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Spiritual Warfare Of The Mind | The Father’s House Live Oak | Amancio Rosas | May 24 2021 Summary

In this sermon, I address a topic that many believers are not adequately prepared for when they first come to faith: spiritual warfare in the mind. I begin by emphasizing the importance of identity in Christ, because before we can fight spiritual battles effectively, we must know who we are. I share how spiritual warfare often begins subtly, not with actions, but with thoughts, and how misunderstanding identity leaves believers vulnerable to deception.

I walk through the sequence of sin, explaining how unchecked thoughts lead to choices, choices form habits, habits create loss of control, and eventually lead to bondage. When sin goes undealt with, it doesn’t just influence behavior, it begins to shape identity. This is why hidden sin is so dangerous: it quietly rewrites how we see ourselves, convincing us that our failures define who we are.

From there, I explain the three sources of spiritual conflict believers face:

The flesh, our fallen, sinful nature that resists the Spirit. The world, both the world system and worldly influence that pressures us to compromise. The supernatural, spiritual forces that actively oppose God’s work in our lives.

All three target the mind, because the battlefield of spiritual warfare is not external, it is internal. Using Scripture from Galatians, 1 John, Ephesians, and Corinthians, I show how the enemy works through deception, half-truths, and discouragement, just as he did in the Garden with Eve.

I then teach from 2 Corinthians 10 that our weapons are not worldly, but spiritual, and that God has given us divine power to demolish strongholds by taking every thought captive and making it obedient to Christ. Victory begins when we refuse to give the enemy a foothold and instead replace destructive patterns with Christ-centered obedience.

I emphasize that freedom is not found in self-effort but in remaining in Christ. Drawing from John 15, Ephesians 4, Colossians 1, and 2 Corinthians 5, I call the church to put off the old self, renew the mind, and put on the new self created in Christ. Growth requires remembrance, constantly returning to the gospel, the cross, and the truth of what Jesus has accomplished for us.

I conclude by leading the church through declarations of truth, directly confronting the lies the enemy uses against believers. Where the enemy says we are nobody, rejected, guilty, abandoned, or too far gone, Jesus declares that we are known, chosen, loved, forgiven, adopted, redeemed, and made new. I invite the congregation to stand in agreement with these truths and respond in vulnerability, prayer, and faith.

This message is ultimately a call to freedom, freedom rooted in identity, guarded in the mind, sustained by Christ, and strengthened through the truth of the gospel.