Guiding Concepts of Modern Belief Mentoring
Guiding Concepts of Modern Belief Mentoring
Christian Belief or Life Training can be traced to both the Old and New Testaments of the Holy bible, which teach, “people do what they do since they think what they think,” i.e., “As a man assumes in his heart so is he.” (Adages 23:7)
This option to conventional Christian therapy does not improve personal restorative abilities. Still, instead of the practical reality of God's words that counters the lies individuals have believed. If a harming person does pass by to allow God's Word to speak into their life, absolutely nothing will change. Nonetheless, when they do, God will certainly renew their mind and bring life-changing healing. Rather than focusing on an individual's hostile actions, this process focuses on problematic reasoning mistakes rooted in a false belief system.
Idea Coaching presumes that problems that manage one's life and distort one's sense of fact, obligation, and responsibility arise from the fraud individuals have about themselves. These fallacies are identified throughout an individual's cognitive development and can be addressed by an Idea Train, specifically when collaborating with Christian customers. The Idea Coach aids the customer in acknowledging false beliefs instilled in their belief system, replacing them with reality, and beginning the process of changing their reasoning (Romans 12:2). Embracing the truth can foster flexibility by changing their point of view on different issues. While changing falsehoods with facts can have a prompt effect on a person's habits, changing the mind is a progressive process.
One main component of Idea Mentoring is the growth of a positive Christian self-concept grounded in God's unconditional, choosing love in Jesus Christ. With a Biblical viewpoint on self-concept, an individual is launched from the concern of needing to produce feelings of self-regard based on performance. Because a Christian, i.e., a follower of Jesus Christ as Rescuer and Lord, need not be a servant to ego-enhancing behavior, they can be free to be selfless and to materialize merits such as belief, integrity, understanding, patience, self-control, God-consciousness, kindness, love, sacrifice, obedience, and humility. Yet without a healthy, balanced self-acceptance grounded in who we are “in Christ,” the practice of these virtues can easily become a neurotic pursuit of God's approval.