Abstract
Much of the literature in pastoral counseling has been written against the backdrop of an anonymous, changing, technological, and urban community setting. The author contrasts the premium this understanding of counseling places on establishing relationships, confidentiality, gaining information through questions, and the long training required with the way these same matters may be understood from the vantage point of a more settled community, characterized by long-term relations, limited confidentiality, and the support lay persons give each other. He discusses the pastor's role change in this setting and describes an approach to training lay men and women to assume pastoral care responsibility.
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Southard, S. Pastoral counseling in a settled community. Pastoral Psychol 26, 168–177 (1978). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01759739
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01759739