📝 Worksheet 8.4: Creational Discernment 15-Aspects Practice Tool
📝 Worksheet 8.4: Creational Discernment 15-Aspects Practice Tool
Course: Introduction to Spiritual Growth
Topic 8: Spiritual Discernment I — Creational Discernment and the 15 Aspects
Worksheet Focus: Practicing whole-person discernment by seeing the whole situation before God
Connection: This worksheet completes Topic 8 by helping students apply creational discernment and the 15 aspects to real-life spiritual growth and ministry situations.
Student Name: ___________________________
Date: ___________________________
Part 1: The Situation You Are Discerning
Choose one real or realistic situation where spiritual discernment is needed.
This may be:
A personal spiritual struggle
A family issue
A church or Soul Center concern
A workplace challenge
A ministry care conversation
A calling decision
A repeated habit or pattern
A relationship conflict
A season of discouragement or confusion
Do not write confidential details that should not be shared.
Briefly describe the situation:
What makes this situation spiritually important?
What quick or shallow answer might someone be tempted to give?
Examples:
“Just pray more.”
“Just forgive.”
“Just work harder.”
“Just leave.”
“Just set a boundary.”
“Just stop feeling that way.”
“Just read your Bible.”
Why might that answer be too small or incomplete?
Part 2: Whole-Person Discernment Check
Use the 15 aspects below to slow down and see the situation more carefully.
You do not need to force every aspect to fit. Some aspects will be more important than others.
1. Numerical Aspect: Patterns, Amounts, and Repetition
What numbers or repeated patterns matter?
Consider:
Hours of sleep
Number of conflicts
Frequency of a habit
Amount of debt
Time spent online
Days missed
Repeated promises or failures
Number of people involved
Notes:
What pattern can be counted?
2. Spatial Aspect: Place, Distance, and Environment
Where is this happening?
Consider:
Home
Work
Church
Online space
Car
School
Hospital
A crowded or isolated setting
A place that feels unsafe or chaotic
Notes:
How does the setting affect the situation?
3. Physical Aspect: Energy, Fatigue, and Bodily Pressure
What physical realities may be involved?
Consider:
Exhaustion
Pain
Hunger
Stress
Movement
Workload
Physical safety
Substance use
Overstimulation
Notes:
What might the body be revealing?
4. Biological Aspect: Health, Growth, Aging, and Bodily Systems
What biological or health realities may matter?
Consider:
Illness
Sleep disruption
Aging
Pregnancy
Disability
Medication concerns
Hormonal changes
Nutrition
Addiction patterns
Notes:
Is medical or health-related support needed?
5. Emotional Aspect: Feelings and Inner Signals
What emotions are present?
Circle any that apply:
Fear | Anger | Grief | Shame | Sadness | Anxiety | Joy | Hope | Resentment | Numbness | Guilt | Desire | Confusion
What emotions are strongest?
What might these emotions be signaling?
6. Analytical Aspect: Thinking, Beliefs, and Interpretations
What thoughts or beliefs are shaping the situation?
Consider repeated thoughts such as:
“I am alone.”
“I have no choice.”
“God is disappointed in me.”
“If I say no, I am selfish.”
“I cannot change.”
“This is just who I am.”
“I must control this.”
Notes:
What belief may need correction, wisdom, or Scripture?
7. Historical/Formative Aspect: Habits, History, and Formation
How did this pattern develop?
Consider:
Family background
Repeated habits
Past wounds
Church experiences
Skills never learned
Repeated choices
Cultural expectations
Previous disappointments
Notes:
What old formation may need to be replaced by new formation?
8. Linguistic Aspect: Words, Labels, and Communication
What words are being used?
Consider:
Labels people use for themselves
Words spoken in conflict
Things left unsaid
Misunderstandings
Exaggerations such as “always” or “never”
Names that wound
Scripture words that may restore truth
Notes:
What word, label, or phrase needs to be challenged or redeemed?
9. Social Aspect: Relationships, Roles, and Belonging
Who is involved?
Consider:
Family
Friends
Church or Soul Center
Coworkers
Mentors
Online groups
Authority figures
Isolated people
Confused roles
Notes:
Is the person supported, isolated, pressured, or role-confused?
10. Economic Aspect: Stewardship of Time, Money, Energy, and Resources
What resources are involved?
Consider:
Money
Debt
Time
Schedule
Energy
Transportation
Housing
Workload
Attention
Responsibilities
Notes:
What stewardship issue needs attention?
11. Aesthetic Aspect: Beauty, Rhythm, Order, and Harmony
Is there beauty, rhythm, or fitting order?
