When Relationships Become Difficult, Do You Respond Like Christ?
Conflict is part of every relationship.
Whether it’s between parents and children, husbands and wives, friends, coworkers, church members, or complete strangers, disagreements reveal something deeper than the situation itself.
They reveal the condition of our hearts.
The Conflict Mirror is a biblical self-examination designed to help you slow down, reflect honestly, and compare your responses with Scripture. Every question includes biblical insight, a Scripture passage, and a reflection designed to encourage spiritual growth—not condemnation.
There are no perfect people.
There is only a perfect Savior who continues transforming imperfect hearts.
Why This Matters
Most people believe conflict begins with another person’s actions.
The Bible teaches that conflict also reveals what is happening inside us.
Do we become defensive?
Do we keep score?
Do we punish people with silence?
Do we seek peace—or simply try to win?
This Christ-Centered Relationships self-examination helps uncover those patterns while pointing every response back to God’s Word.
What You’ll Discover
After completing this biblical self-examination, you’ll reflect on how you respond to:
- Conflict
- Anger
- Forgiveness
- Listening
- Defensiveness
- Emotional punishment
- Bitterness
- Humility
- Public criticism
- Boundaries
- Reconciliation
- Peacemaking
- Grace
- Truth
Before You Begin
Answer each question honestly.
Choose the answer that best reflects how you typically respond—not the answer you wish were true.
The purpose of this quiz is not to determine who was right in your last disagreement.
The purpose is to discover what conflict reveals about your own heart.
The Conflict Mirror
When Relationships Become Difficult, Do You Respond Like Christ?
Every relationship eventually faces disagreement, disappointment, misunderstanding, or hurt.
Conflict itself is not always the problem. The deeper question is what conflict produces in us.
Do we become defensive? Do we punish people with silence? Do we gather others to our side? Do we seek peace—or victory? Do we forgive—or keep score?
This self-examination is not designed to determine who was right in your last disagreement. It is an invitation to examine the way you respond when relationships become difficult.
The goal is not to avoid every conflict.
The goal is to reflect Christ in the middle of it.
“Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.”
Every Conflict Reveals Something
Conflict has a way of exposing attitudes we never intended to reveal.
Sometimes it uncovers humility.
Sometimes it exposes pride.
Sometimes it reveals fear, bitterness, control, or a deep desire to be understood.
Whatever this self-examination uncovered, remember this:
God never reveals our hearts in order to shame us.
He reveals them so He can transform them.
"Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God." — Matthew 5:9 (KJV)
Every conflict becomes an opportunity to become a little more like Christ.
Continue Your Journey
Growth doesn't stop with one self-examination. Continue exploring other areas of your relationships through Scripture.
- The Parent Mirror — Examine your influence as a parent.
- The Friendship Mirror — Become the friend you hope others will be.
- The Marriage Mirror — Strengthen your marriage through biblical reflection.
- The Heart Mirror — Explore the motives shaping your thoughts and actions.
- JESUS CHANGED EVERYTHING
- There's a Scripture for That – Forgiveness
- Peace – There’s A Scripture for That
- Grace – There’s A Scripture for That (KJV) Version
- Mindset – Speak as Christ Would Speak
- Forgiveness: Finding Freedom Through Jesus Christ
Scriptures marked KJV are taken from the KING JAMES VERSION (KJV): KING JAMES VERSION, public domain in The United States. Pathway365 is based in the United States and is governed by its laws. Outside of the United States, you’ll need to check the copyright laws in your country before use.
Scripture quotations from The Authorized (King James) Version. Rights in the Authorized Version in the United Kingdom are vested in the Crown. Reproduced by permission of the Crown’s patentee, Cambridge University Press
