🧪 Case Study 6.3: When Andre’s Mind Was Always on Trial
🧪 Case Study 6.3: When Andre’s Mind Was Always on Trial
Andre had a way of making people laugh before anyone noticed how tired he was.
He was the kind of man who came early to church and stayed late. He stacked chairs, fixed the coffee maker, greeted visitors, and knew which older members needed help walking to their cars. People trusted him because he was steady.
But inside, Andre was not steady.
Inside, his mind was always on trial.
Every night, after everyone else went home, Andre replayed the evidence.
The affair from thirteen years ago.
The divorce.
The look on his daughter’s face when she found out.
The years he spent trying to prove he was different now.
The ministry opportunities he quietly avoided because he believed someone like him should never stand too close to spiritual leadership.
Andre loved Jesus. He believed the Gospel. He could quote Romans 8:1:
“There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who don’t walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit.”
— Romans 8:1, WEB
But he could not seem to receive it.
He believed it for other people.
Not for himself.
One Wednesday night, after a church gratitude group, the leader asked everyone to share one grace they had noticed that week.
A woman shared that God had helped her forgive her sister.
A young father shared that he had apologized to his son.
A widow shared that she had felt peace while reading Psalm 23.
Then Andre said, “I guess I’m grateful God lets me serve, even though I don’t deserve to be here.”
The room got quiet.
The leader, Marcus, had known Andre for two years. He knew Andre was faithful, humble, and respected. But he also heard something in that sentence.
“I don’t deserve to be here.”
Marcus did not correct him in front of the group. He simply said, “Thank you for sharing that honestly, Andre.”
After the group ended, Marcus asked, “Andre, would it be okay if I checked in about something you said?”
Andre shrugged. “Sure.”
Marcus said, “When you said, ‘I don’t deserve to be here,’ it sounded like that sentence may have been with you for a long time.”
Andre’s eyes filled quickly.
He laughed once, trying to cover it. “Yeah. That sentence is basically my roommate.”
Marcus did not rush.
He did not say, “You need to stop thinking that.”
He did not say, “But God forgives you, brother.”
He did not say, “You should be thankful you get to serve.”
Instead, he said, “That sounds exhausting.”
Andre looked down. “It is.”
The Leader Tension
Marcus now faced a real ministry tension.
He wanted Andre to receive the truth of the Gospel.
He also knew that Andre had done real harm in the past. Andre’s regret was not imaginary. His affair had hurt his former wife. His daughter had lived through pain. Trust had been broken.
Marcus had to avoid two errors.
First, he could not minimize sin.
Second, he could not let shame become Andre’s identity.
If Marcus rushed to comfort Andre, he might accidentally cheapen repentance.
If Marcus only pressed Andre to feel guilty, he might strengthen condemnation.
Christian Gratitude Discernment required a better path.
Marcus needed to help Andre distinguish between responsibility and self-condemnation.
Responsibility says:
“I sinned. I need confession, humility, repair where possible, and faithful obedience now.”
Self-condemnation says:
“I am permanently disqualified from mercy.”
Andre was no longer simply grieving his sin.
He was living inside a courtroom where the same verdict was announced every day:
Guilty. Unworthy. Disqualified.
What Marcus Did Well
Marcus asked permission before going deeper.
He said, “Would it be helpful to talk through that sentence with God’s truth and mercy in mind?”
Andre nodded.
Marcus asked, “When did the sentence ‘I don’t deserve to be here’ first become so loud?”
Andre told him about the affair. He did not blame anyone else. He admitted he had been selfish, secretive, and spiritually proud. He said, “My ex-wife moved on. My daughter talks to me now, but it’s not the same. I can’t undo it.”
Marcus listened.
Then he said, “You are telling the truth that sin has consequences. That matters. But I also hear another story forming. It sounds like the sentence has moved from ‘I sinned’ to ‘I am only my sin.’”
Andre sat still.
Marcus continued gently, “Does that sound right?”
