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Christian Temperament Test: Using the Four Temperaments for Honest Self-Knowledge

A responsible guide to using a Christian temperament test for self-knowledge, relationships, small groups, virtues, blind spots, and spiritual growth.

9 min readUpdated July 7, 2026
Christian temperament test guide for four temperaments self-knowledge

Free Temperament Test

Get your Choleric, Sanguine, Melancholic, and Phlegmatic score spread.

The article is easier to use once you know your own temperament pattern.

Take the Free Quiz

A Christian temperament test should help you tell the truth about yourself

The four temperaments can be useful in Christian settings because they give people language for recurring patterns: how they react under pressure, how they relate to others, how they handle conflict, and where they may need growth.

But a temperament result should never become a spiritual excuse. “I am Choleric” is not permission to dominate people. “I am Phlegmatic” is not permission to avoid hard conversations. The point is honest self-knowledge that leads to love, humility, courage, and repair.

How the four temperaments can show up in Christian growth

These are reflective patterns, not fixed judgments about anyone’s faith.

Choleric: strength and surrender

A Choleric may lead decisively, but needs to practice patience, gentleness, and listening before control becomes pride.

Sanguine: joy and faithfulness

A Sanguine may bring warmth and energy, but needs follow-through when excitement fades.

Melancholic: depth and hope

A Melancholic may love truth and meaning, but needs hope when analysis turns into heaviness or criticism.

Phlegmatic: peace and courage

A Phlegmatic may create stability, but needs courage when peacekeeping becomes silence or avoidance.

Christian temperament test uses and limits

Use temperament language where it helps people grow. Do not use it where it replaces wisdom, counsel, or responsibility.

Use caseHelpful useUnhelpful use
Small groupsDiscuss communication and conflict patterns with humility.Label people publicly or reduce them to a type.
Marriage and friendshipNotice stress responses and repair moves.Use a result to blame the other person.
LeadershipUnderstand how people make decisions and receive feedback.Screen people as spiritually mature or immature.
Personal growthName a blind spot and choose one practice this week.Treat temperament as destiny.
Pastoral careUse as informal reflection language.Replace pastoral, medical, or mental-health support.

The FourType recommendation

Take FourType as a free self-reflection quiz first, then use the result as a conversation starter. The most useful question is not “what type am I?” but “what does this reveal about how I love, avoid, lead, react, and grow?”

  • Read the score spread, not only the label.
  • Pay attention to the blind spot that bothers you most.
  • Ask someone who knows you if the result fits.
  • Choose one repair move for this week.

Recommended Guides

Related Temperament Test Guides

Frequently Asked Questions

Is FourType a Christian temperament test?

FourType is a general four temperaments self-reflection test, not a church-specific or doctrinal assessment. Christians can still use it as a practical conversation tool for self-knowledge, relationships, and growth.

Can Christians use the four temperaments?

Many Christians use the four temperaments as informal language for self-knowledge. It should be used humbly and responsibly, not as a spiritual label or excuse.

What is the best Christian use of temperament testing?

The best use is to notice patterns that affect love, patience, courage, humility, conflict, and repair. It should support growth rather than replace discernment or counsel.

Know Your Type Before You Compare

The article is easier to apply once you know your own temperament pattern.

Take the Free Quiz