Why I believe A psychologist's thoughts on suffering, miracles, science and faith

Henry Cloud

Book - 2024

"World-renowned psychologist and leadership expert Henry Cloud has impacted millions of lives through his groundbreaking books and through his work coaching leaders of the most influential organizations in the world. But few people know the details of his own story and how he became one of the most beloved and respected psychologists and faith influencers in America. In this indelibly personal and vulnerable book, Dr. Cloud leads us through his early struggles with illness and depression and the miracles that healed him and led him to his calling as a healer of others. Through masterful storytelling combined with a deeply nuanced understanding of the human mind, Dr. Cloud invites readers to inhabit the spaces of suffering and elation ...that make us most human and to walk alongside of him as he ponders the great questions we are so often afraid to ask but which also give life meaning.

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Subjects
Genres
autobiographies (literary works)
Autobiographies
Published
New York, NY : Worthy Pub 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Henry Cloud (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 263 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781546003410
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Part I. How I Came to Believe in God
  • 1. Small Spiritual Beginnings
  • 2. Seek and You Will Find
  • 3. The Phone Call
  • 4. Into the Abyss, and out of Egypt
  • 5. A Leap of Faith
  • Part II. How I Came to Believe in Miracles
  • The Naked Pastor
  • God as GPS
  • He Protects
  • God's Provision
  • Reunion with Jesus
  • God's Perfect Shrink for Me
  • My Biggest Miracle
  • Do Not Sign It
  • Kneecap
  • A Helping Hand
  • A Day-to-Day Life with Jesus
  • Part III. How I Came to Believe through Science
  • 6. The Truth Is True
  • 7. Dynamic Tension and the Mind of Faith
  • 8. Science as an Obstacle to Faith
  • 9. Can I Trust the Bible?
  • 10. Jesus, Please Explain Your Followers
  • 11. The Greatest Obstacle of All
  • 12. Psychology and Faith
  • Conclusion and an Invitation to You
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Cloud (Trust) meditates in this intimate account on the "unexpected miracles" that have shaped his life. In loose and digressive prose, he writes of struggling as a child with a debilitating hip condition, until a "divine voice" instructed his mother to drive from Mississippi to the New Orleans hospital where a surgeon developed the treatment plan that helped him recover. Elsewhere, he recounts how a "supernatural experience" in which God "came into... my being in the most powerful way I know how to describe" jolted him from despondency after he lost a bank teller job in college, and how God "healed" his depression through the aid of his friends, family, and doctor. Sections that draw on his psychologist's training make for the most fascinating parts of the book (of the divine vision he had after losing his college job, Cloud acknowledges, "If I heard this from someone, I might think they were having a manic episode, but I wasn't... my thinking, impulse control, reality orientation... were all fine"). Readers will also be intrigued by his arguments that psychological principles are grounded in, rather than antithetical to, scripture (for example, the Proverbs quote "If you rescue an angry man, you will only have to do it again" resonates with prevailing wisdom on not being an "enabler" for those with anger problems). It's a wise and well-informed inquiry into faith's many mysteries. (June)

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