Andre whispered, “Yes.”
That was an important moment.
Marcus did not remove responsibility. He helped Andre name the distortion.
What Marcus Needed to Avoid
Marcus needed to avoid several common ministry mistakes.
He needed to avoid saying:
“That was thirteen years ago. Move on.”
That would minimize harm.
He needed to avoid saying:
“God forgives you, so stop feeling bad.”
That would treat forgiveness like a switch.
He needed to avoid saying:
“Your regret proves you are humble.”
That might encourage Andre to keep punishing himself as proof of sincerity.
He needed to avoid saying:
“You should be in leadership now.”
That might push Andre faster than wisdom allowed.
He also needed to avoid turning the conversation into therapy beyond his role.
Marcus was a ministry leader, not Andre’s counselor. If Andre’s shame was connected to severe depression, self-harm, addiction relapse, or deep trauma symptoms, Marcus would need to help him seek additional care.
But in this moment, Marcus could offer spiritual care, Scripture, discernment, and a faithful next step.
Scripture Reflection
Marcus opened his Bible and read slowly:
“For godly sorrow produces repentance leading to salvation, which brings no regret. But the sorrow of the world produces death.”
— 2 Corinthians 7:10, WEB
Then he asked, “Andre, when you remember what happened, does the sorrow lead you toward repentance, humility, repair, and life? Or does it mostly lead you toward death inside?”
Andre answered, “Death. I keep thinking if I punish myself enough, maybe it proves I’m really sorry.”
Marcus said, “That is a powerful sentence. But I wonder if shame has been pretending to be repentance.”
Andre looked up.
Marcus continued, “Repentance walks toward God. Shame hides from Him. Repentance tells the truth. Shame says the sin is your whole name.”
Then Marcus read:
“Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old things have passed away. Behold, all things have become new.”
— 2 Corinthians 5:17, WEB
Marcus did not use the verse to erase the past.
He used it to place Andre’s past under the lordship and mercy of Jesus Christ.
Ministry Sciences Reflection
Ministry Sciences observes that people often live from internal stories.
Andre’s inner story was not only, “I committed adultery.”
That part was true.
His deeper story had become:
“I am permanently unworthy.”
Narrative research shows that repeated inner stories shape identity, emotions, choices, and future behavior. When a person lives inside a shame-based story, even good opportunities can feel threatening. Growth can feel undeserved. Encouragement can feel unsafe.
Cognitive approaches also observe that repeated automatic thoughts can become deeply practiced mental pathways. Andre’s thought, “I don’t deserve to be here,” had become automatic.
But Christian ministry goes deeper than reframing.
The leader is not merely helping Andre think more positively. The leader is helping Andre bring his inner courtroom before the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The Gospel does not say:
“Andre, your sin did not matter.”
The Gospel says:
“Andre, your sin was serious enough for Christ to die, and Christ’s mercy is powerful enough to redeem you.”
That is the difference.
Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map Application
Marcus quietly used several prompts from the Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map.
1. Pain Named
Marcus helped Andre name the real pain:
“You harmed people you loved. You lost trust. You cannot undo the past.”
This protected the conversation from cheap grace.
2. Sin Confessed
Andre had already confessed his sin before God, but Marcus helped him name it specifically without hiding.
“I was selfish. I lied. I betrayed my marriage.”
Specific confession is healthier than vague shame.
3. Thought Renewed
Marcus asked:
“What sentence keeps repeating in your mind?”
Andre answered:
“I don’t deserve to be here.”
That became the thought renewal focus.
4. Story Examined
Marcus helped Andre see the story beneath the thought:
“I am only my worst sin.”
That story needed Gospel truth.
5. Mercy Remembered
Marcus asked:
“Where do you still need to receive the mercy of Christ?”
Andre said, “I think I have accepted that God forgives me legally. I don’t think I have accepted that He still wants me.”
6. Forgiveness Discerned
Marcus helped Andre separate forgiveness, trust, reconciliation, and consequences.
