The Complete List of Spiritual Gifts in the Bible โ What They Are, What They Mean, and Which One Is Yours

Paul opens 1 Corinthians 12 with something urgent: โNow about the gifts of the Spirit, brothers and sisters, I do not want you to be uninformed.โ He had watched what happened to a church full of spiritually gifted people who did not understand their gifts โ comparison, pride, envy, disorder, and worst of all, the body of Christ crippled by members who were either sitting on their gifts or wielding them as weapons of status. He wanted something different. He wanted the church to be what it was designed to be: a living body, every part functioning, every gift in use, nothing missing, nothing wasted.
Two thousand years later, the problem has not changed much. Most Christians know that spiritual gifts exist. Far fewer know what their gift actually is. And fewer still are actively deploying it in any meaningful way in the body of Christ. This article exists to change that โ beginning with the foundation, working through every gift Paul and Peter name in Scripture, and ending with the most important question of all: what is yours?
Each of you should use whatever gift you have received to serve others, as faithful stewards of Godโs grace in its various forms.โ
โ 1 Peter 4:10 (NIV) โ Godโs instruction is not to discover your gift and admire it. It is to use it.What the Bible Actually Means by โSpiritual Giftsโ
Three Greek words โ and each one adds something essential to our understanding
The phrase โspiritual giftsโ is actually a translation of several different Greek expressions in the New Testament, each carrying a slightly different shade of meaning. Understanding these is not just an academic exercise โ it dismantles some of the most common misunderstandings about what spiritual gifts are and where they come from.
The most important word is charisma. This word tells us that spiritual gifts are grace-gifts โ they flow from the same divine generosity that saved you, not from your own spiritual accomplishment. Nobody earns a spiritual gift by being holy enough. Nobody loses one by having a bad week. They are given โ fully, freely, permanently โ by a God whose grace operates without conditions.
The Framework Paul Gives โ The Body of Christ
Before listing any gift, Paul gives us the only context in which they make sense
Paul does not launch straight into the gift list in 1 Corinthians 12. He first spends considerable effort establishing a framework without which the gifts can only cause harm: the image of the body. โJust as a body, though one, has many parts, but all its many parts form one body, so it is with Christโ (1 Corinthians 12:12).
This metaphor is doing critical theological work. The eye does not look at the hand and say, โYou are less important than I am.โ The foot does not refuse to function because it cannot do what the hand does. Every part is necessary. Every part belongs. And the parts that seem less impressive are often the ones that the body cannot function without. โIf the whole body were an eye, where would the sense of hearing be?โ (1 Corinthians 12:17).
This is the context in which every gift in the list must be understood. There is no gift hierarchy. There is no gift that makes its holder superior to someone with a different gift. There are only members of a body, each with a function, each dependent on the others, each making the whole more complete than any one part could be alone.
โNow you are the body of Christ, and each one of you is a part of it.โ
โ 1 Corinthians 12:27 (NIV) โ Not a metaphor to appreciate. A reality to inhabit.The Four Key Biblical Passages on Spiritual Gifts
No single passage gives the complete picture โ you need all four
One of the most important insights about biblical spiritual gifts is that no single passage gives a complete list. Scholars note that none of Paulโs lists are identical, and no gift appears in all of them. This is deliberate โ Paul was not trying to produce an exhaustive taxonomy. He was illustrating a principle: the Spirit distributes many gifts, and the gifts he mentions in each passage fit the particular need he is addressing.
Speaking forth Godโs truth into specific situations. In the NT context, primarily means forth-telling โ declaring what God says โ not necessarily predicting the future.
From the Greek diakonia โ โto wait at tables.โ The practical gift of meeting needs, completing tasks, and supporting the body in tangible ways that free others to minister.
From didaskalos โ the same root as โdidactic.โ The ability to explain Scripture clearly, accurately, and in ways that build understanding and change lives.
From paraklesis โ the same family as parakletos, a name for the Holy Spirit. The gift of coming alongside someone and calling forth what is best in them.
Not merely the ability to be generous โ the supernatural grace to give in ways that are consistently, even inexplicably, beyond what seems proportional to oneโs means.
From proistemi โ to stand before and guide. The gift of motivating others toward Godโs purposes with such clarity and diligence that the body follows willingly.
A heightened sensitivity to those who suffer, and the impulse to move toward them โ practically, compassionately, and cheerfully. โDo it cheerfully,โ Paul adds, because mercy offered grudgingly is not mercy.
The ability to speak into complex situations with Godโs perspective โ not just intellectual wisdom, but supernatural insight that brings clarity, peace, and right direction.
