📝 Worksheet 7.4: Gratitude Without Denial Practice Guide

Course: Christian Gratitude Discernment Ministry
Topic 7: Gratitude Without Denial

Purpose: This worksheet helps Christian leaders practice guiding gratitude conversations that make room for pain, lament, safety, embodied reality, and resurrection hope without using gratitude to silence or pressure wounded people.


Opening Thought

Christian gratitude is not pretending.

It is not saying:

“This does not hurt.”
“This was not wrong.”
“I should be over this.”
“Real Christians do not grieve.”

Christian gratitude says:

“This hurts, and God is still present.”

Gratitude without denial helps leaders hold two truths together:

The wound is real.
The mercy of God is real.


1. Leader Self-Assessment

Check the statements that describe your natural ministry instinct.

When someone shares grief, trauma, anger, or disappointment, I tend to:

☐ Feel pressure to make them feel better quickly
☐ Offer Bible verses before listening deeply
☐ Say hopeful things because silence feels awkward
☐ Try to explain why God allowed it
☐ Encourage gratitude too quickly
☐ Avoid anger or lament
☐ Listen patiently
☐ Ask permission before offering prayer or Scripture
☐ Make room for tears
☐ Notice safety or referral concerns
☐ Allow gratitude and lament to stand together
☐ Remember that grief is not unbelief

Reflection

Which instinct could become harmful if you are not careful?

____________________________________________________________

Which strength can you build on?

____________________________________________________________


2. Naming Pain Before Inviting Gratitude

Before inviting gratitude, help the person name pain honestly.

Practice Prompts

Ask:

“What hurts most right now?”

“What feels heaviest today?”

“What loss, disappointment, wound, or injustice needs to be named honestly?”

“What do you wish people understood about this?”

Ministry Practice

Write a possible situation where someone is hurting.

____________________________________________________________

What pain might need to be named?

____________________________________________________________

What would be harmful to say too quickly?

____________________________________________________________

What would be helpful to say first?

____________________________________________________________


3. Inviting Lament

Lament is faithful grief brought before God.

Read slowly:

“How long, Yahweh? Will you forget me forever?
How long will you hide your face from me?”

— Psalm 13:1, WEB

Reflection

What does this verse teach about honest prayer?

____________________________________________________________

Why should leaders avoid rushing people out of lament?

____________________________________________________________

How could you invite lament in a ministry conversation?

____________________________________________________________

Practice Language

Complete this sentence:

“Would it be helpful to tell God honestly…”

____________________________________________________________


4. Gratitude Without Pressure

Gratitude must be invited with tenderness, not demanded through shame.

Avoid Saying

“You should be thankful.”

“At least it was not worse.”

“God has a reason, so don’t be sad.”

“Other people have it harder.”

“You need to focus on the positive.”

Better Ministry Language

“We do not have to deny the hurt in order to remember God’s mercy.”

“Would it be helpful to look for one sign of grace, or would it be better to stay with the grief for now?”

“You do not have to sound victorious to be faithful.”

“Can we hold both truths together — that this hurts, and that God is still near?”

Your Practice

Write one gratitude-without-pressure sentence you could use.

____________________________________________________________


5. Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map Practice

Use these prompts from the Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map for Topic 7.

Pain Named

What pain, loss, disappointment, sin, wound, or injustice needs to be named honestly?

____________________________________________________________

Lament Invited

What honest prayer, grief, or lament may need to come before God?

____________________________________________________________

Grace Noticed

What grace is present that this person is already noticing?

____________________________________________________________

Grace Missed

What grace might be present but overlooked?

____________________________________________________________

Embodied Reality Honored

What is happening in the person’s body, energy, stress, sleep, limits, or embodied life?

____________________________________________________________

Boundary Considered

What boundary, protection, accountability, or safety step may be needed?

____________________________________________________________

Hope Held

What Gospel promise or resurrection hope should be held gently?

____________________________________________________________

Next Faithful Step

What is one faithful, concrete, wise next step before God?

____________________________________________________________


6. Holding Two Truths Together

Christian leaders often need language that holds pain and hope together.

Complete each sentence.

Grief

“I miss what was lost, and…”

____________________________________________________________

Betrayal

“What happened was wrong, and…”

____________________________________________________________

Illness

“I am afraid, and…”

____________________________________________________________

Depression

“This feels heavy, and…”

____________________________________________________________

Trauma

“My body still reacts to what happened, and…”

____________________________________________________________

Regret

“I cannot undo the past, and…”

____________________________________________________________

Loneliness

“I feel alone, and…”

____________________________________________________________


7. Consent-Based Gratitude Questions

Practice asking permission before moving from lament to gratitude.

Consent Questions

“Would it be okay if we looked for one small mercy in the middle of this?”

“Would it be helpful to reflect on where God may be near, or would listening be better right now?”

