🧪 Case Study 10.3: The Client Who Said, “I Need to Become My Highest Self”

Scenario

Maya is a Christian Leaders Institute student serving as a ministry coach through her local church’s community outreach program. She is not a licensed counselor. She is not presenting herself as a therapist. Her role is to offer faith-informed encouragement, goal clarification, prayer by permission, and wise next-step support.

One afternoon, she meets with Jordan, a young professional who recently began attending community events hosted by the church. Jordan does not identify as Christian. He says he is “spiritual, but not religious.”

Jordan is friendly, thoughtful, and emotionally honest. He tells Maya, “I am trying to become my highest self. I’ve spent too many years living small. I am done with toxic energy. I am manifesting a better life. I think the universe is finally telling me to choose myself.”

Maya listens carefully. Jordan continues.

“I do not really believe in organized religion. I think most religions are just control systems. But I like Jesus. He seemed like someone who lived fully aligned with his higher self. I want that kind of energy.”

Maya feels several things at once. She appreciates Jordan’s desire to grow. She hears his pain. She notices his hunger for healing, identity, and purpose. But she also recognizes that Jordan is using Christian words and spiritual-but-not-religious words in very different ways.

Jordan is not asking for a sermon. He is asking for help making sense of his life.

Maya must decide how to respond.

Analysis

This is a common ministry coaching moment. Jordan is not hostile. He is searching. He is using language shaped by self-help spirituality, spiritual-but-not-religious thought, therapy culture, and selective admiration for Jesus.

Several key phrases reveal his worldview:

“Highest self” suggests that transformation is found by discovering or aligning with an idealized inner self.

“Toxic energy” may describe real emotional harm, but it may also become a vague label for anyone who challenges him.

“Manifesting a better life” suggests that desire, intention, or spiritual focus can shape reality.

“The universe is telling me” gives personal guidance language to an impersonal creation.

“Choose myself” may mean healthy boundaries, but it could also mean self-rule without accountability.

“Jesus lived aligned with his higher self” reduces Jesus from Lord and Savior to a model of self-actualization.

Maya’s task is not to attack Jordan’s words. Her task is to listen, clarify, protect the coaching role, and build a gospel bridge if Jordan gives permission.

Goals

Maya should aim to:

Protect Jordan’s dignity as an image-bearer.

Listen for spiritual longing beneath his language.

Clarify what Jordan means by “highest self,” “energy,” “universe,” and “Jesus.”

Avoid mocking or caricaturing his beliefs.

Avoid pretending his spirituality means the same thing as Christianity.

Keep the conversation within ministry coaching boundaries.

Ask permission before offering Christian comparison.

Invite reflection about meaning, identity, transformation, and Christ.

Notice whether Jordan’s story includes trauma, abuse, depression, self-harm, or other concerns requiring referral.

Offer prayer only if welcomed.

Poor Response

Maya says:

“Jordan, that highest-self stuff is New Age nonsense. You need to stop listening to the universe and start listening to God. Jesus was not some energy guru. You are making yourself your own god. That is idolatry, and you need to repent.”

This response may contain pieces of theological concern, but it is poorly timed and poorly framed.

It fails to listen.

It shames before understanding.

It attacks Jordan’s words before asking what they mean.

It turns a coaching conversation into a confrontation.

It may confirm Jordan’s suspicion that religion is mostly control.

It makes Maya sound more interested in correcting vocabulary than caring for a person.

Wise Response

Maya says:

“Jordan, thank you for sharing that honestly. It sounds like you are longing for growth, healing, and a life that feels more whole. Could I ask what you mean when you say ‘highest self’?”

Jordan says, “I guess I mean the version of me that is not afraid anymore. The version that does not let people use me. The version that finally lives with purpose.”

Maya replies:

“That makes sense. Wanting courage, healthy boundaries, and purpose is important. When you talk about the universe guiding you, do you think of the universe as personal, or is that more a way of describing your sense that life has direction?”

