Agape Christian Counseling

 

About Us

 

 

Value & Mission

Our Vision at Agape Christian Counseling is to impact people in the greater Charlotte area to live healthy, meaningful, lives as they relate to God, their family and friends, as well as their church and community.

Our Mission at Agape Christian Counseling is to help individuals in the process of healing and change to embrace God’s love in order to love God and others.

 

Statement of Faith & Values

We believe in one God eternally existing in three persons Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

We believe in the deity of the Lord Jesus Christ, in His sinless life, in His death as atonement for all who believe in Him, in His bodily resurrection and ascension into heaven and His personal return in power and glory.

We believe in the Bible to be the inspired, inerrant, authoritative Word of God.

We believe that all mankind has sinned and incurred the penalty of spiritual death, which is separation from God but that those who receive the Lord Jesus Christ by faith are given an eternal salvation which is characterized, among other things, by adoption as God's sons, the sealing of the Holy Spirit, justification on the basis of Christ's substitutionary sacrifice, and eternal life.

 

Christian Counseling

Considerable controversy exists about whether there is, or should be, a distinct field of counseling under the label of “Christian counseling.”  Some argue that all competent counseling is the same regardless of religious persuasion.  Others contend that at best Christian counseling is simply Christian believers who practice psychotherapeutic healing arts.  In other words, these helpers are informed by a Christian value system, but their actual practice and strategic intervention are indistinguishable from an unbelievable professional.

Here at Agapé Christian Counseling, Inc. we strongly affirm that Christian counseling is a discrete and describable branch of counseling and psychotherapy.  We are firmly persuaded that the claims of Christ upon a believer and the rich texture of the Christian lifestyle cannot be divorced from the problem solving, helping process.  The direction and insights of scripture and the bracing power of prayer, we are convinced, form the essence of the process of restoration to the wholeness that God intended.

The tendency then is for a skeptic to assume that a Christian counseling approach is a diluted form of therapy which spreads a thin façade of professional counseling over a religious exhortation to simply try harder to be a good person.  Quite the contrary, Christian counseling, at its best, is an in-depth work of interpersonal exploration and healing of human brokenness.  By coming along side the hurting person, the Christian counselor seeks, through empathetic understanding and compassionate objectivity, a lofty goal.  That supreme objective is the optimal blending of divinely revealed truth with the scientific, clinical insights gained from psychotherapy.  Christian counseling is a thoroughly professional approach to personal problems that integrates both the psychological and theological understandings of human functioning.

In summary, Christian counseling attempts to integrate all that is valid from competent clinical counseling with all that is relevant to the personal issue from the context of biblical truth and faith in Christ.

Dr. Sid Bradley, Former Dean of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary - Charlotte




The History of Agapé  Christian Counseling

by Ann Noonan, MEd, NCC, LPC

 

Change, although planned and desired, can at times be very difficult. As I anticipated our move to Charlotte in the summer of 1995, I was certain God was going to “bless” me in a definite way for my obedience to follow His leading. Surely God and I had the same “vision” about His will for me and my work for Him. Of course, He would want me to duplicate what I had been doing, and I would simply slip into a similar position here in Charlotte. I never realized that God wanted to reveal to me.

 

One of the things God wanted to teach me was that it was His plan, not my plan that was significant.  In When God Interrupts, Craig Barnes says regarding his parishioners’ spiritual journeys, “I have observed that they always experience the light and hope at the point where they succumb to their darkest fear.”  Jesus put it better when He said, “those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will save it (Luke 9:24).”  One of my darkest fears and least desired tasks was starting a private practice. I just knew God never intended for me to do that, so He and I wrestled for quite a bit until I acquiesced.

 

When my friend and former Director read the following at a going-away party, I remember thinking, “That’s nice!  She has chosen a devotional from one of my favorite authors.”  (Oswald Chambers—My Utmost for His Highest, p. 224, August 11). “And he saw Him no more(2 Kings 2:12).  It is not wrong to depend on Elijah as long as God gives him to you, but remember the time will come when he will have to go; when he stands no more to you as your guide and leader, because God does not intend he should. You say—‘I cannot go on without Elijah. God says you must.’”  Little did I know what was ahead. My Elijah was gone and I stood at my Jordan with only God.

 

Another tremendous influence on my thinking was an independent study of Experiencing God: Knowing and Doing the Will of God, by Blackaby and King.  As I let the truths of God permeate my soul, I became aware that I was experiencing a crisis of belief.  Did I truly believe God had a plan for me, that He loved me and desired only a love relationship with me?  For years I had been teaching people these truths in therapy, but now I was undergoing my own desert experience. Again and again I struggled and came to the same conclusion—God and His son do not lie.  Jesus said, Apart from me you can do nothing.  I am the vine; you are my branches.  If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear fruit (John 15:5).”  My conclusion almost on a daily basis was and continues to be that God wanted me to be moldable, available to Him and allow Him to set the agenda. My job was to trust, obey and not expect to get the complete picture before I started to follow Him.  I had to get to that place of. . . “not my will, but thine will be done(Luke 22:42).”

 

From my struggles to know and do the will of God, He birthed a solo practice, which has grown into the existing Agapé Christian Counseling with 14 therapists who truly believe it is God’s truth that “sets the captives free.”Each of us desires to yield our skills to Him as a conduit of His grace and mercy in people’s lives.  Today, I am convinced that it is the lessons learned from God along the way that are often significant. We at Agapé are trusting God in our participation with Him wherever He directs.