“Would you like prayer, Scripture, silence, or simply someone to sit with you?”

“Can I ask a gentle question about hope, or is this not the right moment?”

“Would it feel helpful or pressured to talk about gratitude today?”

Write Your Own Consent-Based Question

____________________________________________________________


8. Scripture Reflection

Read slowly:

“Rejoice with those who rejoice. Weep with those who weep.”
— Romans 12:15, WEB

Reflection

What does this verse teach leaders not to do?

____________________________________________________________

What does this verse teach leaders to do?

____________________________________________________________

How could this verse change the way you lead a group?

____________________________________________________________


9. Safety and Referral Awareness

Gratitude is not the right first tool when safety is at risk.

Seek appropriate help when someone expresses or shows signs of:

☐ Suicidal thoughts or self-harm risk
☐ Threats toward others
☐ Domestic violence or coercive control
☐ Child abuse, elder abuse, or vulnerable adult abuse
☐ Sexual assault
☐ Severe depression or anxiety
☐ Trauma symptoms that overwhelm daily life
☐ Addiction relapse or dangerous substance use
☐ Psychosis, paranoia, or disconnection from reality
☐ Medical concerns affecting mood, sleep, energy, or thinking
☐ Unsafe living conditions
☐ Legal protection needs

Practice Referral Language

Complete this sentence:

“I am grateful you trusted me with this. This is too important for you to carry alone because…”

____________________________________________________________

Then complete:

“Would you be open to connecting with…”

____________________________________________________________


10. Group Leadership Practice

When leading a group, make room for both gratitude and lament.

Group Opening Language

Practice saying:

“Tonight, you are welcome to share a gratitude, a lament, both, or pass.”

“No one is required to share more than is wise for this setting.”

“We honor confidentiality, but if someone is in danger or being harmed, we will seek help.”

“We do not have to rush grief in order to honor God.”

“God sees what is spoken and what remains unspoken.”

Your Group Opening

Write your own opening for a gratitude group, small group, Soul Center gathering, or ministry setting.

____________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________


11. Leader Practice Scenario

Read this scenario.

Tanya attends a church gratitude gathering after losing her mother. During the group, another participant says, “You should be thankful she is in heaven.” Tanya smiles politely, but she becomes quiet. Afterward, she tells the leader, “I know where my mother is. I just hate that I cannot call her anymore.”

Step 1: What pain needs to be named?

____________________________________________________________

Step 2: What would be harmful to say?

____________________________________________________________

Step 3: What would be helpful to say first?

____________________________________________________________

Step 4: How could the leader invite lament?

____________________________________________________________

Step 5: What grace is Tanya already noticing?

____________________________________________________________

Step 6: What Gospel hope can be held gently?

____________________________________________________________

Step 7: What embodied reality might the leader ask about?

____________________________________________________________

Step 8: What is one faithful next step?

____________________________________________________________


12. Rewriting Harmful Statements

Rewrite each statement into gratitude-without-denial ministry language.

Harmful Statement 1

“At least God has a plan.”

Better:

____________________________________________________________

Harmful Statement 2

“You need to stop focusing on the negative.”

Better:

____________________________________________________________

Harmful Statement 3

“Other people have it worse.”

Better:

____________________________________________________________

Harmful Statement 4

“You should be over this by now.”

Better:

____________________________________________________________

Harmful Statement 5

“If you had more faith, you would have more peace.”

Better:

____________________________________________________________


13. Prayer

Lord Jesus,

Teach me to practice gratitude without denial.

Give me courage to name pain honestly.
Give me patience to sit with lament.
Give me wisdom to know when gratitude should be invited and when silence is more faithful.
Give me tenderness with wounded people.
Give me discernment when safety, referral, or protection is needed.

Help me never use spiritual words to avoid sorrow.
Help me never use gratitude to pressure someone into performance.
Help me never call evil good.

Make me a leader who can rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep.

Teach me to hold the cross and resurrection together.

The wound is real.
Your mercy is real.
The grief is real.
Your presence is real.
The pain is real.
Your resurrection hope is real.

Amen.


Final Reflection

What is one phrase you want to stop using in ministry because it may rush or minimize pain?

____________________________________________________________

What is one phrase you want to practice because it honors both lament and hope?

____________________________________________________________

Where do you need to grow in patience with grief, anger, trauma, or sorrow?

____________________________________________________________


Simple Practice for This Week

This week, practice one moment of unhurried presence.

When someone shares pain, resist the urge to explain, fix, cheer up, or rush to gratitude.

Pause.

Say one of these sentences:

“That sounds deeply painful.”

“I am so sorry.”

“What has been hardest about that?”

“Would it be helpful to pray honestly about this?”

Then listen.

This week’s practice is simple:

Let lament breathe before gratitude speaks.

पिछ्ला सुधार: सोमवार, 25 मई 2026, 8:30 AM