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Two respected senior professors in the marriage and family field
cover every issue that affects family life, including marriage,
parenting, sexuality, communication, social dynamics, and family
life in modern society. This proven resource for studying the most
established of human institutions has been in print for over twenty
years, with over 80,000 copies sold. The fourth edition has been
updated to address current family-related issues and refined to
reflect teaching practices for the contemporary classroom,
including updated references to online resources.
Praise for a Previous Edition
"An excellent resource for preachers and teachers and an obvious
choice for a text in family studies in a Christian
college."--"Calvin Theological Journal"
This proven, comprehensive resource covers every issue that affects
Christian family life. It has been in print for over thirty years
and has sold nearly 100,000 copies. This new edition is updated
throughout with discussions of recent family-related issues. It
includes a new chapter on work and family balance and a new section
on the increasing role grandparents take in parental
responsibilities.
Jack and Judy Balswick offer a vision of marriage that is both
profoundly spiritual and thoroughly practical for the twenty-first
century.
Sex pervades our culture, going far beyond the confines of the
bedroom into the workplace, the church, and the media. Yet despite
all the attention and even obsession devoted to sex, human
sexuality remains confusing and even foreboding. What, after all,
is authentic human sexuality? That is the question Judith and Jack
Balswick set out to answer in this wide-ranging and probing book.
Informed by sociology, psychology, and theology, the Balswicks
investigate how human sexuality originates both biologically and
socially. They lay groundwork for a normative Christian
interpretation of sexuality, show how authentic sexuality is
necessarily grounded in relationships, and explore such forms of
"inauthentic sexuality" as sexual harassment, pornography, and
rape. Since its first publication, Authentic Human Sexuality has
established itself as a standard text at numerous colleges and
seminaries. Now this third edition features updated theological and
social science research, insights from current neuropsychological
evidence, and an expanded biblical model of authentic sexual
relationships, along with updated discussion of sexual minorities,
same-sex attraction, and LGBTQ issues. A new generation of
students, pastors, psychologists, and sociologists engaged in
counseling will be indebted to the Balswicks for this study of an
endlessly fascinating and perplexing facet of human identity.
Sex pervades our culture, going far beyond the confines of the
bedroom into the workplace, the church and the media. Yet despite
all the attention and even obsession devoted to sex, human
sexuality remains confusing and even foreboding. What, after all,
is authentic human sexuality? That is the question Judith and Jack
Balswick set out to answer in this wide-ranging and probing book.
Informed by sociology, psychology and theology, the Balswicks
investigate how human sexuality originates both biologically and
socially, lay groundwork for a normative Christian interpretation
of sexuality, show how authentic sexuality is necessarily grounded
in relationships, and explore such forms of "inauthentic sexuality"
as sexual harassment, pornography and rape. Since its first
publication in 1999, Authentic Human Sexuality has established
itself as a standard text at numerous colleges and seminaries.
While maintaining the book's overall structure, this new paper
edition offers updated discussions and bibliographies throughout,
including a completely new chapter on sexual development throughout
the human lifespan and a substantially revised chapter on sexual
beings in relationship that incorporates a trinitarian theological
perspective. A new generation of students, pastors, psychologists
and sociologists engaged in counseling will be indebted to the
Balswicks for this updated study of this endlessly fascinating and
perplexing facet of human identity.
On the basis of a theologically grounded understanding of the
nature of persons and the self, Jack O. Balswick, Pamela Ebstyne
King and Kevin S. Reimer present a model of human development that
ranges across all of life's stages: infancy, childhood,
adolescence, young adulthood, middle adulthood and elder adulthood.
They do this by drawing on a biblical model of relationality, where
the created goal or purpose of human development is to become a
reciprocating self-fully and securely related to others and to God.
Along the way, they provide a context for understanding individual
development issues-concerns, tensions, worries or crises
encountered by the self in the context of change. Awareness of
these issues is most pronounced at developmental transitional
points: learning to talk and walk, beginning to eat unassisted,
going to school, developing secondary sexual physical features,
leaving home, obtaining full-time employment, becoming engaged and
then married, having a child for the first time, parenting an
adolescent, watching children move away from home, retiring,
experiencing decline in physical and mental health, and, finally,
facing imminent death. The authors contend throughout that, since
God has created human beings for relationship, to be a self in
reciprocating relationships is of major importance in negotiating
these developmental issues. Critically engaging social science
research and theory, The Reciprocating Self offers an integrated
approach that provides insight helpful to college and seminary
students as well as those serving in the helping professions. Those
in Christian ministry will be especially rewarded by the in-depth
discussion of the implications for moral and faith development
nurtured in the context of the life of the church. In this revised
and expanded second edition, Balswick, King and Reimer have added
research from developmental neuroscience and neuropsychology, which
connects transitional behavior to a changing brain. They have also
included a wealth of research on the moral, spiritual and religious
dimensions of human development, in which they introduce the notion
of reciprocating spirituality. In addition the authors engage with
the burgeoning fields of positive and evolutionary psychology.
Christian Association for Psychological Studies (CAPS) Books
explore how Christianity relates to mental health and behavioral
sciences including psychology, counseling, social work, and
marriage and family therapy in order to equip Christian clinicians
to support the well-being of their clients.
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