Archive for the 'Steve Viars' Category

Putting Your Past in Its Place

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2011

Putting Your Past in Its Place

Book Details

Author: Stephen Viars, D.Min.

Publisher: Harvest House (February 2011) (248 Pages)

Category: Biblical Counseling, Christian Living

ISBN: 978-0-7369-2739-0

Retail Price: $12.99

Reviewer: Bob Kellemen

Biblical “Balance”

Christians who attempt to address the crucial topic of the past tend toward extremes. At times, we fall into the trap of “the past is everything” mindset. We blame our past and use it as an excuse. At other times, we careen to the opposite extreme of “the past is nothing.” We rip out of context and misapply Paul’s words about forgetting the things which are behind (Philippians 3:1-15).

In Putting Your Past in Its Place, Pastor Steve Viars avoids both extremes. As he notes:

“Both extremes are problematic for students of Scripture. If the past is nothing, then why did God create us with the ability to remember? Why are we instructed, for example, to not let the sun go down on our wrath (Ephesians 4:26) if today isn’t going to effect tomorrow? But the past is everything view is equally troubling. The Scripture does not encourage us to view ourselves as helpless victims whose choices today are outside our ability to understand or change” (p. 18).

Viars then spends a complete chapter developing a “theology of the past.” With that foundation laid, the rest of Putting Your Past in Its Place is a practical theology of what the Bible teaches about how we deal with our past scripturally.

Suffering and Sin

The modern biblical counseling movement at times has emphasized the confrontation of sin, somewhat to the neglect of comfort for suffering. Viars addresses both by helping readers to organize their past into their innocent past (suffering) and their guilty past (sin). He then delineates between whether we handled our past well or poorly.

The rest of the book treks with readers through the four categories of:

• The “Innocent Past” (suffering) when you Responded Well: You were sinned against, but did not sin in return. Respond now with “Authentic Suffering.”

• The “Innocent Past” (suffering) when you Responded Poorly: You were sinned against, but your response displeased God. Respond now with “Humble Analysis.”

• The “Guilty Past” (sin) when you Responded Well: You blew it, but then acknowledged your failure and handled matters appropriately. Respond now with “Joyful Remembrance.”

• The “Guilty Past” (sin) when you Responded Poorly: You sinned and then took additional steps that displeased God further. Respond now with “Honest Self-Confrontation.”

Viars is anything but naïve. So immediately after introducing these four categories, he explains:

“It is okay if your ‘baloney detector’ is going off right about now. I am not suggesting that the Bible teaches these four categories in some sort of absolute and rigid fashion. Rather, these categories help us to clarify what happened and how we responded. That, in turn, helps us to know what biblical principles to apply” (p. 67).

Viars spends three chapters on “authentic suffering” and dealing with our innocent past. He emphasizes biblical principles of facing it honestly, biblically, hopefully, and missionally. He develops “humble analysis” and dealing with our guilty past in two chapters. Here he encourages readers to ponder six diagnostic questions to discern how to respond today to one’s guilty past.

The three chapters on “joyful remembrance” help readers to respond to their guilty past when they handled their sin biblically. Here Viars focuses on what to do when we do not feel forgiven and when we continually rehearse our failures. The two chapters on “honest self-confrontation” teach how to handle our guilty past when we responded unbiblically. Here Viars helps readers to address heart issues and patterns rather than focusing on symptoms, while also directing readers to their only hope—rejoicing in the forgiveness of our Redeemer.

Real-Life Narratives

At first glance, these four categories might imply something of a mechanical approach. Nothing could be further from the truth. Throughout Putting Your Past in Its Place, what shines through is Viars’ decades of experience as a pastor and biblical counselor working with real people with real issues. His creative illustrations, engaging stories, personal examples, weaving in of Jill’s story, real-life testimonials, and questions for personal reflection and group discussion all result in the most reader-friendly counseling book you’ll ever find.

Viars has devoted his life and ministry to helping others change—biblically. Putting Your Past in Its Place is the result of that lifelong ministry. Whether you’re struggling with the process of change related to past suffering or to past sin, this book provides the seasoned, compassionate, pastoral, hope-filled, biblical wisdom you need.

