David Powlison (CCEF)
Faculty Member, Christian Counseling & Educational Foundation
David is a faculty member at CCEF and senior editor of The Journal of Biblical Counseling. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania, as well as a M.Div. degree from Westminster Theological Seminary. David has been counseling for over thirty years. He has written numerous articles on biblical counseling and on the relationship between faith and psychology. His books include Speaking Truth in Love; Seeing with New Eyes; Power Encounters: Reclaiming Spiritual Warfare; and The Biblical Counseling Movement: History and Context. David has taught across the United States and in Korea, India, Brazil, Europe, and Sri Lanka.
Blog Posts (4)
The BCC Weekend Video Resource: What Are the Strengths and Weaknesses of Biblical Counseling?
In this two-part video series, Dr. David Powlison provides candid and insightful responses to the question, “What are the strengths and weaknesses of biblical counseling?” Continue reading →
The BCC Weekend Video Resource: Is There Value in a Biblical Counselor Pursuing a Ph.D. at a Secular
Dr. David Powlison responds to a question from a student who is considering pursuing a Ph.D. at a secular university: “Is There Value in a Biblical Counselor Pursuing a...
The BCC Weekend Media Resource: The Pastor’s Counseling Ministry
The BCC has a robust and growing portfolio of media resources. We’re creating, collecting, collating, and posting the best of the best in video, audio, MP3, Vimeo, YouTube, and...
The BCC Weekend Video Resource: CCEF and the School of Biblical Counseling
The BCC has a robust and growing portfolio of media resources. We’re creating, collecting, collating, and posting the best of the best in video, audio, MP3, Vimeo, YouTube, and...
Books (3)
Latest Comments on Resources by David Powlison
That’s a question that requires more than the space allowed in a comment post. For the differences between how people may see/perceive nouthetic counseling and biblical counseling, I would encourage you to read Heath Lambert’s work, “The Biblical Counseling Movement After Adams.” For differences between biblical counseling and Christian counseling, in terms of how those words are typically used, I would encourage you to read the “Five Views” book edited by Johnson.
Hi Bob,
What are the differences between nouthetic, biblical, and Christian counseling? Thanks!
Cinda, Without the scriptural and gospel basis for biblical counseling, it really isn’t biblical counseling, is it? We in the “second generation” of modern biblical counseling must seriously consider our stewardship and be sure that our equipping is Christ-centered and biblically-focused with a robust and relational emphasis on the sufficiency of Scripture and progressive sanctification that is Gospel-centered.
3. I am very aware from studying under Powlison at Westminster and CCEF. He is a master in his art of biblical counseling and teaching, as he puts God’s order in proper perspective within the secular camps. The book “Psychology ad Christianity; Five Views” compares these, and I recommend it. I believe we can intelligently, with God’s grace, use secular terms and prevailing science in psychology to bring the presenting spiritual root to the surface during counseling.







It’s interesting to contrast this view with the nouthetic/biblical view that Jay Adams has presented repeatedly:
http://www.nouthetic.org/blog/...
http://www.nouthetic.org/blog/...
http://www.nouthetic.org/blog/...