📝 Worksheet 8.5: Indigenous Spirituality Respect and Discernment Guide

Purpose of This Worksheet

This worksheet helps you practice respectful, Christ-centered discernment in ministry conversations involving Indigenous spiritualities, land, ancestors, ceremony, sacred story, historical wounds, and community memory.

You are not being trained to become an expert in every Indigenous tradition. You are being trained to become a wiser Christian leader who listens carefully, avoids assumptions, protects dignity, stays within role, and bears faithful witness to Jesus Christ without contempt.

Use this worksheet as a field handbook tool for officiant ministry, chaplaincy, ministry coaching, pastoral care, Soul Center leadership, funeral ministry, wedding ministry, community prayer, discipleship, recovery ministry, and public or private spiritual care conversations.


Part 1: Key Concept Review

1. Indigenous Spiritualities Are Not One Religion

Write three reasons Christian leaders should avoid saying, “Indigenous people believe…”




Better language to practice:

“Some Indigenous traditions emphasize…”

“In this family, what does this mean?”

“In this community, how is this understood?”

“I do not want to assume. Would you be willing to explain?”


2. Land Is More Than Property

In many Indigenous conversations, land may carry meanings such as memory, grief, burial, identity, stewardship, sacred story, family, and belonging.

Write three possible meanings land may carry in a ministry conversation.




Christian discernment:

Land matters because God created the world good.
Land is a gift of God.
Land is not God.
Creation points beyond itself to the Creator.


3. Ancestors May Mean Different Things

Ancestor language can mean family memory, elder wisdom, grief, identity, spiritual guidance, ritual obligation, fear, continuity, or mediation.

When someone speaks of ancestors, what respectful question could you ask?



Christian clarity:

Ancestors may be remembered and honored.
Elders may be respected.
Family stories may be treasured.
Jesus Christ is the one mediator between God and humanity.


4. Ceremony Requires Discernment

Not every ceremony means the same thing. Some ceremonies may be cultural, memorial, communal, spiritual, sacred, private, or mixed.

Before participating, ask:

What am I being invited to do?


What does this action mean?


Am I observing, supporting, praying, participating, leading, or endorsing?


Can I participate in good conscience as a Christian leader?



Part 2: Personal Discernment

1. My First Reaction

When I hear about Indigenous spirituality, land, ancestors, ceremony, or mission wounds, my first emotional reaction is usually:

☐ Curiosity
☐ Caution
☐ Fear
☐ Respect
☐ Confusion
☐ Defensiveness
☐ Compassion
☐ Uncertainty
☐ Other: ____________________________

Why do I think I react this way?




2. My Ministry Risk

Which mistake am I most likely to make?

☐ Speak too quickly
☐ Become defensive
☐ Avoid Christian clarity
☐ Sound harsh
☐ Over-apologize without witness
☐ Imitate what I do not understand
☐ Treat all Indigenous peoples as the same
☐ Ignore historical wounds
☐ Use Scripture too quickly
☐ Avoid the conversation entirely

What would a wiser response look like?




3. My Role Clarity

In my current or future ministry role, I am most likely to encounter this topic as a:

☐ Wedding officiant
☐ Funeral officiant
☐ Chaplain
☐ Minister
☐ Ministry coach
☐ Soul Center leader
☐ Recovery ministry leader
☐ Jail or prison ministry worker
☐ Youth or young adult leader
☐ Women’s ministry leader
☐ Pastoral care volunteer
☐ Community prayer participant
☐ Other: ____________________________

What are the boundaries of that role?



What would be outside my role?




Part 3: Comparative Religion Conversation Practice

Use the five comparative religion questions to listen carefully. Do not use these questions as an interrogation. Use them as a private discernment map.

1. What is treated as ultimate?

In this conversation, the person or family may treat one or more of these as ultimate:

☐ Creator
☐ Great Spirit
☐ Land
☐ Ancestors
☐ Ceremony
☐ Community survival
☐ Justice
☐ Healing
☐ Sacred balance
☐ Family memory
☐ Identity
☐ Resistance to erasure
☐ Jesus Christ
☐ Something else: ____________________________

What clues would help me discern this?




2. What is the human problem?

The human problem may be understood as:

☐ Sin
☐ Broken relationship
☐ Disconnection from land
☐ Loss of ceremony
☐ Forgetting ancestors
☐ Colonial wound
☐ Family separation
☐ Cultural erasure
☐ Injustice
☐ Spiritual imbalance
☐ Shame
☐ Grief
☐ Death
☐ Addiction
☐ Distrust of Christianity
☐ Something else: ____________________________

What pain or longing should I listen for?




