Langberg skillfully addresses sexual abuse in a way that covers systemic and individual issues in regards to the client who might arrive in therapy. She is clearly concerned with a holistic understanding of sexual abuse, and shows it through her explanations of therapy as well as trauma. She clearly sets up a methodology that brings a therapist through multiple phases of treatment, addressing the client, the therapist, symptoms, the impact of change, and so on. I enjoy her simple and direct use of language, and her patient, detailed explanations of each phase of treatment. Langberg also illustrates the importance of story, by sharing accounts of different clients who have experienced abuse.
The aspect of this book that I had difficulty with was the theology that was woven throughout. It felt more like a contrived, surface level conception that was based on a lot of assumptions about the Christian faith in general. Nothing felt like it spoke to trauma in an innovative or engaging way, as a book like Spirit and Trauma might. At times, I had to skim over some of the language just to move on to something that felt more relevant. I am grateful, however, that she engages the importance of addressing abuse within the church, an idea that is still far from being implemented in the present.