Difference between revisions of "Jay E. Adams"

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'''Jay E. Adams''' is a [[Reformed Churches|Reformed]] theologian known for his work on the development of counseling that is a Biblical and Reformed alternative<ref>[http://orlabs.oclc.org/identities/lccn-n50-36855 worldcat identity]</ref> to that of "standard", liberal psychology.  His work was inspired mostly by [[Reformed Churches|Reformed theology]] and partly by [[Thomas Szasz]] and [[O.H. Mowrer]]<ref> ''Competent to Counsel?: The History of A conservative Protestant Anti-psychiatry movement'', written by Ph.D. candidate David A. Powlison, Charles Rosenberg (thesis adviser), 1996 University of Pennsylvania Doctor Thesis</ref>  
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'''Jay E. Adams''' is a [[Reformed Churches|Reformed]] theologian known for his work on the development of counseling that is a Biblical and Reformed alternative<ref>[http://orlabs.oclc.org/identities/lccn-n50-36855 worldcat identity]</ref> to that of "standard", liberal psychology.  His work was inspired mostly by [[Reformed Churches|Reformed theology]] and partly by [[Thomas Szasz]] and [[Orval Hobart Mowrer|O.H. Mowrer]]<ref> ''Competent to Counsel?: The History of A conservative Protestant Anti-psychiatry movement'', written by Ph.D. candidate David A. Powlison, Charles Rosenberg (thesis adviser), 1996 University of Pennsylvania Doctor Thesis</ref>  
  
 
==Selection of Works==
 
==Selection of Works==

Revision as of 01:46, March 5, 2009

Jay E. Adams is a Reformed theologian known for his work on the development of counseling that is a Biblical and Reformed alternative[1] to that of "standard", liberal psychology. His work was inspired mostly by Reformed theology and partly by Thomas Szasz and O.H. Mowrer[2]

Selection of Works

  • The Christian counselor's New Testament : a new translation in everyday English, with notations, marginal references, and supplemental helps (Six editions exist spanning 1977-2000)


References

  1. worldcat identity
  2. Competent to Counsel?: The History of A conservative Protestant Anti-psychiatry movement, written by Ph.D. candidate David A. Powlison, Charles Rosenberg (thesis adviser), 1996 University of Pennsylvania Doctor Thesis

External links