practice, Adams wrote ''Competent to Counsel'' (1970), which was highly influential for biblical pastoral theology. He also founded [[The Institute for Nouethetic Studies]], putting together a curriculum to support such work. It has trained practitioners and also served as a center of resources for this practice and related studies. His approach was evangelical and conservative. | After decades in practice, Adams wrote ''Competent to Counsel'' (1970), which was highly influential for biblical pastoral theology. He also founded [[The Institute for Nouethetic Studies]], putting together a curriculum to support such work. It has trained practitioners and also served as a center of resources for this practice and related studies. His approach was evangelical and conservative. | ||
==Nouthetic counseling== | ==Nouthetic counseling== | ||
According to an interview by Aaron Blumer, Adams' major influence on counseling was based on his book ''Competent to Counsel'', published in 1970, when he was about 40 years old. | According to an interview by Aaron Blumer, Adams' major influence on counseling was based on his book ''Competent to Counsel'', published in 1970, when he was about 40 years old. | ||
In the late 20th century, [[John F. MacArthur]] said that Adams, through his book ''Competent to Counsel'' (1970), gave the Christian church "an indispensable corrective to several trends that are eating away at the Church's spiritual vitality". | In the late 20th century, [[John F. MacArthur]] said that Adams, through his book ''Competent to Counsel'' (1970), gave the Christian church "an indispensable corrective to several trends that are eating away at the Church's spiritual vitality". [[Derek Tidball]] said that Adams made an "enormous contribution to the revival of biblical pastoral theology." According to Ian F. Jones, Tim Clinton, and George Ohlschlager, "Jay Adams brought a biblical revolution to Christian and pastoral counseling in the 1970s, challenging a field that was racing toward rancor, even dissolution by its fascination with all manner of anti-Christian psycho-babble."<ref>http://www.aacc.net/2006/07/18/christian-counseling-and-essential-biblical-principles/ https://web.archive.org/web/20130222075933/http://www.aacc.net/2006/07/18/christian-counseling-and-essential-biblical-principles/</ref> David Powlison said that Adams' writings provided "abundant resources for the development of counseling". These led to the establishment of various institutions based on his views. | ||
Some non-evangelical psychologists have argued that [[nouthetic counseling]] | Some non-evangelical psychologists have argued that [[nouthetic counseling]] can do considerable harm to patients. Critics note that some of the recommended techniques are ineffective. Also, patients who are not helped by nouthetic counseling often consider themselves religious failures, adding to their problems. Further criticism comes from ''The Baker Encyclopedia of Psychology and Counseling,'' which states that "Adams seems to be not fully knowledgeable regarding the theories he criticizes" and that "confrontation is also essential to the theory of Adams." However, it also states that this confrontation "is defined as caring confrontation." | ||
Mark McMinn has said, however, that "Dr. Adams has received a great deal of unfair, uninformed criticism from the Christian counseling community. Although I do not share Dr. Adams' opinion on confronting sin in counseling, I do respect his pioneering work in biblical counseling." | Mark McMinn has said, however, that "Dr. Adams has received a great deal of unfair, uninformed criticism from the Christian counseling community. Although I do not share Dr. Adams' opinion on confronting sin in counseling, I do respect his pioneering work in biblical counseling." |
Latest revision as of 23:37, 25 March 2025
Birth Date | January 30, 1929 |
---|---|
Birth Place | Baltimore, Maryland |
Death Date | November 14, 2020 |
Death Place | Unknown |
Occupation(s) | Counselor, writer, founder |
Affiliation(s) | The Institute for Nouthetic Studies (founder) |
Jay Edward Adams (January 30, 1929 – November 14, 2020) was an American Presbyterian preacher and author who was known for his development in the mid and late 20th century of counseling based on Biblical scriptures. He published more than 100 books related to this topic, which have been translated into 16 languages.
After decades in practice, Adams wrote Competent to Counsel (1970), which was highly influential for biblical pastoral theology. He also founded The Institute for Nouethetic Studies, putting together a curriculum to support such work. It has trained practitioners and also served as a center of resources for this practice and related studies. His approach was evangelical and conservative.
Nouthetic counseling
According to an interview by Aaron Blumer, Adams' major influence on counseling was based on his book Competent to Counsel, published in 1970, when he was about 40 years old.
In the late 20th century, John F. MacArthur said that Adams, through his book Competent to Counsel (1970), gave the Christian church "an indispensable corrective to several trends that are eating away at the Church's spiritual vitality". Derek Tidball said that Adams made an "enormous contribution to the revival of biblical pastoral theology." According to Ian F. Jones, Tim Clinton, and George Ohlschlager, "Jay Adams brought a biblical revolution to Christian and pastoral counseling in the 1970s, challenging a field that was racing toward rancor, even dissolution by its fascination with all manner of anti-Christian psycho-babble."[1] David Powlison said that Adams' writings provided "abundant resources for the development of counseling". These led to the establishment of various institutions based on his views.
Some non-evangelical psychologists have argued that nouthetic counseling can do considerable harm to patients. Critics note that some of the recommended techniques are ineffective. Also, patients who are not helped by nouthetic counseling often consider themselves religious failures, adding to their problems. Further criticism comes from The Baker Encyclopedia of Psychology and Counseling, which states that "Adams seems to be not fully knowledgeable regarding the theories he criticizes" and that "confrontation is also essential to the theory of Adams." However, it also states that this confrontation "is defined as caring confrontation."
Mark McMinn has said, however, that "Dr. Adams has received a great deal of unfair, uninformed criticism from the Christian counseling community. Although I do not share Dr. Adams' opinion on confronting sin in counseling, I do respect his pioneering work in biblical counseling."
Education
- Bachelor of Divinity Reformed Episcopal Seminary
- Bachelor of Arts in Classics Johns Hopkins University
- Masters in Sacred Theology Temple University
- PhD in Speech University of Missouri
Publications
(See: Jay E. Adams bibliography)