CHAPTER THREEFROM THERAPEUTIC PRESENCE TO DIVINE PRESENCEIn the previous chapter, I argue that healing has traditionally been attributed to God throughout the history of Christianity, and that a competent Christian counsellor is one who is able to make the relational structure embedded in the counselling process vastly analogical to that embedded in the divine healing experience, to the extent that the divinehealing memory of the client is invoked. I propose to understand Christian counselling as a source analogue of a target analogue, the target analogue being the Divine Presence and divine act of healing. In this chapter, I elaborate on the notion of presence, attempt to mark its nature, and propose a model of Christian counselling presence that may explain how the source analogue of the target analogue can practically be produced.