📝 Worksheet 12.4: Ninety-Day Christian Relational Confidence Rule of Life
Worksheet 12.4: Ninety-Day Christian Relational Confidence Rule of Life
Private Worksheet Note
This worksheet is for your private reflection. You are not required to upload your completed answers. You may choose to share selected insights with a trusted pastor, mentor, chaplain, life coach, group leader, or mature Christian friend, but only by your consent.
Do not write private trauma details, sexual history, court matters, workplace complaints, medical records, screenshots, or identifying details that should remain protected.
This worksheet will help you create one final course asset for your private People Skill Confidence Portfolio.
Pause and Pray
Take a quiet moment before God.
Slow your breathing.
Relax your shoulders.
Open your hands if that helps you pray.
Pray:
Lord Jesus, thank You for walking with me through this course. Thank You that I am an organic human created by You and being formed in Christ. Help me build a ninety-day plan that is rooted in grace, shaped by agape love, and realistic for my life. Teach me to listen, ask, speak, set boundaries, return to the Peacefire, build friendship, honor others, and carry Your presence into everyday relationships. Amen.
Part One: Receive Your Growth With Grace
Where I Started
When I began this course, one area where I wanted to grow in people skill confidence was:
What I Have Noticed
During this course, I noticed that my people skill confidence is affected by:
Check any that fit.
___ my inward self-conversation
___ fear of rejection
___ shame or embarrassment
___ pride or defensiveness
___ desire for approval
___ avoidance of conflict
___ trouble listening
___ uncertainty about what to ask
___ difficulty speaking clearly
___ trouble saying no
___ fear of male-female misunderstanding
___ loneliness or lack of belonging
___ past relational hurt
___ hurry, fatigue, stress, or emotional overload
___ other: _______________________________________________
Growth I Can Thank God For
One way I have grown, even a little, is:
One practice from this course that helped me was:
One truth I want to keep receiving in Christ is:
Part Two: Notice and Name Your Ongoing Growth Areas
Organic Human Awareness
I am an organic human created by God. I am an embodied soul with spiritual and physical life before God.
Because I am an organic human, my inward words, body, emotions, habits, posture, tone, timing, and relational choices are connected.
Where do I need to keep noticing my whole-person life before God?
What physical or practical patterns affect my relationships?
Examples: fatigue, stress, hurry, sleep, health, schedule, body tension, phone use, lack of quiet, isolation.
What spiritual or inward patterns affect my relationships?
Examples: fear, shame, pride, resentment, approval-seeking, prayerlessness, discouragement, comparison.
Gracious Self-Conversation
One inward sentence that often weakens my confidence is:
A gracious self-conversation sentence I can practice before God is:
Examples:
“I can be present without performing.”
“I can listen before defending.”
“I can be corrected without being destroyed.”
“I can set a boundary without becoming cold.”
“I can return to the Peacefire.”
“I can love with agape love and leave the outcome to God.”
Part Three: Discern and Choose Your Ninety-Day Practices
A ninety-day Christian Relational Confidence Rule of Life should be realistic, grace-shaped, and practical.
Do not choose everything.
Choose a few faithful practices you can actually continue.
Daily Practice
Choose one or two daily practices.
___ Begin the day with prayer for Christlike presence.
___ Practice one gracious self-conversation sentence.
___ Ask one curious and interesting question.
___ Listen to one person without interrupting.
___ Encourage one person sincerely.
___ Pause before responding to tense messages.
___ Pray for one relationship.
___ Notice whether I am reacting from fear, shame, pride, or agape love.
___ End the day by thanking God for one relational grace.
___ Other: _______________________________________________
My daily practice will be:
When will I practice this?
What might make this difficult?
What will help me continue?
Weekly Practice
Choose one or two weekly practices.
___ Review one important conversation.
___ Practice one act of hospitality or welcome.
___ Encourage or follow up with one person.
___ Review my boundary and assertiveness plan.
___ Use the 15-aspects map to prepare better questions.
___ Use the Peacefire map to reflect on one conflict.
___ Ask a trusted person for prayer or encouragement.
___ Rest from hurry so I can relate more wisely.
___ Practice remembering names and details.
___ Other: _______________________________________________
My weekly practice will be:
What day or rhythm could help me remember this?
Who might benefit from this practice?
What support might I need?
Monthly Practice
Choose one monthly review practice.
