What is the importance of communication in counseling? Dr. Bill Richardson talks about how God's self-disclosure informs the practices of active listening and communication in counseling.
One of the things I like to talk about when I talk about learning to be a therapist—a counselor—and our program is communication. All that the counselor really has to help another human being is communication. It's listening. And it's all the all the nuances of verbal and nonverbal behavior, as well. It's the person of the therapist that brings about healing and change because people are harmed in relationship, people are healed in relationship, or at least improved in relationship. And then communication is the is the medium of that relationship. And I love that because what could be more biblical than communication—than studying communication? As believers, the study of communication and intimate communication belongs to us.
One of the things I like to talk about when I talk about learning to be a therapist—a counselor—and our program is communication. All that the counselor really has to help another human being is communication. It's listening. And it's all the all the nuances of verbal and nonverbal behavior, as well. It's the person of the therapist that brings about healing and change because people are harmed in relationship, people are healed in relationship, or at least improved in relationship. And then communication is the is the medium of that relationship. And I love that because what could be more biblical than communication—than studying communication? As believers, the study of communication and intimate communication belongs to us.