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| Emotionally Healthy Church, The | 
enlarge | Author: Peter Scazzero Creator: Warren Bird Publisher: Zondervan Category: Book
List Price: $17.99 Buy New: $9.68 You Save: $8.31 (46%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $9.60
Avg. Customer Rating:   (32 reviews) Sales Rank: 9226
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.5 x 1
ISBN: 0310246547 Dewey Decimal Number: 253 UPC: 025986246549 EAN: 9780310246541 ASIN: 0310246547
Publication Date: March 1, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Something is desperately wrong with most churches today. Many sincere followers of Christ who are passionate for God and his work are unaware of the crucial link between emotional health and spiritual maturity. They present themselves as spiritually mature but are stuck at a level of immaturity that current models of discipleship have not addressed. Discipleship that really transforms a church must integrate emotional health with spiritual maturity. The Emotionally Healthy Church, winner of the Gold Medallion Book Award, offers a strategy for discipleship that accomplishes healthy living and actually changes lives.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
  Let's Break Down the Church December 10, 2008 I've been in many churches and ministries where the aura is void of emotion. You're supposed to do things just for the sake of doing them without taking any consideration whatsoever of others' feelings. At times I felt like I was doing God a service, while others I was just completely drained. I didn't feel like talking about what was on my mind for fear of it not being..."holy."br /br /And yet, being "holy" means being honest with who you are, 'cause God sure made us as people destined for His pleasure. We're broken people in a broken world, and Scazzero wants us to realize that that's just plain okay. Granted, we shouldn't stay complacent or inert with where we are, but we must recognize all that we are, faults and all, in order to pursue the greater good.br /br /My life has been without such guidance until I started attending the church I am at now; the pastor there introduced us members with this book. It takes a wise man to acknowledge that the church is full of broken bodies, and a powerful leader to let us open up our wounds so that they may mend.br /br /Highly recommended read for all Christians, whether they realize they're broken or not.
  The Emotionally Healthy Church September 29, 2008 When it comes to instruction on leadership, most books skip over how to be a healthy person. This book points out that you can't build a healthy community if you are not healthy yourself. Scazzero takes a fresh look at leadership and lines out many practical principles.
  Poor diagnostics September 26, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I believe this book is overcomplicating the issue by failing to see the real problem.br /br /The premise of the book is that one can be spiritually mature (be doing all the "right" things) while also being "emotionally immature." The author assumes many times that Jesus "hadn't done His transforming work on the innermost parts of [him]" . . . as if Jesus were transforming him platonically. The author runs a risk when claiming that he is doing everything "right," and yet still something isn't working. He's adding to what God says we need. br /br /We need to listen to God, trust Him, and obey Him. He'll change us. The author thinks this view is too simplistic.br /br /The book is full of examples of failure (which the author uses to prove the need for his book). He notes that the problem the people in failure are having is that they're putting spiritual things ahead of emotional things. Really the heart of the issue is that people aren't hearing God--they're merely perceiving what they think God wants them to do then running with it. They figure that "the ball is in their court" and effectively cease to listen to God (if they ever started).br /br /This book muddies the simplicity of what God asks of us and places scorn on God's promise to change us by asserting there are parts of us that God will not change through us seeking Him. This addition is subtraction.
  Truth becomes personal July 19, 2008 Lose the pretense. The pent up emotions, unpleasant memories, childhood experiences, disappointments, unmet desires, and motives of our heart that we hide behind the veneer of ministry, reputations and titles are bluntly exposed for what they are. Truth finally becomes personal and unbelievably shocking! Jesus was emotionally whole and freely expressed his anger, surprise, joy, and sadness. This book is key to taking an honest look at yourself and relationships. Begin your inner healing and start developing and maintaining honest healthy friendships, relationships and marriages, or mending broken ones. This book is a must read for all Christians young and old, including pastors, leaders and those who serve in any capacity of ministry. Thank you Peter for humbling yourself and baring your soul and teaching us how to do the same.
  Helpful if imperfect... November 8, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
In "The Emotionally Healthy Church," Peter Scazzero suggests that the way most modern, evangelical churches "do church" creates a culture of emotional dysfunctionality, which allows or even forces the people of the church to be spiritually crippled and unable to function in the way that God intends for them to live as disciples of Christ. He then proposes six principles that will right this sinking ship and reestablish the church as a place that produces healthy followers of Jesus, emotionally and spiritually (because the two cannot be separated). br /br /Overall, I agree with the general premises of this book. As Scazzero shared his observation that Christians are unwilling and sometimes unable to hear the truth if it is uncomfortable to them, I was struck by how relevant that claim is in the lives of so many people that I know. As he described how Christians seemingly refuse to acknowledge the reality of such "negative" emotions as anger, frustration, and sorrow, this resonated very much in my own life. Indeed, he suggests that one of the worst things that we can do for our spiritual development is to pretend that these very real and human emotions do not exist or are somehow inappropriate. Finally, I also agreed with his call to acknowledge the fact that we are beings created with limits, and that we do a disservice to ourselves, to those whom we love, and to our Creator by attempting to live limitless lives. Though it's obviously hard to do, I appreciate Scazzero's challenge to recognize our limits and make choices accordingly, even when the consequences are disappointing and sometimes even hurtful to others.br /br /In the midst of agreeing with Scazzero's overarching principles, there were a few smaller ideas that did not sit as well with me. For instance, I am wary of the way that he emphasized grief and loss. Specifically, I agree that we need to create more space in the church for people to deal with grief and loss more honestly, rather than sweeping these emotions under the rug of God's provision, as if the fact that God is in control somehow makes the pain automatically go away. However, the degree to which Scazzero discussed these emotions almost leaves no room for those who have experienced little or no loss. I am uncomfortable that he almost seems to make grief a requirement for spiritual maturity. br /br /My other point of contention is with his call to brokenness. I understand and agree that it is not particularly helpful when pastors present a perfect public persona, never admitting wrong and never acknowledging personal weakness. A willingness to put our own struggles in the open can go a long way toward fostering the type of transparency that is essential for growth to happen within the church. However, I am convinced that there is a time when a pastor needs to provide an example of godliness, faithfulness, and victory. If pastors are always equally broken as Johnny Pewsitter, then what hope does anyone have for freedom from the bondage of sin? As much as the Apostle Paul admits his own wretchedness, he also challenges the church to follow his example as he follows Christ. The challenge to lead by example and to at least occasionally get things right seems to be noticeably absent from Scazzero's teaching.br /br /Scazzero is to be commended for offering a book that many of us in the church need to read. His brutal honesty is refreshing. He provides a healthy model for all church leaders in the way of transparency, and it's a good model for many of us to follow, in terms of acknowledging our mistakes and shortcomings. I also appreciate his charge for church leaders to pursue reality, no matter how disappointing it might be. I'm glad that I read this book and am happy to recommend it to anyone who might be open to the connections between emotional health and spiritual vitality in the church.
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