• Question 1
5 out of 5 points
The lecture emphasized that different generations typically have different worldviews. If
we are counseling someone just coming into adulthood in the 21st century, what should
we emphasize?
Selected
Realize that the client may have a very relativistic
Answer:
outlook on life.
• Question 2
5 out of 5 points
From the lecture discussion on ways of knowing truth, what can we say?
Selected
There is a link between our worldview and what ways of knowing
Answer:
(epistemological methods) that we accept and reject.
• Question 3
5 out of 5 points
Finish this comparative key phrases with the correct sets of words: theology is to
psychology as is to .
Selected
Revelation/ reason
Answer:
or observation
• Question 4
5 out of 5 points
The lectures provided a brief introduction to the models of integration (based on
Niebuhr’s Christ and Culture). What did we learn from that introduction?
Selected
One criticism of the colonialist’s position is that adherents would use
Answer:
certain psychological principles or theories but would not admit the
necessity for empirical verification of the psychology “findings.”
• Question 5
5 out of 5 points
If I am following the “earmarks” of integration laid out in the lectures, which of the
following would I demonstrate?
Selected
I would actively seek to find truth in theology, in principles of spiritual
Answer:
formation, and in the theories and empirical discoveries of psychology.
• Question 6
5 out of 5 points
In contrast to a biblical worldview of counseling, a psychological worldview of counseling
Selected
would suggest that psychology can always find reasons/causes for
Answer:
human problems.
, • Question 7
5 out of 5 points
Christian counseling, based in theology, would identify sin as ultimately behind human