Comparative Religion Ministry Skills
الخطوط العريضة للقسم
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Christian Leaders Institute • Ministry Skills
Comparative Religion Ministry Skills
Equip yourself to listen, discern, compare, and minister wisely across religious and spiritual worldviews with Christ-centered clarity, humility, and love.
Comparative Religion Ministry Skills equips volunteer, part-time, and full-time Christian leaders to listen, discern, compare, and minister wisely across religious and spiritual worldviews.
This course teaches students to use comparative religion as a ministry conversation skill, not as a debate weapon. The goal is to help Christian leaders listen deeply, protect dignity, compare without caricature, and offer Christ-centered clarity with wisdom and love.Course Content Team
Course Leadership
- Professor Rev. Henry Reyenga — Team Leader
- Pam Reyenga — Editor
- Haley Steiner — Video Presenter
Contributors
- Sophie Distefano
- Abigail Dominiak
- Additional Christian Leaders Institute course-building contributors
- With appreciation to Dr. Roy Clouser and the Comparative Religion course referenced at Christian Leaders Institute
Who This Course Prepares Students to Serve
Ministry Contexts
- Christian Leaders Institute students
- Christian Leaders Alliance candidates
- Officiants, ministers, and chaplains
- Ministry coaches and Soul Center leaders
- Pastors, elders, deacons, and small group leaders
- Wedding and funeral ministry leaders
Conversation Settings
- People from Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, Muslim, Christian, secular, spiritual-but-not-religious, or blended worldview backgrounds
- Interfaith couples and families
- People asking about God, death, suffering, salvation, prayer, Scripture, ceremony, identity, purpose, and final hope
- People shaped by religious wounds, family traditions, secular assumptions, or spiritual searching
- People exploring the claims of Jesus Christ
What Students Will Learn
Ministry Conversation Practices
- Consent-based ministry conversations
- Respectful religious worldview listening
- Clear role boundaries
- Confidentiality with limits
- Permission-based prayer
- Scripture sharing with wisdom and consent
- Careful comparison without mockery or caricature
- Dignity-protecting conversation skills
- Referral awareness when deeper care is needed
- Gospel bridge-building without pressure or manipulation
Worldview Patterns
- What a person treats as ultimate
- How different religions understand God, gods, Brahman, emptiness, law, karma, revelation, nature, the universe, reason, or the self
- How people understand sin, suffering, ignorance, guilt, shame, alienation, death, or lack of meaning
- How traditions describe restoration, liberation, salvation, enlightenment, submission, grace, repentance, ritual, moral effort, or authenticity
- How spiritual words may carry very different meanings
- How Christian hope differs from other religious and secular hopes
Ministry Skills Developed
Students will learn to ask five key comparative religion ministry questions:
- What is treated as ultimate?
- What is the human problem?
- What path to restoration is being trusted?
- What final hope is being imagined?
- How does Christ meet, challenge, and redeem this longing?
Students will practice listening for the “altar” behind spiritual language, clarifying sacred words, comparing religions without flattening them into sameness, offering prayer by permission, using Scripture with wisdom and timing, building gospel bridges without manipulation, and knowing when to pause, refer, or seek oversight.Who This Course Serves
This course is especially valuable for churches, Soul Centers, ministry coaches, chaplains, pastors, officiants, funeral ministers, wedding officiants, elders and deacons, small group leaders, marriage ministry leaders, premarital mentors, family ministry leaders, discipleship mentors, leadership development mentors, campus ministry leaders, recovery ministry volunteers, church planters, and Christian volunteers who have personal ministry conversations.
The goal is to help students establish a safe, dignified, Christ-centered, accountable, and referral-aware ministry presence when people are exploring religion, spirituality, family beliefs, grief, ceremonies, prayer, Scripture, identity, purpose, suffering, and the claims of Christ.Important Scope Statement
This course provides ministry conversation training only. It does not certify students in counseling or therapy, religious studies scholarship, interfaith mediation, legal advocacy, clinical chaplaincy care, trauma treatment, psychological assessment, case management, crisis response, cult deprogramming, abuse investigation, or emergency response.Students are trained to serve within a clear Christian ministry role. They are taught to protect privacy, honor consent, avoid forced disclosure, pray by permission, share Scripture with wisdom, compare religions respectfully, protect dignity, and refer when needs exceed their role.
Those pursuing ordination pathways may continue through the Christian Leaders Alliance.
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