10 Questions to Diagnose Your Spiritual Health

Published: Fri, 10/04/24

Updated: Fri, 10/04/24

 

Sessions Include:

  1. Do You Thirst for God?
  2. Are You Increasingly Governed by God’s Word?
  3. Are You Becoming More Loving?
  4. Are You More Sensitive to God’s Presence?
  5. Do You Have a Growing Concern for Others
  6. Do You Delight in the Bride of Christ?
  7. Are Spiritual Disciplines Increasingly Important?
  8. Do You Still Grieve Over Sin?
  9. Are You Quicker to Forgive?
  10. Do You Yearn for Heaven?

 

 

 

“HAVE YOU HAD ANY TROUBLE SLEEPING?

“Have you experienced any shortness of breath?

“Any changes in your eyesight?

“Have you experienced any unusual fatigue?

“Has the technician drawn your blood yet?

“Now for this next test …”

This is the way it goes during my annual physical checkup. The doctor always evaluates my bodily health by two means: questions and tests.

The English Puritans of 1550 to 1700 sometimes referred to ministers as “physicians of the soul.” In our day as in theirs, the timeless process of discerning one’s spiritual health likewise involves questions and tests. My purpose in these pages is to act as a physician of the soul, asking questions and suggesting spiritual tests which can, by the help of the Holy Spirit, enable you to self-diagnose your spiritual health.

For there to be health, of course, there must be life. I wrote this book with the assumption that its readers would possess the eternal life given by grace to those who know God through faith in His Son, Jesus Christ. The night before He was crucified, Jesus prayed, “And this is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent” (John 17:3). Stressing the necessity of knowing Jesus, the Son of God, in order to have eternal life, the apostle John adds, “Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life” (1 John 5:12).

I realize, however, that many who begin reading this book will do so with a false sense of assurance that you know Jesus and that God has given you eternal life. Nothing in the world is more important than an eternal, life-giving knowledge of God through Jesus, who is the only way to the Father (see John 14:6). I urge you not to take the existence of such a relationship between yourself and God for granted. The Bible itself implores you, “confirm your calling and election” (2 Peter 1:10).

Where eternal life through Christ does exist, there should also be health and growth. That’s what this book is about—evaluating spiritual health and growth. Throughout, remember that as Jesus is the source of spiritual life, so He also is the standard of spiritual health. And regarding spiritual growth, we are to “grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ” (Ephesians 4:15). As Jonathan Edwards said so emphatically,

Christians are Christlike: none deserve the name of Christians that are not so, in their prevailing character. … The branch is of the same nature with the stock and root, has the same sap, and bears the same sort of fruit. The members have the same kind of life with the head. It would be strange if Christians should not be of the same temper and spirit that Christ is of; when they are his flesh and his bone, yea are one spirit (1 Cor. 6:17), and live so, that it is not they that live, but Christ that lives in them.

So, whatever the present state of your spiritual health or rate of your spiritual growth, let’s begin by “looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith” (Hebrews 12:2), and “press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:14). May the Lord be pleased to use this little volume to help you “grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be the glory both now and to the day of eternity. Amen” (2 Peter 3:18).

Donald S. Whitney, Ten Questions to Diagnose Your Spiritual Health (NavPress; Tyndale House Publishers, 2021), vi–3.


Check out our Bible Study on Ten Questions to Diagnose Your Spiritual Health . A bible study on the book of Lamentations as well as some Psalms of Lament.

These lessons are available on Amazon, as well as a part of Good Questions Have Groups Talking Subscription Service. Like Netflix for Bible Lessons, one low subscription gives you access to all our lessons--thousands of them. For a medium-sized church, lessons are as little as $10 per teacher per year.

 


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