Larry Crabb Jr.'s book, Effective Biblical Counseling, is an oldie but a goodie. In the book, he attempts to talk about three levels of counseling that can be offered in a church setting to Christians who are struggling. His feeling, as presented in the book, is that the majority of therapeutic needs that Christians have should be administered through the church body that they are a part of.
His framework differs from the framework of Jay Adams, where most of therapeutic modalities revolve around identifying sinful behaviors and thoughts and badgering the client into confessing and resolving those. Instead, Crabb believes in "spoiling the Egyptians," taking useful techniques from the field of psychology and using them in a Biblical framework to help people achieve inner peace. Before using any technique, he believes that it needs to be submitted to the lens of Scripture to see if it is consistent before it is used.
Just because a technique is helpful to patients doesn't mean that it is Christ honoring.
Crabb does believe that past harms and events influence present emotions and behaviors and that before you can make a break with a sinful thought pattern, you need to understand what emptiness that thought pattern is meeting for you. The challenge, of course, is that many people focus on the behaviors rather than the thinking that underlie them and the end result is that the behaviors don't change.
Over and over through the book, Crabb talks about Scripture, what it says and how we need to be careful not to give others who are struggling emotionally an opening to sin.
I think he is careful to admit that we need to be gentle in our approach and take adequate time for people to come to their own understanding of their struggles.
I do think that Crabb, in an effort to be Scriptural, is pretty quick to discourage people from leaving unsafe situations. He never mentions abuse, but discusses telling a woman whose alcoholic husband collapses on the couch drunk every evening that God expects her to stay with her husband. At the least, I would explore the question of safety with such a woman before giving her "the word of the Lord." Maybe this is simply due to the fact that the book was written in the 1970s, but it feels like there is not adequate encouragement to identify the safety (or lack thereof) for the person being counseled.
I know that he is attempting to be Scripture focused, but I fear that he is actually making victims feel guilty for leaving situations where they or their children are endangered. Submission is a Biblical principle, but we would do well to remember that there is a need to protect the least of these from those who would prey on them.
I still recommend this book, but wish there was an updated version. I think for a more nuts and bolts book, I would recommend Mark McMinn's "Theology, Psychology, and Spirituality in Christian Counseling," a book that I really connected with.