Jordan pauses. “I have never really thought about that. I guess I talk like the universe is personal, but I do not know if I believe that.”

Maya says:

“That is a thoughtful observation. In Christian faith, we believe guidance does not come from an impersonal universe, but from a personal Creator who knows us and calls us. I do not want to pressure you, but would it be okay if I shared how Christians understand transformation?”

Jordan nods.

Maya continues:

“Christians believe transformation is possible, but not because we save ourselves by becoming a higher self. We believe we are made new in Christ. That means God meets us with grace, tells the truth about our wounds and sins, restores our identity, and forms us into people who love God and love others.”

This response is clear, calm, and respectful.

Stronger Conversation

Maya can continue with careful coaching questions:

“Where do you feel most stuck right now?”

“When you say you want to choose yourself, what would healthy responsibility look like?”

“Are there people you need distance from for safety, or people you are avoiding because they challenge you?”

“What kind of person do you hope to become?”

“How do you decide whether a desire is wise?”

“What do you do with guilt or regret when you know you have hurt someone?”

“What would it mean to be loved by God before you improved yourself?”

These questions help Jordan examine the difference between self-protection, self-rule, healing, repentance, and transformation.

Maya might also say:

“I hear your desire to stop living in fear. Christians believe courage is not just self-confidence. It grows as we learn to trust God and walk in truth.”

Or:

“I hear your desire for healing. Christians believe healing includes comfort, but also honesty, forgiveness, repentance, and restored relationships where that is safe and wise.”

Or:

“I hear your interest in Jesus. Christians do not see Jesus as a man who discovered his highest self. We believe he is the Son of God, the Word made flesh, who came to save and restore us.”

Boundary Reminders

Maya must remember her role.

She is offering ministry coaching, not therapy.

She should not ask Jordan to relive traumatic experiences in detail.

She should not diagnose Jordan’s family system, mental health, or spiritual condition beyond her role.

She should not pressure Jordan to become Christian in order to continue receiving care.

She should not promise confidentiality without limits.

She should not become Jordan’s only support system.

She should not encourage Jordan to cut off people unless there is a clear safety or abuse concern and appropriate referral support.

She should seek oversight if Jordan discloses self-harm, abuse, exploitation, violence risk, serious addiction, or danger to another person.

Do’s

Do ask what Jordan means by his spiritual language.

Do honor his desire for courage, healing, purpose, and freedom.

Do clarify the difference between self-salvation and new creation in Christ.

Do ask permission before sharing Scripture, prayer, or Christian comparison.

Do keep the conversation grounded in practical next steps.

Do invite Jordan to consider Jesus more deeply.

Do watch for pain beneath spiritual confidence.

Do refer when the conversation moves beyond ministry coaching.

Don’ts

Do not mock “highest self” language.

Do not assume Jordan is unserious because his beliefs are blended.

Do not pretend “the universe” means the same thing as God.

Do not reduce Jesus to an example of self-actualization.

Do not use the conversation to show off apologetics knowledge.

Do not push Jordan into public testimony.

Do not make his spiritual confusion your personal rescue project.

Do not treat coaching as covert evangelistic pressure.

Sample Phrases

“Thank you for trusting me with that. What do you mean when you say ‘highest self’?”

“It sounds like you are longing for courage, healing, and purpose.”

“When you say the universe is guiding you, do you think of the universe as personal?”

“Would it be okay if I shared how Christians understand transformation?”

“Christians believe we are not saved by becoming our higher self. We are made new by grace in Christ.”

“I hear your interest in Jesus. Christians believe Jesus is more than an enlightened teacher or spiritual model.”

“Would prayer be welcome right now, or would it be better just to keep talking?”

“This sounds important enough that you may benefit from additional support beyond this conversation.”

Ministry Sciences Reflection

Jordan’s spiritual language may carry emotional protection. Words like “toxic,” “energy,” “highest self,” and “choose myself” may help him feel strong after seasons of disappointment, rejection, or confusion.

