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Healing What Betrayal Left Behind. Processing Betrayal Using Biblical Counseling Insights
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- Nombre de pages162
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-39404-3
- EAN9783565394043
- Date de parution08/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille1 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
Betrayal wounds differently from other pain. It does not arrive from outside the boundaries of trust - it comes from within them. From the person who knew you, was close to you, and chose otherwise. That is why its damage runs so deep: it does not only hurt the heart, it fractures the inner world of safety that made loving possible in the first place.
This book explores the long, honest, grace-held process of healing from betrayal through the wisdom of biblical counseling - a tradition that takes both the depth of human pain and the sufficiency of scripture with equal seriousness.
It does not rush toward forgiveness as a quick resolution, nor does it minimize the real trauma that betrayal leaves in the body, the emotions, and the faith. Instead, it invites readers into a slower, more truthful movement - one that begins not with forgiving but with being honestly seen in the wound. Drawing from the careful pastoral and therapeutic insights of biblical counselors, these pages explore the layered nature of betrayal recovery: the initial disorientation and grief, the complex work of processing anger without being consumed by it, and the eventual - never forced - journey toward a forgiveness that is not the same as trust, and not the same as reconciliation.
As scripture holds in Psalm 55, David himself cried out to God in the raw language of betrayal - proof that God has always made room for this particular kind of pain within the life of faith.
It does not rush toward forgiveness as a quick resolution, nor does it minimize the real trauma that betrayal leaves in the body, the emotions, and the faith. Instead, it invites readers into a slower, more truthful movement - one that begins not with forgiving but with being honestly seen in the wound. Drawing from the careful pastoral and therapeutic insights of biblical counselors, these pages explore the layered nature of betrayal recovery: the initial disorientation and grief, the complex work of processing anger without being consumed by it, and the eventual - never forced - journey toward a forgiveness that is not the same as trust, and not the same as reconciliation.
As scripture holds in Psalm 55, David himself cried out to God in the raw language of betrayal - proof that God has always made room for this particular kind of pain within the life of faith.























