https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GTPR2DV5/
Editorial Review For When Faith Meets Psychology
When Faith Meets Psychology speaks to Christians who
carry anxiety, depression, ADHD, or burnout, then stack guilt on top of it. The
book starts with that double burden and keeps one clear claim in view: mental
health struggle does not mean a person is failing God. From there, it moves
through care, diagnosis, anxiety, depression, ADHD, burnout, daily rhythms,
therapy, and a care plan. Prayers, reflections, and workbook pages keep the
book tied to daily use.
The strength here is the voice. Aaron J. Bellridge writes in
a plain way and keeps the pages moving. He names church clichés for what they
are and refuses to coat them in shiny fog. That choice gives the book force. He
pairs Scripture with tools, grounding exercises, breath prayers, therapy
screening questions, and relapse planning. The result feels grounded and
useful. The book keeps its message in view, and that message lands. Care for
the mind and body counts as faithful stewardship.
This book fits the Christian living and mental health space
that many readers want right now. Faith readers want books that treat therapy,
medication, and pastoral care with care. When Faith Meets Psychology
enters that space with a steady hand. It joins the push toward faith and mental
health integration. It never reads like a trend report wearing church clothes.
Readers who feel worn down by prayer-only advice will get a
lot from this book. Christians who live with anxiety, depression, ADHD, or
burnout will see their struggle named in plain terms. Pastors, small group
leaders, and family members will get language that can help them drop the
clumsy lines people toss out when they have no clue what to say. That alone
gives this book real value.
I recommend When Faith Meets Psychology for readers
who want faith, mental health care, and daily practice in one place. It offers
comfort, structure, and a path people can use. The book knows what it wants to
say, and it says it without wasting the reader’s time.