The ability to understand and apply biblical truth deeply, including knowing things about a situation or person that could only have come from divine revelation.
Not saving faith, which all believers share. A supernatural endowment of trust in Godโs power that allows a person to pray and act with extraordinary confidence even when evidence is absent.
Note the plural โ โgiftsโ of healings. God uses certain people as instruments through which He brings physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual restoration to others.
The capacity to be an instrument of Godโs supernatural intervention in natural circumstances โ signs that demonstrate the reality and power of the Kingdom of God.
The ability to recognise whether something is from the Spirit of God, from human flesh, or from a demonic source. An essential gift for protecting the church from deception.
Speaking in a language unknown to the speaker, for prayer and praise directed to God. In public, requires interpretation; in private prayer, Paul commends it (1 Cor 14:4).
The ability to translate or interpret the content of tongues speech for the understanding of the whole congregation. Necessary for tongues to edify the gathered body.
The gift of coming alongside others to support and assist in ways that free them for ministry they could not otherwise do. The bodyโs engine room โ often invisible, always essential.
From kubernesis โ a shipโs helmsman or captain. The gift of steering people and ministries toward their God-given destination with planning, organisation, and oversight.
These gifts are particularly significant because their stated purpose is not their own ministry โ it is to โequipโ others for theirs. Every other believerโs gifts are activated and unleashed through these roles.
From apostolos โ โone who is sent.โ Foundational sense: the twelve + Paul. Broader sense: pioneer missionaries and church planters who establish the gospel in new territory.
Those who speak Godโs truth with urgency and clarity into the churchโs current situation. Building, strengthening, comforting โ and at times, rebuking with love and authority.
From euangelion โ the gospel. The supernatural ability to share the good news in ways that bring people to genuine faith. Philip (Acts 21:8) and Timothy (2 Tim 4:5) are named examples.
In the original Greek, โpastors and teachersโ may be a single office. The pastorโs defining gift is tending the flock โ feeding, protecting, caring for, and leading Godโs people with a shepherdโs heart.
The equipping gift of teaching operates at a church-wide level โ building the whole body in biblical understanding so that every member can โdo works of serviceโ (Eph 4:12).
Peterโs contribution is elegant. Where Paul gives detailed lists, Peter gives a principle: every spiritual gift operates in one of two modes โ speaking or serving. And both must be done not in human confidence but with divine dependence: speaking โas one who speaks the very words of God,โ serving โwith the strength God provides.โ The goal is always the same: โso that in all things God may be praised.โ The gifts are not platforms for the gifted. They are instruments for the glorification of God.
Peter also adds two gifts unique to his passage: hospitality (verse 9 โ โoffer hospitality to one another without grumblingโ) and the general principle of stewardship of grace โ handling what God has given with faithfulness, not ownership. Your gift does not belong to you. You are a steward of it, accountable for how you deploy it in the body.

Understanding How the Gifts Relate to Each Other
Scholars commonly group the biblical gifts into three types โ and understanding which category a gift falls in helps you understand how to use it
Gifts That Speak
These gifts operate through communication โ words spoken in the Spiritโs power that build, clarify, reveal, and transform.
- ProphecySpeaking Godโs truth into specific situations with divine authority and clarity
- TeachingExplaining and applying Scripture in ways that build genuine understanding
- EncouragementSpeaking life into people โ calling forth their best, steadying their faith
- Word of WisdomBringing Godโs perspective to complex situations with supernatural clarity
- Word of KnowledgeRevealing truth โ about Scripture or about situations โ beyond natural discovery
- Tongues + InterpretationSpirit-empowered speech in unknown languages, made useful to the body through interpretation
- EvangelismCommunicating the gospel in ways that bring people to genuine saving faith
Gifts That Serve
These gifts operate through action โ practical work done in the Spiritโs power that sustains, supports, and enables the body to function.
- Serving / HelpsMeeting practical needs so that others are freed for the ministry only they can do
- LeadershipGuiding the body toward Godโs purposes with diligence and motivating clarity
- AdministrationOrganising and steering ministries toward their God-given goals with precision
- GivingReleasing resources generously and strategically into Godโs work
- MercyMoving toward those who suffer with compassion, comfort, and practical help
- HospitalityCreating environments of welcome and belonging that open people to the gospel and to community
- DiscernmentProtecting the body by recognising what is of the Spirit and what is not
Gifts That Demonstrate
These gifts operate through supernatural demonstration โ signs and wonders that authenticate Godโs power and message. These are the gifts most debated in contemporary Christianity.
