Confrontation, Redemption,
Professional Identity & Ethics |
Latest 2024–2025 Graded A+ Pass
Christian counseling would conclude that change can
happen without confronting sin. - ✔✔✔ANSWER-False
Whether a client has a sense of conscience will be a clue to
the client's attributional style. - ✔✔✔ANSWER-True
, As we consider "sin" as a factor in human problems and behavior,
the concept of external attribution would place the blame for
human choices on the individual person. - ✔✔✔ANSWER-False
According to McMinn, 'pondering" as a form of confrontation would
be considered a gentle way to confront. - ✔✔✔ANSWER-True
Clients with an internal attribution style, would primarily seek
counseling to feel better about themselves, rather than confront
and change their own problematic behavior. - ✔✔✔ANSWER-False
Based on McMinn's counseling "map," the lecture posed a series
of questions to help a counselor identify where the client was in
terms of self/need/relationship. What is a true statement from
that discussion? - ✔✔✔ANSWER-If clients hope that the
counselor is the ultimate solution to their problems, this reveals
what they believe about "need"
When a Christian counselor looks at the role of sin in client
problems, what is a true statement? - ✔✔✔ANSWER-All of these
A Christian counselor would see "right and wrong" as determined
by an outside being