This is the tenth post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
This is the fourth post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
This is the ninth post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
This is the first post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
This is the second post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
This is the seventh post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
This is the sixth post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
This is the third post of our weeklong series, Into the Light: A Series on Abuse and the Church, which features
the stories of abuse survivors, along with insights from professional counselors, legal experts, and church leaders about how to better prepare Christians to prevent and respond to abuse.
«Julie Ingersoll, a professor at the University of North Florida who studies evangelical communities, said mental isolation is key to abuse, and websites telling
the stories of abuse survivors «completely undermine the power of abusers to convince their victims that it's their fault and that they're all alone.
Not exact matches
Morning posts will feature a
survivor story (today's comes from author Mary DeMuth), and afternoon posts will feature interviews and guest posts from professional counselors, legal experts, and leaders (later today you will meet Boz Tchividjian
of Godly Response to
Abuse in the Christian Environment — G.R.A.C.E).
Yet in nearly every email I receive from
survivors of abuse, (and sadly, I receive a lot), I hear
stories about how hard it was for them to confront and address the
abuse they suffered because they were told that doing so wasn't Christlike.
A barber in Connecticut shared a post on Instagram, telling the
story of a domestic
abuse survivor who came to him for help.
Stephen Jimenez — a
survivor of child sexual
abuse and the co-founder
of advocacy group New Yorkers Against Hidden Predators — sits down with «In Focus» Host Cheryl Wills to talk about his
story of abuse.
A press conference - at which
survivors of the
abuse by Catholic priests will tell their
stories and say what it is they want from the pope's visit.
Writers are finding not only the healing process that comes in the form
of writing a first - person account
of childhood
abuse, the labyrinth
of mental illness, or overcoming a physical handicap to achieve a level
of normalcy in life, they are also discovering an audience
of readers who are hungry for these veritable
survivor stories.
She's now the face
of hope and resilience in
abuse survivors, named «Best Survival
Story of 2015» by People Magazine.
Mariah's
Story: A touching poem about a Dachshund puppy mill
survivor that brings to light the resilience
of abused dogs.
Three
survivors of emotional
abuse share their
stories below.
Chief Littlechild helped to lead a seven - year investigation by Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission into the country's «saddest, darkest, most unknown history», to unveil the truth and hear the
stories of the
survivors, many
of whom were subject to
abuse in the government - funded church - run boarding schools.
In the past decade, many residential school
survivors have also come forward with
stories of physical and sexual
abuse suffered while attending residential school.
She counsels adults, adolescents, and groups and has a particular interest in helping
survivors of trauma and
abuse navigate their
stories of harm with self - compassion instead
of shame.