3. What is the path to restoration?

The person may look to:

☐ Ceremony
☐ Return to community
☐ Honoring elders
☐ Remembering ancestors
☐ Language recovery
☐ Prayer
☐ Traditional healing
☐ Justice
☐ Family repair
☐ Sobriety
☐ Storytelling
☐ Christian worship
☐ Repentance and faith in Christ
☐ Something else: ____________________________

Where might I affirm a good longing without affirming every spiritual claim?




4. What is the final hope?

The person or family may hope for:

☐ Peace
☐ Harmony
☐ Healing of memory
☐ Cultural survival
☐ Restored community
☐ Continuity with ancestors
☐ Protection
☐ Justice
☐ Heaven
☐ Resurrection
☐ New creation
☐ The healing of the nations
☐ Something else: ____________________________

How does Christian resurrection hope speak to this longing?




5. How does Christ meet, challenge, and redeem this longing?

Complete the sentences:

Christ meets the longing for land by:


Christ meets the longing for ancestors by:


Christ meets the longing for ceremony by:


Christ meets the longing for justice by:


Christ meets the longing for healing by:


Christ challenges every idol by:



Part 4: Practice Phrases

1. Listening Phrases

Practice writing three respectful listening phrases.

Example: “I do not want to assume. Would you be willing to share what that means in your family?”





2. Historical Wound Phrases

Practice writing three responses when someone says Christianity was connected to harm.

Example: “I am sorry that the name of Christ was connected to harm. I do not want to minimize that.”





3. Permission-Based Prayer Phrases

Practice writing three ways to ask before praying.

Example: “As a Christian minister, I pray in the name of Jesus. Would that be welcome here?”





4. Christian Clarity Phrases

Practice writing three ways to keep Christ clear without contempt.

Example: “As a Christian, I believe our final hope is in Jesus Christ, who entered death and rose again.”





5. Appropriation-Avoidance Phrases

Practice writing three ways to avoid using what is not yours to use.

Example: “I want to honor this tradition without using words or practices that are not mine to use.”





Part 5: Boundary Check Scenarios

Read each scenario and write a wise response.

Scenario 1: The Wedding Request

A bride says, “My grandmother wants us to include a traditional blessing in the wedding. Can you lead it?”

What should you ask before answering?



What might you say if you cannot lead that practice in good conscience?




Scenario 2: The Funeral Prayer

A family asks you to pray at a memorial where elders will speak, and some relatives are uncomfortable with church language.

What should you clarify before the service?



Write a short permission-based response.




Scenario 3: The Sacred Object

A church team wants to use an Indigenous sacred object as a visual prop for a sermon about “ancient wisdom.”

What is the concern?



What would you advise?




Scenario 4: The Hospital Visit

A patient speaks about ancestors visiting in dreams and asks whether you think they are “watching over” her.

How can you listen without immediately arguing?



How can you gently keep Christian hope clear?




Scenario 5: The Mission Wound

A man says, “Christianity was used to destroy my people’s culture. I do not trust pastors.”

What should you not say first?



What could you say instead?




Scenario 6: The Public Ceremony

You are invited to a public community ceremony and asked to “say something spiritual,” but no one has clarified whether Christian prayer is welcome.

What questions should you ask?



What would integrity require if Christian prayer is not welcome?




Part 6: Field Handbook Tool

Indigenous Spirituality Respect and Discernment Guide

Use this tool before or after a ministry conversation involving Indigenous spirituality, land, ancestors, ceremony, sacred story, or historical wounds.

Step 1: Identify the Setting

Where is this conversation happening?

☐ Wedding
☐ Funeral
☐ Hospital room
☐ Hospice room
☐ Jail or prison ministry
☐ Recovery ministry
☐ Coaching session
☐ Pastoral care conversation
☐ Soul Center
☐ Community ceremony
☐ Public prayer event
☐ Family gathering
☐ Church event
☐ Other: ____________________________

What permission structure exists in this setting?



Step 2: Clarify Your Role

I am serving as:

☐ Officiant
☐ Minister
☐ Chaplain
☐ Ministry coach
☐ Mentor
☐ Volunteer
☐ Soul Center leader
☐ Guest
☐ Family friend
☐ Other: ____________________________

What am I responsible to do?


What am I not responsible to do?



Step 3: Listen for the Meaning

What words or themes are being used?

