Priorities × Interests × Methodologies × Blindspots

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Use: For modality researchers, character-first educators, and trainers in Biblical Psychology 101 — Modalities For Life.

Modal excellence Priorities (protect / preserve) Interests (what they notice and pursue) Methodologies (repeatable practices) Possible pathologies / blindspots
PRO — Prophetiea (discover)
Scout / Eye (lampstand) Keep the lamp clear.
Protect discernment, doctrinal sobriety, and truthful naming. Patterns, root causes, trajectories, “what is coming.”
What others missed, ignored, or assumed. 1) Scrapbook evidence: 3–7 scraps before any proclamation.
  1. Thesis sentence: “The pattern is…, therefore we must…”.
  2. Prediction + test: name a forecast and what would falsify it.
  3. Clean speech: short, concrete, dated warnings and invitations. | Revelation without submission. Contempt for process and people. Conspiracy thinking. Chronic critique without responsibility. Isolation, superiority, “I see therefore I rule.” | | DEA — Deaconiea (serve) Specialist / Hand (altar of incense) | Protect quality, reliability, and timeliness. Keep craft clean and repeatable. | Tools, scripts, checklists, workflows, standards. How to make the idea real in the physical world. | 1) Read the brief: define spec, timeline, acceptance criteria.
  4. Prototype fast: smallest working version in 24–72 hours.
  5. Standardize: template, checklist, versioning, handoff notes.
  6. Finish strong: polish, QA, documentation, delivery. | Perfectionism and delay disguised as excellence. Impatience with ambiguity and “soft work.” Harshness toward slower learners. Identity fused to performance and reputation. | | DID — Didasko (teach) Essentialist / Ear (laver) | Protect clarity and truth. Guard fundamentals so the house stays intelligible. | Definitions, first principles, categories, sequence. Where learners get stuck and why. | 1) Boil down: 1 sentence, 1 paragraph, 1 page.
  7. Teach in layers: overview → example → practice → review.
  8. Mastery checks: simple quizzes, retrieval practice, recap in learner’s words.
  9. Curriculum hygiene: glossary, canon of sources, stable progression. | Over-correction and rigidity. Truth without tenderness. Teaching as control (lecturing to avoid listening). Shaming those who are not “serious.” | | PAR — Parakaleho (enable) Coach / Tongue (table of shewbread) | Protect courage, belonging, and follow-through. Keep conversations safe, bounded, and fruitful. | People’s potential, motivation, and next-step obstacles. Stories, emotions, and meaning-making. | 1) One next step: make obedience small and doable.
  10. Scaffold then release: support briefly, then hand back responsibility.
  11. Reflective questions: “What are you responsible for by Friday?”
  12. Cadence: check-in, encouragement, accountability, closure. | Over-availability and boundary collapse. Talking as substitute for action. People-pleasing and rescuing adults from ownership. Manipulative encouragement (using warmth to control). | | MET — Metadidomi (steward) Economist / Neck (ark of covenant) | Protect sustainability and future capacity. Keep the “water” clean: systems, hygiene, logistics. | Budgets, structures, resourcing, coordination. Where friction, waste, and risk accumulate. | 1) Map flows: money, time, people, information.
  13. Define lanes: owners, decision rights, escalation paths.
  14. Build light systems: simple SOPs, dashboards, calendars.
  15. Risk hygiene: backups, buffers, documentation, contingency plans. | Anxiety-driven control. Hoarding resources “for later.” Over-structuring that strangles initiative. Reducing people to inputs and outputs. | | IST — Proistemi (lead) Expansionist / Head (gate man) | Protect alignment, mission focus, and decisiveness. Keep order that serves life. | Opportunities, leverage points, strategy, momentum. What must change now, what must wait. | 1) Decision charter: decide, delegate, refuse (documented).
  16. Priority stack: 3–5 outcomes for the season.
  17. Cadence: weekly review, clear owners, short meetings.
  18. After-action: what worked, what broke, what we will change. | Impatience with consensus and care work. Collateral damage to people and culture. Overreach and burnout of the team. Using urgency to bypass wisdom and accountability. | | ELE — Eleeos (mercy) Interventionist / Heart (altar of sacrifice) | Protect the vulnerable and restore safety. Keep the house compassionate without chaos. | Crisis signals, pain points, the overlooked and wounded. Immediate needs and practical relief. | 1) Triage: stabilize safety, then diagnose.
  19. Mercy plan: what we do today, what gets referred, what must stop.
  20. Bounded giving: time-box help, document, hand off for long-term care.
  21. Repair rituals: apology, reconciliation steps, follow-up check. | Savior complex and hidden resentment. Boundary collapse and compassion fatigue. Bypassing process “for the sake of love.” Enabling dependency instead of restoration. |

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Character-first calibration (quick rule): Gift becomes excellence when it stays under truth, humility, and boundaries. Gift becomes pathology when it demands control, attention, or exemption.

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Aide Memoir - Romans 12:6-8 Worldview

Reference Library

Onboarding to Full Accreditation as a College Governor (GC2029)

First Year Matriculation Syllabus - Seminary Gate

Oikos–IGMI Formation

Graduate Thesis Track

God Blossoms Humanly: Priorities, Interests & Methodologies

Bibliography

Reading Library — Romans 12:6–8 Modality Research (MA/PhD)