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Lies My Psychologist Told Me: How to Think Clearly as a Christian
Coles
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Lies My Psychologist Told Me: How to Think Clearly as a Christian in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $10.99

Coles
Lies My Psychologist Told Me: How to Think Clearly as a Christian in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $10.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Have you ever left therapy feeling clearer emotionally, but foggier spiritually?
You’ve done the work - therapy, reflection, emotional literacy - yet something still feels stalled.
You’ve gained insight, but confidence hasn’t grown alongside it.
You’ve wondered whether questioning therapy means you’re being resistant, unhealthy, or unfaithful.
Written for thoughtful Christians shaped by both faith and psychological culture, Lies My Psychologist Told Me offers a careful, non-reactionary examination of how therapeutic frameworks influence beliefs about responsibility, healing, identity, and growth - often without being recognized as a worldview at all.
What You’ll Explore Inside:
Why therapy is never truly neutral - and why that matters for Christians
How emotional language can quietly replace biblical categories
The difference between emotional insight and spiritual wisdom
Why healing and holiness are not the same goal
How responsibility can be reframed as harm without being named
The subtle authority shift from Scripture to credentialed expertise
Why validation can feel healing while stalling transformation
How discernment became confused with condemnation
What Scripture assumes about human nature that psychology often does not
How to engage therapy as a tool, not a governing authority
Ways to think clearly without rejecting care or insight
How to regain confidence without emotional certainty
Why clarity matters more than emotional resolution
How to test ideas without attacking intentions
What faithful maturity looks like in a therapeutic age
This is not an anti-therapy book.
It does not dismiss emotional pain, discourage seeking help, or replace psychology with slogans. Instead, it offers language, distinctions, and structure for Christians who want to receive care without surrendering spiritual authority.
If you’re ready to move beyond endless self-examination and toward steadier, Scripture-anchored clarity…
If you want tools without confusion, insight without loss of confidence…
Lies My Psychologist Told Me invites you to think clearly, live faithfully, and reclaim discernment - without fear - in a therapeutic age.
Have you ever left therapy feeling clearer emotionally, but foggier spiritually?
You’ve done the work - therapy, reflection, emotional literacy - yet something still feels stalled.
You’ve gained insight, but confidence hasn’t grown alongside it.
You’ve wondered whether questioning therapy means you’re being resistant, unhealthy, or unfaithful.
Written for thoughtful Christians shaped by both faith and psychological culture, Lies My Psychologist Told Me offers a careful, non-reactionary examination of how therapeutic frameworks influence beliefs about responsibility, healing, identity, and growth - often without being recognized as a worldview at all.
What You’ll Explore Inside:
Why therapy is never truly neutral - and why that matters for Christians
How emotional language can quietly replace biblical categories
The difference between emotional insight and spiritual wisdom
Why healing and holiness are not the same goal
How responsibility can be reframed as harm without being named
The subtle authority shift from Scripture to credentialed expertise
Why validation can feel healing while stalling transformation
How discernment became confused with condemnation
What Scripture assumes about human nature that psychology often does not
How to engage therapy as a tool, not a governing authority
Ways to think clearly without rejecting care or insight
How to regain confidence without emotional certainty
Why clarity matters more than emotional resolution
How to test ideas without attacking intentions
What faithful maturity looks like in a therapeutic age
This is not an anti-therapy book.
It does not dismiss emotional pain, discourage seeking help, or replace psychology with slogans. Instead, it offers language, distinctions, and structure for Christians who want to receive care without surrendering spiritual authority.
If you’re ready to move beyond endless self-examination and toward steadier, Scripture-anchored clarity…
If you want tools without confusion, insight without loss of confidence…
Lies My Psychologist Told Me invites you to think clearly, live faithfully, and reclaim discernment - without fear - in a therapeutic age.


