☐ Land
☐ Ancestors
☐ Elders
☐ Ceremony
☐ Creator
☐ Great Spirit
☐ Sacred story
☐ Mission schools
☐ Church wounds
☐ Burial places
☐ Language recovery
☐ Justice
☐ Healing
☐ Protection
☐ Balance
☐ Memory
☐ Family
☐ Jesus
☐ Prayer
☐ Other: ____________________________

What do these words mean to this person or family?



Step 4: Watch for Assumptions

What am I tempted to assume?


What question could replace that assumption?



Step 5: Check for Appropriation

Am I being asked to use, copy, lead, wear, perform, display, or explain something that may belong to another people’s sacred practice?

☐ Yes
☐ No
☐ Unsure

If yes or unsure, what permission or guidance is needed?



Step 6: Ask About Prayer and Scripture

Would prayer be welcome?

☐ Yes
☐ No
☐ Unsure

Would Christian prayer in Jesus’ name be welcome?

☐ Yes
☐ No
☐ Unsure

Would Scripture be welcome?

☐ Yes
☐ No
☐ Unsure

What permission question should I ask?



Step 7: Keep Christ Clear

How can I be honest about Jesus Christ without pressure?


What gospel bridge may be present?

☐ Creation
☐ Land
☐ Lament
☐ Justice
☐ Ancestors and resurrection hope
☐ Ceremony and Christian worship
☐ Cross and suffering
☐ New creation
☐ Healing of the nations
☐ Family belonging
☐ Other: ____________________________

Write one Christ-centered bridge phrase.




Step 8: Know When to Seek Help

Do I need pastoral, institutional, legal, counseling, safety, or cultural guidance?

☐ Yes
☐ No
☐ Unsure

What concern requires help?

☐ Abuse
☐ Self-harm risk
☐ Threat of violence
☐ Exploitation
☐ Coercive control
☐ Trauma beyond my role
☐ Legal/reporting issue
☐ Public ceremony uncertainty
☐ Sacred practice uncertainty
☐ Family conflict
☐ Medical concern
☐ Other: ____________________________

Who should I contact or consult?



Part 7: Local Ministry Application

1. Local Awareness

What Indigenous peoples, communities, or histories are connected to your area?



What do you need to learn before speaking too confidently?




2. Relationship Before Platform

What would it look like to build trust before trying to lead, teach, or speak publicly?




3. Church or Soul Center Application

How could your church, ministry, or Soul Center honor Indigenous neighbors without appropriation or performance?




4. Ministry Team Discussion

Use these questions with a ministry team:

  1. Where might we encounter Indigenous spirituality or historical wounds in our ministry?

  2. What phrases should we avoid?

  3. What permission questions should we practice?

  4. How can we be honest about Jesus without sounding contemptuous?

  5. Who could help us learn local history responsibly?

  6. What boundaries should guide public prayer, ceremonies, and use of symbols?


Part 8: Gospel Bridge Reflection

Choose one theme and write a careful gospel bridge.

☐ Land
☐ Ancestors
☐ Ceremony
☐ Historical wounds
☐ Justice
☐ Healing
☐ Sacred story
☐ Community memory
☐ Death and grief
☐ New creation

Theme Chosen


What Longing Is Present?



What Must Be Honored?



What Must Not Be Affirmed as Ultimate?



How Does Christ Meet This Longing?



My Gospel Bridge Phrase




Part 9: Prayer and Commitment

Personal Prayer

Write a short prayer asking God for humility, courage, clarity, and tenderness in Indigenous spirituality conversations.






Ministry Commitment

Complete the sentence:

When I encounter Indigenous spirituality, land, ancestors, ceremony, sacred story, or historical wounds in ministry, I will seek to:





Closing Formation Prayer

Lord Jesus Christ,

You are Lord of creation, Lord of the nations, Lord of history, and Lord of every wounded place.

Teach me to listen before I speak.
Teach me to honor people without losing clarity.
Teach me to respect land, memory, family, and ceremony without making them ultimate.
Teach me not to mock what I do not understand.
Teach me not to take what is not mine to use.
Teach me to lament harm honestly.
Teach me to ask permission before prayer and Scripture.
Teach me to keep your name clear without using it as pressure.

Make me gentle with wounded histories.
Make me courageous with gospel hope.
Make me wise in public settings.
Make me humble in private conversations.
Make me faithful in every role you entrust to me.

You are the crucified and risen Lord.
You are the one mediator between God and humanity.
You are the hope of the nations.
You are making all things new.

Amen.

கடைசியாக மாற்றப்பட்டது: சனி, 16 மே 2026, 1:46 PM