Consider:
Chaos or peace
Clutter or order
Sabbath rhythm
Worship music
Nature
Creativity
Meals
Celebration
Rest
Daily routines
Notes:
What rhythm or beauty may help restore attention to God?
12. Legal/Juridical Aspect: Justice, Boundaries, Accountability, and Protection
Is there harm, injustice, or boundary violation?
Consider:
Abuse
Neglect
Manipulation
Broken promises
Responsibilities avoided
Safety concerns
Accountability needed
Reporting concerns
Consequences
Notes:
What needs protection, accountability, or a clear boundary?
13. Ethical Aspect: Love, Care, Mercy, and Responsibility
What would love require?
Consider:
Compassion
Truth
Protection
Patience
Kindness
Goodness
Faithfulness
Gentleness
Self-control
Sacrificial care
Notes:
What does Christlike love look like here?
14. Faith Aspect: Worship, Trust, Scripture, Prayer, and Surrender
What is being trusted or worshiped?
Consider:
God
Control
Approval
Comfort
Money
Fear
Success
Resentment
Pleasure
Human opinion
What does Scripture speak into this situation?
Where are prayer, confession, repentance, worship, communion, or obedience needed?
15. Integrative Wisdom: The Next Faithful Step
Now bring the whole situation before God.
Do not try to fix everything at once.
What seems most urgent?
What seems most hidden?
What seems most hopeful?
What is beyond your role or ability?
Who else may need to be involved?
What is one next faithful step?
Part 3: Avoiding Reductionism
Reductionism happens when we reduce a whole person or situation to only one issue.
Which reductionistic answer are you most tempted to give?
Circle one:
Only spiritual
Only physical
Only emotional
Only relational
Only economic
Only moral
Only practical
Only psychological
Only social
Only doctrinal
Why is that reduction too small?
What additional aspects need attention?
Part 4: Compassion and Responsibility
Creational discernment helps us hold compassion and responsibility together.
Where is compassion needed?
Where is repentance, correction, or accountability needed?
Where is rest, healing, or support needed?
Where are boundaries needed?
Part 5: Referral Wisdom
A wise spiritual leader knows when a situation needs help beyond their role.
Does this situation involve any of the following?
Check any that apply:
☐ Danger or abuse
☐ Threat of self-harm or harm to others
☐ Serious mental health crisis
☐ Medical concern
☐ Addiction crisis
☐ Legal issue
☐ Domestic violence
☐ Severe financial crisis
☐ Trauma requiring specialized care
☐ Complex counseling needs beyond my training
☐ None of these are apparent
Is referral or outside help needed?
☐ Yes
☐ No
☐ I am not sure
What kind of help may be appropriate?
How can spiritual support continue without pretending to be qualified for everything?
Part 6: Fruit of the Spirit Discernment
Topic 7 focused on spiritual fruit. Now connect that fruit to discernment.
Which fruit is most needed in this situation?
Circle one:
Love | Joy | Peace | Patience | Kindness | Goodness | Faithfulness | Gentleness | Self-Control
Why is this fruit needed?
What would this fruit look like in action?
Part 7: A Simple Discernment Summary
Complete the following statements.
This situation is not only about:
It also involves:
The most important aspects seem to be:
The Scripture, prayer, or spiritual practice most needed is:
The practical step most needed is:
The relationship or community support most needed is:
The next faithful step is:
Part 8: Ministry Leader Reflection
For ministers, chaplains, coaches, officiants, Soul Center leaders, small group leaders, and mentors:
How can you listen before labeling?
How can you ask better questions before giving advice?
How can you honor both Scripture and the whole created reality of the person?
How can you avoid shame while still honoring truth?
How can you know when to refer?
Part 9: Final Prayer Exercise
Write a prayer that brings the whole situation before God.
Include:
The body
The emotions
The relationships
The responsibilities
The boundaries
The faith struggle
The need for wisdom
The next faithful step
My Prayer:
Closing Prayer
Lord God, creator of heaven and earth,
Teach me to see wisely.
Help me not to reduce people to one issue.
Help me notice the whole embodied soul before you.
Give me wisdom to see bodies, emotions, thoughts, histories, words, relationships, responsibilities, resources, justice, love, and faith.
Protect me from shallow advice.
Protect me from spiritual pride.
Give me courage to speak truth.
Give me compassion to care gently.
Give me humility to refer when needed.
Give me patience to listen before labeling.
Show me the next faithful step.
Let my discernment be shaped by Scripture, prayer, the Holy Spirit, and the love of Christ.
Amen.