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To: SeekAndFind

Her father failed her.


4 posted on 08/16/2024 7:28:20 PM PDT by Jonty30 (Genghis Khan did not have the most descendants. His father had more. )
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To: Jonty30

Yes he did. Another shameful betrayal of sound Christian teachings, and I’m also of the opinion that no one can be a democrat and a Christian at the same time.


10 posted on 08/16/2024 7:33:59 PM PDT by ducttape45 (Jeremiah 17:9, "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?")
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To: Jonty30
Her father failed her.

Her father failed her because he was a Swiss-Armenian Clinical Psychologist with a doctorate from Marquette University.

Gigi married Stephan, a Swiss-Armenian, at the age of 17, in what she calls an arranged marriage, and moved to Switzerland where they found her father-in-law’s controlling influence intolerable. After about eight years the couple moved to the states so Tchividjian could pursue a college education. He earned a doctorate in clinical psychology at Marquette University, in Milwaukee, where he interned under the late Larry Crabb, a popular Christian counselor and author who encouraged Tchividjian to move to South Florida. Tchividjian built a thriving practice, and in the 1980’s founded Life Management Ministries, focused on training for small groups, at First Baptist Church of Fort Lauderdale. He also hosted a radio talk show on what was formerly WMCU.

Raising a family in South Florida While Stephan pursued his career, Gigi was busy at home managing their large family and household. Writing on scraps of paper between chores, she has since published more than 10 books and developed an inspirational speaking ministry. When the family first moved to Florida, they briefly attended Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church under the leadership of the late Rev. D. James Kennedy, where in 1974 the Rev. Graham spoke at the dedication of their new church sanctuary to an overflow crowd. A few years later, the family became members at First Baptist Church of Fort Lauderdale, pastored by Dr. O.S. Hawkins, where Tchividjian developed the counseling ministry, and the Hawkins became close family friends. Their large family filled the front row pews, and Gigi chuckled as she recalled Hawkins as an instigator with the children.

In a phone interview, Hawkins, now president of Guidestone Financial Resources, agreed, “I totally was. When Antony was about six years old, I’d pay him money to run up and touch the prayer altar and run back and sit down, and they’d go crazy!”

Remembering the time fondly, Hawkins said “God was doing a fresh work in Fort Lauderdale.” In 1985 the Rev. Graham conducted an eight-day crusade at Lockhart Stadium in Fort Lauderdale that attracted crowds estimated in excess of 25,000 per day, to hear a gospel message encouraging a personal relationship with Christ. The Rev. Graham was welcomed by then Florida Governor Bob Graham, who called the preacher “a son of Florida returning to Florida,” according to a Sun-Sentinel article. Graham attended Florida Bible Institute in Tampa and preached his first sermon in Palatka, Fla. During the crusade, the entire family was involved in some form.

“There is no doubt that Stephan and Gigi were a powerful ministry couple in the 80’s,” said Hawkins, adding “Stephan helped so many broken lives become whole… and apart from her own relationship with Christ, Gigi’s strength was in her family.”

Asked if it was difficult being the daughter of “America’s pastor,” Gigi said, “We were never sacrificed for public opinion.” However, with her father travelling about 70 percent of her childhood, her mother chose to move the family to North Carolina to be near her parents, who were former missionaries in China. “I could go on talking for hours about my mother, and I do at The Cove.” (The Billy Graham Training Center at The Cove is a Christian Conference and Retreat Center in Asheville, N.C., where Gigi currently serves as a family ambassador, speaking and welcoming guests.) “She was a character,” Gigi said of her mother. “She was a wonderful writer, a poet, theologian and intellectual, but she had a streak in her that could think of things, and they were fun!”

Gigi recalled that when she was a child, busloads of tourists came on their lawn and called the family out by name, just so they could take pictures. “And in the 1960’s there were so many threats against my dad, the FBI made him put up an electric fence and get guard dogs. My mother was furious and said, ‘This is an afront to my guardian angels!’ She was spunky! Spunky with her grandchildren too.”

Of her seven children, Gigi said Tullian was the one always running out the door with a surfboard. “He came in one day with his ears pierced and I was horrified! And he always fixed his hair in some strange way, so I felt like I was sitting in the front row at First Baptist Fort Lauderdale with six children and a chicken! But after he had pierced his ears, my mother sent him a box of earrings. Then for thanksgiving, she sent him a knife and a fork for his ears. She was teaching me, ‘Gigi, don’t make a mountain out of a molehill.’ She had a wonderful way of teaching. She didn’t get on to him. She didn’t criticize him, and he got over it pretty quicky, but that taught me a great lesson.”

Gigi described both her mother and daddy as nonjudgmental. As an illustration, she recounted attending the celebration of the 75th Anniversary of TIME Magazine with her father. It was a black-tie affair in Rockefeller Center to which everyone who had ever appeared on the cover was invited and it was a motley crew. This was during the Clinton administration in the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal, so there was a little tension, and they were seated at President Clinton’s table. “In the taxi on the way back to the hotel, I asked Daddy, how do we as Christians deal with these sorts of things? And his answer to me was, ‘Honey, the New Testament teaches, our job is to love, the Holy Spirit’s job is to convict, and it’s God’s job to judge.’

Gigi Graham Tchividjian on God’s Faithfulness to Their Legacy Family


So my question was what do psychologists think about religion?

And the response was from Wikipedia:

Psychologists consider that religion may benefit both physical and mental health in various ways, including encouraging healthy lifestyles, providing social support networks and encouraging an optimistic outlook on life; prayer and meditation may also benefit physiological functioning.
Nothing there about Faith or Grace.   The psychologist's daughter is woke blind on the goodness of President Trump.   And Bill Graham told her mother that, "it’s God’s job to judge."
37 posted on 08/16/2024 8:35:34 PM PDT by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken! )
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To: Jonty30; ducttape45

At some point, a person is responsible for his or her own decisions. Up to this point, she’s apparently been mindful of her father’s teachings but has now decided to align herself with baby-killers and Marxists. I doubt her father would approve.


53 posted on 08/16/2024 9:57:37 PM PDT by skr (Righteousness exalteth a nation: sin is a reproach to any people. - Proverbs 14:34)
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To: Jonty30

“her father failed her”...she has a new father and he isn’t who she thinks he is.


69 posted on 08/17/2024 4:48:37 AM PDT by Qwapisking ("IF the Second goes first the First goes second" L.St )
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