- HealingBeing used as a channel through which God brings physical, emotional, or spiritual restoration
- Miraculous PowersBeing an instrument of Godโs supernatural intervention in natural circumstances
- FaithExtraordinary confidence in Godโs power to act, enabling prayer and action that moves mountains
- ApostleshipPioneer-level authority and anointing for establishing the gospel in new territories
๐ฏ Which category do you naturally lean toward? Most people find that one of these three groupings resonates deeply with how they already function in the body. That is not coincidence. It is likely a signpost toward your gift. Leave a comment below โ what stands out to you?
5 Myths About Spiritual Gifts That Are Holding You Back
Do All Spiritual Gifts Still Operate Today?
This is one of the most debated questions in contemporary Christianity โ and it deserves an honest answer rather than being glossed over or avoided. Bible-believing Christians who love Scripture have reached different conclusions on this question.
Some scholars and traditions believe that sign gifts โ tongues, healing, miracles, prophecy โ were given specifically to authenticate the apostolic message and establish the early church. With the completion of the New Testament canon, these โconfirming giftsโ were no longer necessary and have ceased. Key texts: 1 Corinthians 13:8โ10; Hebrews 2:3โ4.
Others believe that all gifts remain available to the church throughout history until Christ returns. There is no explicit biblical statement that any gift would cease before โthe perfect comesโ โ which most continuationists identify as Christโs return (1 Corinthians 13:10). They point to global reports of signs and wonders as evidence of ongoing operation.
What the Bible clearly teaches on all sides of this debate: every gift that exists is given by the Spirit alone, for the benefit of the body, to the glory of God. The disagreement is about which gifts are currently in operation โ not about the nature, purpose, or source of gifts themselves.
How to Discover Your Spiritual Gift
Reading about spiritual gifts is the beginning, not the end. The goal of every biblical passage on this subject is the same: discover what the Spirit has given you, and use it. Here are four proven pathways to identifying your gift.
James 1:5 says if you lack wisdom, ask God who gives generously. The same applies to gifts. Pray specifically: โFather, show me what You have placed in me โ and show me where the body needs it.โ Then listen for the answers that come through open doors, affirmations, and opportunities.
Spiritual gifts tend to energise rather than drain you, even when they are demanding. Which activities in the church leave you feeling spent but satisfied? Which conversations come naturally to you? Where do others come to you for help? These are signposts from the Spirit.
Your gift will produce fruit that others can see before you can. Ask trusted Christians who know you well: โWhere do you see the Spirit working through me?โ Their answers may surprise you โ gifts often operate more powerfully than the one who carries them realises.
You cannot identify your gift by reading about it โ you have to use it. Try serving in different capacities in your local church. You will find that certain areas produce a sense of divine fit โ an anointing that you and others can both feel. That is likely your gift in operation.
The Gift Given Is Not the Gift Buried
The most dangerous thing you can do with a spiritual gift
Jesus told a parable about a man who gave his servants different amounts of money and went on a journey. When he returned, two of them had invested what they had been given and multiplied it. One had buried his. He returned it intact, unused, unexploited โ and was judged not for failing spectacularly but for refusing to begin.
Spiritual gifts work the same way. The danger is not in using your gift imperfectly. It is in not using it at all โ in waiting until you feel more qualified, more confident, more certain of what it is. The body of Christ is not waiting for you to feel ready. It is waiting for the part of it that you carry โ the function only you can fulfill, the grace-gift sovereignly placed in you by a Spirit who makes no mistakes in His distribution.
Paulโs desire was not merely that you would know about spiritual gifts. He wrote 1 Corinthians 12โ14 because a church full of people with spiritual gifts was functioning worse than it should because those gifts were being misunderstood, misused, and misdirected. The answer was not less gifts. It was more understanding, more love, more deliberate deployment of what the Spirit had given.
That same answer is what this article has tried to provide. Now the question belongs to you โ and to the Spirit who has already answered it, whether you know it yet or not.
โFollow the way of love and eagerly desire gifts of the Spirit, especially prophecy.โ
โNow eagerly desire the greater gifts. And yet I will show you the most excellent way.โ
โ 1 Corinthians 12:31 (NIV) โ The gifts matter. But they operate within love โ or they donโt work at all.Which Spiritual Gift Do You Think You Have?
Tell us in the comments โ or share this article with someone who is trying to figure out where they fit in the body of Christ. The right resource at the right moment changes everything.
๐ List of Spiritual Gifts in the Bible โ Complete Study: Romans 12 ยท 1 Corinthians 12 ยท Ephesians 4 ยท 1 Peter 4
The Spirit distributes as He determines. What He has placed in you is needed by the body right now. โฆ