While I highly recommend Putting Your Past in Its Place for the person in the pew, I’m also convinced that it will be a theory-altering, practice-changing book for pastors and biblical counselors. Viars models the sufficiency of Scripture for everyday life like no one I have read. Pastors and counselors can learn from him not only how to help their parishioners and counselees to deal with the past, but even more, how to view and use the Scriptures to develop a theology and methodology for dealing with any life issue.

In an era when our resources seem at times to bounce between theology unrelated to life and self-help manuals not grounded in God’s truth, Putting Your Past in Its Place is a breath of fresh air. The “sufficiency of Scripture” has become something of a buzz word in biblical counseling—used at times without definition or real-life descriptions. By grounding his practical theology in a biblical theology of the past, Viars models a robust, relational, real-world approach to the sufficiency of Scripture. He shows that God’s Word is relevant to all of life, and offers uniquely profound insights for living.

Note: This review first appeared at the Gospel Coalition Book Review site. Read it there at Putting Your Past in Its Place.

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Robust Resources for Changed Lives

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

Robust Resources for Changed Lives 

Where do you turn for in-depth, comprehensive, relational resources that equip you to speak the truth in love so we can all grow together in Christ? There are numerous great sources available in the Evangelical world today. Another cutting-edge resource is coming your way.

Save the date. On Monday, May 2, 2011, the Biblical Counseling Coalition (BCC) will launch its Blog Site: Grace & Truth

The first week, you can enjoy the following posts from leaders in the biblical counseling movement:

• Monday, May 2: Paul Tripp, The Ultimate Lens on Life

• Tuesday, May 3: Elyse Fitzpatrick, Despising the Shame 

• Wednesday, May 4: Steve Viars, Biblical Counseling as a Community Bridge 

• Thursday, May 5: Bob Kellemen, Our Competence Comes from Christ

• Friday, May 6: BCC Staff, Five to Live By: The Best of the Best on the Net in Biblical Counseling

• Saturday, May 7: The BCC Interview: Pastor Deepak Reju of Capitol Hill Baptist Church

The BCC Blog Site will also include a list of Featured Blogs and a list of Recommended Websites. The BCC is not about the BCC. The BCC is about bc—biblical counseling—linking you to valuable resources, best-practice churches, premier para-church groups, and conferences you won’t want to miss.

Just the First-fruits

And this is just the first of several upcoming BCC “launches.”

In late May to early June, the BCC Book Review site will launch. Every week the BCC will post four biblical counseling book reviews. The site will also provide “The Best of Guides” (such as “The Top Ten Books on Biblical Counseling and Dealing with Anxiety”).

Then throughout the summer and on an ongoing basis, the BCC will launch the Free Resources section of the website. Eventually, the BCC plans to provide 1,000s of free articles, forms, counseling guides, videos, and audio resources.

Three Audiences

Every section of the BCC website will focus on three audiences:

• People seeking biblical care: all of us—people in need of change.

• People providing biblical care: pastors, counselors, spiritual friends.

• People equipping biblical care-givers: educators, equippers, writers.

If you’d like to be placed on the BCC e-mailing list to hear more updates and receive periodic e-blasts and e-newsletters, sign-up on the BCC home page.

Join the Conversation

• What blog post topics would you like to see the BCC address?

• What books would you like the BCC to review?

• What free resource topics would you want the BCC to provide?

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Serving Together: The Gospel Coalition and the Biblical Counseling Coalition

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Serving Together: The Gospel Coalition and the Biblical Counseling Coalition 

Chicago will host the 2011 Gospel Coalition Conference, April 12-14. The theme of this year’s conference is They Testify About Me which highlights how all of Scripture, including the Old Testament, center on Christ: His person and work.

The theme is appropriate as The Gospel Coalition exists as ”a fellowship of evangelical churches deeply committed to renewing our faith in the gospel of Christ and to reforming our ministry practices to conform fully to the Scriptures.” This year, the newly launched Biblical Counseling Coalition will have four active roles in the conference. This, too, is fitting, as “the BCC exists to strengthen churches, para-church organizations, and educational institutions by promoting excellence and unity in biblical counseling as a means to accomplish compassionate outreach and effective discipleship.”

 David Powlison’s Workshop Session

Dr. David Powlison, of the CCEF and Board Member of the BCC, will lead a Wednesday (11-noon) session on The Pastor’s Counseling Ministry.

BCC Q/A Special Event

Dr. Powlison, Garrett Higbee (BCC BOD Member), Steve Viars (BCC BOD President), and Bob Kellemen (BCC Executive Director) will lead a BCC Q/A focused around Recent Advancements in Biblical Counseling. This special event will run from 12:30-1:30 PM on Wednesday.