He said, “God’s forgiveness does not mean everyone must trust you the same way immediately. Your daughter’s healing has its own timeline. But her timeline does not cancel God’s mercy.”
That was important.
7. Hope Held
Marcus asked:
“What Gospel hope can you hold without pretending the past was good?”
Andre said, “Maybe Christ can still form me into a faithful man.”
8. Next Faithful Step
Marcus asked:
“What is one faithful step this week?”
Andre decided to write a prayer of confession and mercy. He also decided to meet with an older mentor once a month, not because he was disqualified forever, but because he wanted to walk humbly and honestly.
The Conversation Deepens
A week later, Andre met with Marcus again.
He brought a handwritten prayer.
It said:
Lord Jesus, I confess again that I sinned against You and against people I loved. I do not excuse it. I do not rename it. But I also confess that I have used shame as a false payment. I have acted as if my self-punishment could add something to Your cross. Forgive me for that pride. Teach me to walk humbly, receive mercy, and serve without pretending I am my own savior. Amen.
Marcus read it and sat quietly.
Then he said, “Andre, that is not shallow gratitude. That is holy gratitude.”
Andre said, “It feels strange. Like I’m not letting myself off the hook, but I’m also not hanging myself on it.”
Marcus nodded. “That may be the beginning of a renewed mind.”
Discussion Questions
What repeated sentence was shaping Andre’s inner life?
How did Marcus distinguish between responsibility and self-condemnation?
What would have been harmful about telling Andre, “Just move on”?
Why was it important that Marcus did not minimize Andre’s past sin?
Why was it also important that Marcus did not let Andre’s sin become his whole identity?
How did 2 Corinthians 7:10 help Andre discern the difference between godly sorrow and death-producing shame?
How did Romans 8:1 apply to Andre without erasing consequences?
What role did consent play in Marcus’s ministry conversation?
What parts of the Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map were especially useful in this case?
When might a leader need to refer someone like Andre to counseling, pastoral oversight, medical care, or crisis support?
Personal Reflection Exercise
Think of someone you might encounter in ministry who is living under regret, shame, resentment, or a painful inner story.
Do not write identifying details.
Complete these prompts:
1. The Repeated Sentence
What sentence might this person be hearing inside?
“I am…”
“I always…”
“God will never…”
“Because of what happened…”
Write one possible sentence:
____________________________________________________________
2. The Story Beneath the Sentence
What larger story might that sentence be telling?
____________________________________________________________
3. Truth Without Denial
What real pain, sin, wound, or consequence should not be minimized?
____________________________________________________________
4. Mercy Remembered
What mercy of God may need to be remembered?
____________________________________________________________
5. Scripture to Hold
What Scripture could be gently offered with permission?
____________________________________________________________
6. One Faithful Step
What next step might be wise?
____________________________________________________________
7. Referral Awareness
Is there any sign that this person may need more care than your role can provide?
____________________________________________________________
Ministry Practice: Better Sentences for Thought Renewal
Practice saying these sentences aloud.
“Let’s name what is true without letting shame name who you are.”
“That thought sounds heavy. How long has it been speaking to you?”
“Does this sentence lead you toward repentance and life, or toward despair?”
“Can we bring that thought before Scripture together?”
“You do not have to thank God for the sin or the pain. But can we thank God that sin and pain do not get the final word?”
“What is one faithful step that honors truth, mercy, and wisdom?”
Closing Thought
Andre’s mind had been a courtroom for years.
But in Christ, the courtroom is not the final room.
The cross speaks. Mercy speaks. Truth speaks. Resurrection hope speaks.
Christian Gratitude Discernment helps leaders walk gently with people whose thoughts accuse them day and night, not by denying sin or pain, but by helping them bring the whole story before Jesus.
The renewed mind learns to say:
“I will tell the truth about what happened. I will receive mercy for what Christ has forgiven. I will walk humbly with what remains. And I will not let shame become my lord.”