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September 30, 2024

Beloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul.

1 Peter 2:11 (ESV)



THE WAR WITHIN

 

If you grew up in church, you probably share the same memory I have of a church camp or D-Now weekend. The speaker would push all week, and in the final sermon, there was a call to die to sin and trust in God. Then there were usually one of three options (likely rotated between camps or speaking tours): to write your sin on a piece of paper, a rock, or a nail. After the sermon, there would be an altar call where you’d place your sin in a fire, throw your rock into the woods, or hammer the nail to a cross.

Why did that moment have so much power? Because the pastor woke you up to the reality that sin was real and prevalent in your life. He brought you face-to-face with the weight of sin. That simple symbolic action felt like the release of a heavy burden, a public declaration of your desire to be free.

But here’s the truth: while those moments are powerful and moving, we often find that once the camp high fades, the sins we tried to throw away find their way back. Why? Because the real battle is ongoing. It’s not just about symbolic gestures but about a daily war against the passions that wage war on our souls.

Notice Peter’s language in this verse. He is urging, pleading, practically begging. Have you ever been begged by someone? Maybe it was a fitness coach urging you to stick to your diet, a friend begging you to binge-watch the latest Netflix series, or an influencer recommending the next big product. Peter’s urging is different. He isn’t concerned with fleeting trends or temporary fixes; he is urging us to engage in the fight of our lives. Peter wants us to wrestle with the desires that pull us away from God.

Peter knew this was not a one-time battle. The language he uses suggests an ongoing struggle. It’s easy for us to be lulled into complacency, to let sin slide when we’re not in the emotional peak of a retreat or actively thinking about it. But sin is always lurking, always waiting for an opportunity to slip back into our hearts and minds.

If we’re honest, it’s much easier to set a plan for paying off debt, achieving a career milestone, or working toward a fitness goal than to wage war on sin. After all, paying off debt has clear steps: create a budget, stick to it, make payments. Gaining a fitness goal? Eat right, exercise, rest, repeat. But fighting sin? That’s an invisible war that requires not just external discipline but also internal, honest reflection.

Sin doesn’t show up on a neat to-do list. It’s subtle. It comes in when we least expect it—whether through a fleeting thought, a lingering temptation, or a moment of weakness. And Peter is urging us to recognize it, confront it, and fight against it.

Here’s the thing: sin is not just an external threat. Peter says these passions “wage war against your soul.” This is deeply personal. Sin wants to destroy you from the inside out. It attacks the soul, the very core of who you are. And as believers, we must take this war seriously. This isn’t just about avoiding bad behavior; it’s about protecting the purity of our souls.

So, what does it look like to fight?

It looks like confession: Regularly bringing our sins to God, acknowledging them, and asking for the grace to overcome them.

It looks like accountability: Having people in our lives who will lovingly urge us to stay on course.

It looks like prayer: Asking God to strengthen us for the battle and to give us a deep desire for holiness.

It looks like reading God’s Word: Filling our hearts and minds with God’s truth so that we can discern the lies of sin when they come.

When is the last time you thought about fighting sin? Maybe it’s time we start again.

 


Sellers Hickman serves as College Pastor at NorthStar Church and loves cheering on his Ole Miss Rebels. He and his wife, Hannah, live in Dallas, Ga. with their one year old, Emery. He also serves as the chaplain for the KSU Men’s Basketball team.