___ Review my People Skill Confidence Portfolio.
___ Review my organic human confidence statement.
___ Review my agape love reflection.
___ Review my gracious self-conversation plan.
___ Review my listening and question practices.
___ Review my warm and clear speech practice.
___ Review my boundary plan.
___ Review my Peacefire conversation map.
___ Review my friendship and hospitality plan.
___ Review my male-female honor and boundary reflection.
___ Ask whether I need pastoral, professional, legal, clinical, workplace, or safety support.
___ Other: _______________________________________________
My monthly review practice will be:
At the end of each month, I will ask:
What growth do I notice?
Where do I need more grace and practice?
What is my next faithful step?
Part Four: Build Your Peacefire Practice
Conflict will still happen after this course.
A Peacefire practice helps you slow down, turn toward Christ, and choose one faithful next step.
My Wildfire Warning Signs
When I am moving toward the Wildfire, I may notice:
___ harsh words
___ inner rehearsing
___ quick assumptions
___ gossip
___ silent punishment
___ defensiveness
___ exaggeration
___ controlling behavior
___ fear of losing approval
___ pressure to win
___ avoidance of truth
___ emotional shutdown
___ other: _______________________________________________
My most common Wildfire signs are:
My Peacefire Return Plan
When conflict begins, I will practice this pattern:
What happened?
What did I assume?
What did I want?
What did I fear?
How did I respond, or how am I tempted to respond?
What would my response spread?
How is Jesus inviting me back to the Peacefire?
What is one faithful next step?
Firebreak Discernment
A firebreak is a faithful boundary or limitation that reduces the spread of conflict when a conversation is unsafe, unwise, premature, harmful, or repeatedly unfruitful.
A firebreak is not revenge.
Where might I need a wise firebreak?
What kind of firebreak may be needed?
___ pause before responding
___ wait before sending a message
___ refuse gossip
___ limit the topic
___ use written communication
___ invite a wise mediator or leader
___ involve a pastor, supervisor, or appropriate authority
___ reduce access
___ seek professional help
___ follow a safety plan
___ report danger when required
___ other: _______________________________________________
My firebreak plan, if needed, is:
Part Five: Support and Referral Plan
People skill confidence grows best with wise support.
Trusted Support
A trusted person I may ask for prayer, encouragement, or wise reflection is:
The kind of support I may ask for is:
___ listening
___ prayer
___ encouragement
___ accountability
___ help thinking through a next faithful step
___ pastoral care
___ coaching support
___ referral help
___ practical help
___ other: _______________________________________________
When I Need More Than Ordinary Support
I should seek appropriate outside help when a situation involves danger, coercion, abuse, threats, stalking, violence, sexual misconduct, child or vulnerable-person harm, suicidal intent, danger to others, trafficking, medical emergency, severe emotional distress, substance-impaired danger, legal concerns, workplace risk, or other serious issues.
If I need help beyond ordinary discipleship conversation, I can contact:
Pastor or ministry leader:
Counselor or qualified professional:
Emergency or crisis support:
Workplace, school, legal, or safety contact if needed:
Other trusted helper:
Part Six: My Ninety-Day Christian Relational Confidence Rule of Life
Use your answers above to write a simple plan.
Keep it clear and realistic.
My Daily Practice
For the next ninety days, I will practice:
My Weekly Practice
Each week, I will practice or review:
My Monthly Practice
Each month, I will review:
My Peacefire Practice
When conflict begins, I will:
My Support Plan
For prayer, encouragement, wisdom, or referral help, I will:
My One Faithful Step This Week
This week, my first step will be:
Part Seven: Portfolio Summary
Write a short summary for your private People Skill Confidence Portfolio.
My ninety-day Christian Relational Confidence Rule of Life is:
This plan is rooted in grace because:
This plan is shaped by agape love because:
This plan is realistic for my life because:
The growth I am asking Jesus to continue in me is:
Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus, thank You for the growth You have begun in me. Help me continue as an organic human who receives Your love and shares Your love with others. Shape my inward conversation with grace and truth. Teach me to listen well, ask wise questions, speak with warmth and clarity, set faithful boundaries, return to the Peacefire, build friendship, practice hospitality, and honor others as God-designed people. Help me take small faithful steps for the next ninety days. Give me humility to seek support when needed and courage to love others with agape love. Amen.