BCC and Pastoral Care

Throughout the conference, the BCC will be providing pastoral care for attendees. This offering is motivated by TGC and the BCC’s concern for Christian leaders: who cares for the care-givers, who shepherds the shepherds?

BCC Booth

The BCC will also host a booth at the conference (booth 99) with literature related to the BCC, sample BCC documents, and sample materials authored by BCC Board Members and Council Board Members.

Join the Conversation

What are the benefits of para-church organizations serving together?



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Putting Your Past in Its Place

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

My Foreword to Steve Viars’ Putting Your Past in Its Place

Pastor Steve Viars has devoted his life and ministry to helping others to change—biblically. You hold in your hands the result of his lifelong ministry—Pastor Viars’ Opus.

It’s an opus well worth reading and applying. Whether you’re struggling with the process of change related to past suffering or to past sin, Putting Your Past in Its Place provides the seasoned, compassionate, pastoral, hope-filled, biblical wisdom you need.

Christians who attempt to address the crucial topic of the past tend toward extremes. Not Steve. He carefully avoids the “past is nothing” and “the past is everything” mindsets. He scripturally avoids the “truth only” or “love only” approach. Instead, like the Apostle Paul, he offers you both the Scriptures and his own soul (1 Thessalonians 2:8).

Steve is a master communicator, having honed the skill of relating God’s truth to people’s lives through decades as a pastor and biblical counselor. Those skills are on display throughout Putting Your Past in Its Place. It provides a comprehensive practical theology of the past that reads like a real-life narrative. Because it is real life—our lives as we deal daily with our past. His creative illustrations, engaging stories, personal examples, weaving in of “Jill’s story,” questions for personal reflection and group discussion, and his “real life testimonials” in the appendix material all result in the most reader-friendly counseling book you’ll ever find.

While I highly recommend Putting Your Past in Its Place to “the person in the pew,” I’m also convinced that it will be a theory-altering, practice-changing book for pastors and biblical counselors. Steve models the sufficiency of Scripture for everyday life like no one I have read. Pastors and counselors can learn from Steve not only how to help their parishioners and counselees to deal with the past, but even more, how to view and use the Scriptures to develop a theology and methodology for dealing with any life issue.

I’ve known Steve since we were both in elementary school. Given the intensity of his ministry responsibilities, I’ve wondered how he lives such a joy-filled, hopeful life. I’ve pondered how he maintains such healthy relationships. Now I know the rest of the story. Steve keeps his accounts current with God. He practices what he teaches in Putting Your Past in Its Place. If you want to find God and experience the joy, hope, and love that He offers in Christ, then practice what Steve teaches in Putting Your Past in Its Place.

—Robert W. Kellemen, Ph.D., Founder and CEO of RPM Ministries, Executive Director of the Biblical Counseling Coalition, Author of God’s Healing for Life’s Losses


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What’s Worth a Week of My Time?

Friday, February 11th, 2011

What’s Worth a Week of My Time?

Why in the world would over 1,600 people spend from Sunday afternoon through Friday afternoon at a biblical counseling conference?

Well, if you don’t want to hear from me on this (are there people like that?), check out the Twitter feed at #bctconf). Here’s my take on why 1,600+ people spent the week at the Faith Biblical Counseling Ministries training conference in Lafayette, Indiana.

Hmm… Let me rephrase that. Here are a few reasons why I spent the week there (not in any particular order).

1. Iron sharpens iron… through biblical teaching.

I know that some speakers at some conferences don’t often attend sessions unless they’re speaking. Not here. I was equipped, encouraged, stirred, and convicted as I listened to my fellow speakers relate truth to life. I spent the week here because I want to grow up in Christ.

2. Iron sharpens iron… through biblical relating.

However, I didn’t spend every second in sessions. I spent the week here because I long for deep Christian fellowship and I enjoyed it richly this week. My life and ministry have been enriched by spending quality time with people like Steve Viars, Garrett Higbee, Brian Nicholson, Doc Smith, Andy Woodall, Rob Green, Amy Baker, Mark Dutton, Edris and Arvid Olson, Heather Smith, Jocelyn Wallace, Elyse Fitzpatrick, Martha Peace, Brad Bigney, Kevin Carson, Stuart Scott, Jack Delk, Tim Lane, Randy Patten, and so many more.

