Jump directly to the Content

HOW TO GIVE GOOD ADVICE

Some people want you to listen; others genuinely want you to speak.

I was having lunch with a psychologist who offers her services part-time to her church. As we talked, she was asking me questions about her cases.

Finally I said, "This is ludicrous. I've never studied counseling a day in my life. I'm a businessman, and you're a Ph.D. in psychology, the head of a clinic. Why are you asking me?"

"There's a difference between counseling and asking for advice," she said. "I come to you for good advice."

I was intrigued with her distinction, and reflecting on it, I think it's an important one. Sometimes, I suspect, we confuse the two functions.

Advice is suggesting a specific action within a specific time frame, and it deals with factual things: purchases, job changes, decisions.

Counsel is guidance toward a better relationship, attitude, or lifestyle-things that can't be quantified or tightly scheduled. For instance, counselors can't promise, "You'll have a handle on your depression within two months." When a person wants advice, however, one of the best questions ...

From Issue:Winter 1987: Finances
May/June
Support Our Work

Subscribe to CT for less than $4.25/month

Homepage Subscription Panel

Read These Next

Related
Preaching to Everyone in Particular
Preaching to Everyone in Particular
Find varied applications and scatter them throughout the sermon.
From the Magazine
I Cried Out to the Name Demons Fear Most
I Cried Out to the Name Demons Fear Most
How Jesus rescued a New Age psychic from spiritual darkness.
Editor's Pick
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
Understanding God and our world needs more than bare reason and experience.
close