Discernment: Difference between revisions
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'''Discernment''' names the act of evaluating and deciding how to act in response to [[Recognition]], according to conscience and responsibility. | '''Discernment''' names the act of evaluating and deciding how to act in response to [[Recognition]], according to conscience and responsibility. | ||
== How This Term Is Used Here == | |||
Discernment is not [[judgment]], verdict, or enforcement. In this context, discernment names the personal work of deciding how one should respond after something has been recognized as true, present, or [[harm]]ful. It is exercised inwardly and situationally, and it remains accountable to the claims of [[neighbor]] and the limits of one’s own responsibility. | |||
== Relation to Other Terms == | |||
* ''[[Recognition]]'' precedes Discernment by making truth, presence, or [[harm]] visible. | |||
* ''[[Charitability]]'' governs Discernment by orienting decisions toward the good of [[neighbor]]. | |||
* ''[[Faith]]'' sustains Discernment by releasing anxious control over outcomes. | |||
* ''[[Judgment]]'' differs from Discernment in that it renders verdicts within [[Jurisdiction]]. | |||
* ''[[Justice]]'' may follow Discernment where repair or restoration is sought. | |||
=== Discernment of Spirits === | |||
The phrase “discernment of spirits” is commonly used to describe the act of recognizing and responding to various influences upon perception, desire, or conduct. In this context, it refers to the personal work of [[Recognition]] and Discernment applied to "[[Spirits]]". | |||
Discernment of spirits does not grant authority to [[Judgment|judge]] persons, pronounce verdicts, or claim privileged access to truth. It names the responsibility to notice which influences lead toward [[charitability]], faithfulness, and care for [[neighbor]], and which lead toward [[harm]], coercion, or self-justification. | |||
Like all discernment, it binds only the one who discerns. | |||
== Scriptural Grounding == | |||
This usage follows the scriptural emphasis on personal responsibility in responding to what has been perceived. Paul writes: | |||
<blockquote>Test everything; hold fast to what is good. (1 Thessalonians 5:21)</blockquote> | |||
Here, discernment is an act of evaluation and response, not authority over others. | |||
== Common Misuses == | |||
* Discernment is not condemnation or moral superiority. | |||
* Discernment does not grant authority to command or enforce. | |||
* Discernment does not replace Recognition or precede it. | |||
* Discernment does not excuse [[harm]] in the name of sincerity. | |||
Latest revision as of 15:31, 24 January 2026
Discernment names the act of evaluating and deciding how to act in response to Recognition, according to conscience and responsibility.
How This Term Is Used Here
Discernment is not judgment, verdict, or enforcement. In this context, discernment names the personal work of deciding how one should respond after something has been recognized as true, present, or harmful. It is exercised inwardly and situationally, and it remains accountable to the claims of neighbor and the limits of one’s own responsibility.
Relation to Other Terms
- Recognition precedes Discernment by making truth, presence, or harm visible.
- Charitability governs Discernment by orienting decisions toward the good of neighbor.
- Faith sustains Discernment by releasing anxious control over outcomes.
- Judgment differs from Discernment in that it renders verdicts within Jurisdiction.
- Justice may follow Discernment where repair or restoration is sought.
Discernment of Spirits
The phrase “discernment of spirits” is commonly used to describe the act of recognizing and responding to various influences upon perception, desire, or conduct. In this context, it refers to the personal work of Recognition and Discernment applied to "Spirits".
Discernment of spirits does not grant authority to judge persons, pronounce verdicts, or claim privileged access to truth. It names the responsibility to notice which influences lead toward charitability, faithfulness, and care for neighbor, and which lead toward harm, coercion, or self-justification.
Like all discernment, it binds only the one who discerns.
Scriptural Grounding
This usage follows the scriptural emphasis on personal responsibility in responding to what has been perceived. Paul writes:
Test everything; hold fast to what is good. (1 Thessalonians 5:21)
Here, discernment is an act of evaluation and response, not authority over others.
Common Misuses
- Discernment is not condemnation or moral superiority.
- Discernment does not grant authority to command or enforce.
- Discernment does not replace Recognition or precede it.
- Discernment does not excuse harm in the name of sincerity.