3. Biblical counselors are compassionate.

Session after session and interaction after interaction, I enjoyed the compassionate care spoken about and shared by the dear folks at the conference. The sensitivity to hurting people models Christ-likeness—a model I long to embrace.

4. Biblical counselors are relevant and practical.

I so appreciate the robust depth of insight for living shared at the conference…in sessions and in personal interactions. Rich theology richly related to real life—that’s worth a week of my time. Whether talking about victory over specific besetting sins or talking about finding hope amidst life’s trials, biblical truths were applied “where the rubber meets the road”—never trite, but always true to life.

5. It’s fun!

“Fun” and a “week focused on biblical counseling” might seem like an oxymoron, a contradiction in terms. Not at all. Life is serious, but life is also hilarious. To laugh with friends, to kid, to joke… Yes, I was able to unwind at a biblical counseling conference. “Who’d a thought it?”

The Rest of the Story

Interested in the 2012 Faith Biblical Counseling Conference? Check out: Christ-Centered Counseling.

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Why do you attend Christian conferences (whichever one you attend)?


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Announcing the Launch of the Biblical Counseling Coalition

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Announcing the Launch of the Biblical Counseling Coalition

During the past year, over two-dozen leading pastors, biblical counselors, and Christian educators have been prayerfully discussing whether the time is right to launch a new coalition of organizations, leaders, and participants in the biblical counseling movement. Those leaders are excited to announce the official launch of the Biblical Counseling Coalition.

Pastor Steve Viars, the President of the BCC Board of Directors, captures the BCC’s purpose.

“The BCC is all about promoting relationships and providing resources. There are many tremendous organizations and individuals involved in the biblical counseling movement. The BCC seeks to connect such men and women in a way that creates a natural and healthy synergy. We believe that together we can accomplish more.”

The coalition’s Mission Statement further focuses the BCC’s vision.

The BCC exists to strengthen churches, para-church organizations, and educational institutions by promoting excellence and unity in biblical counseling as a means to accomplish compassionate outreach and effective discipleship.

The BCC wants to be a catalyst further strengthening and unifying already-existing biblical counseling ministries, churches, and schools committed to biblical counseling. The BCC is a bridging ministry keeping people connected to and informed about conferences, blogs, resources, and classes offered by other biblical counseling ministries.

The BCC’s Executive Director, Dr. Bob Kellemen, highlights the three-fold audience to which the BCC seeks to minister.

“We want to strengthen the biblical counseling movement by ministering to people who offer care, people who are seeking care, and people who train care-givers. For example, on our site and in links to other sites, people will find blogs, book reviews, videos, and resource articles on a topic such as depression. Some of those resources will be written for those who offer care—pastors, biblical counselors, lay spiritual friends. Some will be written to help the person who is seeking care for depression to find biblical hope and wisdom. Some will discuss depression from a theological perspective so that those who train care-givers can be stretched through the iron-sharpening-iron process.”

The Biblical Counseling Coalition seeks to serve the entire church. Pastor Garrett Higbee, who serves as the Treasurer of the BCC Board, explains that:

“More than counseling, the vision of the BCC is for the entire church to speak God’s truth in love. We want to motivate and equip folks at the most basic levels of self-counsel, one-another ministry, small group leadership, and intentional discipleship. We want counseling with truth and love to become viral in the church and to be a foundational part of every discipleship-based ministry.”

Learn more about the BCC’s robust, relational vision of biblical counseling by visiting the Biblical Counseling Coalition. At the “under construction” website you’ll find:

• The BCC’s Confessional Statement

• The BCC’s Doctrinal Statement

• The BCC’s Mission/Vision/Passion Statement

• A Welcome from Pastor Steve Viars, the President of the BCC’s Board of Directors

• A Welcome from Dr. Bob Kellemen, the Executive Director of the BCC

• Bios of the BCC’s Board of Directors and Council Board Members

• Testimonials: “Why We Need the BCC”

• Coming Soon: A Listing of Resources the BCC Will Be Offering 

Website: www.biblicalcounselingcoalition.org

Email: info@biblicalcc.org

Twitter: www.twitter.com/biblicalcc

Facebook: www.facebook.com/BiblicalCounselingCoalition

Promoting Personal Change Centered on the Person of Christ

Ephesians 4:11-16


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