If Maya attacks the language too quickly, Jordan may experience the conversation as threat. He may become defensive or withdraw. If Maya agrees too quickly, she may reinforce a worldview that places the self in the role of savior.

A wise ministry response slows the conversation down. Maya helps Jordan name desire, fear, hope, pain, responsibility, and longing. This gives space for truth to be heard without unnecessary pressure.

Organic Humans Reflection

Jordan is not merely a set of ideas. He is an embodied soul. His beliefs affect his body, emotions, choices, relationships, moral agency, and future.

When he says he wants to become his highest self, he may be expressing a whole-person longing for wholeness. He wants identity. He wants courage. He wants peace. He wants freedom from fear. He wants a story that makes sense.

Christian ministry honors this longing while pointing beyond the self. Human beings are not designed to be self-created projects. They are image-bearers created by God, wounded by sin, and invited into restoration through Christ.

Image-Bearer Reflection

Maya should see Jordan first as an image-bearer, not as a problem to solve. His blended spirituality may be confused, but he still bears dignity. He is capable of reflection, repentance, trust, love, and calling.

Seeing Jordan as an image-bearer helps Maya avoid contempt. It also helps her avoid compromise. Because Jordan has dignity, he deserves truth spoken with care.

Comparative Religion Reflection

This case reveals several comparative religion themes:

What is treated as ultimate? The self, the universe, personal growth, and felt alignment.

What is the human problem? Fear, toxic energy, lack of purpose, and disconnection from the true self.

What is the path to restoration? Manifestation, self-choice, energy management, and becoming the highest self.

What is the final hope? A fulfilled, confident, healed, self-directed life.

How does Christ meet, challenge, and redeem this longing? Christ offers new creation, forgiveness, identity received from God, Spirit-led transformation, and love that is not trapped inside self-rule.

Gospel Bridge

A strong gospel bridge might sound like this:

“Jordan, I hear your desire for healing and purpose. Christianity also teaches that transformation is possible. But it gives a different path. We do not become whole by saving ourselves or discovering a divine self within. We become new by receiving grace from Jesus Christ, who knows the truth about us, forgives sin, heals wounds, and calls us into a life of love.”

This bridge honors longing, clarifies difference, and points to Christ.

Practical Lessons

  1. Spiritual-but-not-religious language often carries real longing.

  2. “Highest self” language should be clarified before it is corrected.

  3. The universe should not be treated as another name for the God of Scripture.

  4. Jesus should not be reduced to a model of self-actualization.

  5. Ministry coaching must not become therapy, control, or pressure.

  6. Gospel bridges work best when they connect to the person’s stated longing.

  7. Permission-based Christian comparison protects dignity and trust.

  8. The goal is not to win a phrase battle, but to invite deeper truth.

Reflection Questions

  1. What did Jordan seem to be longing for beneath his “highest self” language?

  2. Why would Maya’s poor response likely close the conversation?

  3. What clarifying question would you ask first in this case?

  4. How can Maya affirm Jordan’s desire for growth without affirming self-salvation?

  5. What is the difference between “becoming my highest self” and being made new in Christ?

  6. Why is it important to ask whether “the universe” is personal or impersonal?

  7. What boundaries should Maya keep as a ministry coach?

  8. What safety concerns would require referral or oversight?

  9. What gospel bridge from this case could you use in ministry?

  10. How can a Christian leader speak truth without sounding contemptuous?

References

The Holy Bible, World English Bible.

Christian Leaders Institute. Comparative Religion Ministry Skills Master Template.

Clouser, Roy. The Myth of Religious Neutrality: An Essay on the Hidden Role of Religious Belief in Theories. University of Notre Dame Press, 2005.

Guinness, Os. Fool’s Talk: Recovering the Art of Christian Persuasion. InterVarsity Press, 2015.

Newbigin, Lesslie. The Gospel in a Pluralist Society. Eerdmans, 1989.

Smith, James K. A. How (Not) to Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor. Eerdmans, 2014.

Остання зміна: суботу 16 травня 2026 07:20 AM