Before you begin, complete this diagnostic. It is not a test; it is a baseline. Save your answers so you can compare them at the end of the course.
1. Your Current Battlefield
Rate each area from 1 (rarely attacked) to 5 (constantly attacked):
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Mind: racing thoughts, fear, confusion, intrusive images
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Emotions: anxiety, depression, shame, numbness, sudden mood drops
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Identity: feelings of worthlessness, imposter syndrome, comparison
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Relationships: conflict, isolation, offense, unforgiveness
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Family: division, rebellion, distance, hidden dysfunction
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Finances/work: scarcity, sabotage, conflict, stalled progress
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Calling: procrastination, hopelessness, confusion about purpose
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Health/body: unexplained fatigue, chronic illness, sleep disturbance
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Occult/open doors: past occult involvement, generational patterns, disturbing dreams
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Doctrine/discernment: confusion about truth, attraction to false teaching, cynicism
2. Your Current Response Pattern
Circle the one that best describes you:
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A. Ignore it — I rarely think about Satan and hope problems go away.
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B. Fear it — I see spiritual attack behind everything and feel anxious.
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C. Fight it — I pray and resist, but often in my own strength.
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D. Rest in Christ — I know my authority but want deeper practice.
3. Your Support Structure
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Do you have a local church? (Yes / No / Sometimes)
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Do you have one mature believer you can call within 24 hours? (Yes / No)
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Have you ever worked with a licensed counselor or pastoral care team? (Yes / No)
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Do you have a daily Scripture and prayer habit? (Yes / No / Inconsistent)
4. Your Transformation Goal
Write one sentence describing where you want to be 90 days from now.
Next step: Begin with Lesson 1. Return to this diagnostic after Lesson 50 to measure change.
At a Glance
Summary: This welcome module establishes a baseline of the believer's current spiritual battlefield, response patterns, support structure, and transformation goals so progress can be measured across the course.
Key principle: Lamentations 3:40: "Let us search and try our ways, and turn again to the LORD." Honest self-examination is the doorway to repentance and growth.
Core teaching points:
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Spiritual warfare is real, personal, and varies across ten battlefields: mind, emotions, identity, relationships, family, finances/work, calling, health/body, occult/open doors, and doctrine/discernment.
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Most believers default to ignoring Satan, fearing Satan, or fighting in their own strength; the mature goal is to rest in Christ while growing in practiced resistance.
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Transformation requires honest self-assessment, not performance or shame.
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Support structures — local church, mature friend, daily Scripture and prayer — predict whether knowledge will become durable change.
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A written 90-day transformation goal turns vague desire into measurable discipleship.
Real-world example: A believer finishes the course but cannot name any change because she never recorded where she started; another student saves the diagnostic, revisits it after Lesson 50, and sees that panic attacks dropped from weekly to rare after establishing morning identity declarations.
Practice & Assessment
Common student mistake: Treating the diagnostic as a test to pass rather than a baseline to track, or skipping it because it feels too personal.
Practice assignment: Complete the Spiritual Warfare Diagnostic honestly, save your answers in a journal, and write one sentence describing where you want to be 90 days from now.
Worksheet idea: "Baseline and Finish Line": record your 1–5 ratings for each battlefield, your current response pattern, your support structure, and your 90-day goal; return to it after Lesson 50.
Completion requirement: Student completes the diagnostic, writes a 90-day transformation goal, and saves the worksheet for comparison at the end of the course.
Questions on Course Welcome — Spiritual Warfare Diagnostic
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Why is the diagnostic not a test?
ANSWER: Because it is a baseline for measuring change, not a score of spiritual worth.
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What are three of the ten battlefields listed?
ANSWER: Any three of: mind, emotions, identity, relationships, family, finances/work, calling, health/body, occult/open doors, doctrine/discernment.
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Which response pattern represents resting in Christ while wanting deeper practice?
ANSWER: D. Rest in Christ.