My honest wrestle with sin and spiritual loyalty
The Conflict of Two Loves
As much as I hate to admit it, I’ve been unfaithful to my Savior. More often than I care to admit.
It’s not that I don’t care. It’s not that I don’t love Him, because I do. Because of Jesus, I’ve been able to experience a real and personal relationship with God. A love that reminds me I’m seen, chosen, and deeply known.
The kind of love that covers shame, quiets fear, and heals places I didn’t even know were bleeding.
It’s beautiful, but it also comes with a cost. A cost that requires me to crucify my flesh daily and walk away from what once comforted me. Because on the other side of that beauty is real darkness. A devil that hates the love God has for His children. And because he hates it, he attacks it.
He feeds the sinful nature inside all of us, the part that craves gratification, attention, escape. The part that wants what it wants right now. And if you’re not watchful, if you slip, if you’re tired or vulnerable, it creeps in. Quietly. Quickly. Convincingly.
It’ll sound like:
“Just this once.”
“God will forgive you.”
“No one has to know.”
But that’s the trick. The enemy’s only real power is deception. And deception, when believed, leads to disobedience.
The Allure of Sin
Sin doesn’t always show up looking like a red flag. Sometimes it shows up dressed in comfort, in old habits, in desires that whisper, “This will make you feel better.” It doesn’t come as a threat, it comes as a relief. A temporary escape. A numbing agent.
For me, sin often comes when I’m tired. Weary. Waiting on God and wondering if He hears me. And before I know it, I find myself entertaining thoughts, habits, or even people that I’ve already told God I was done with. I’ve cried real tears over wanting to be better… wanting to honor God with my body, with my choices, with my loyalty, but then I find myself going back to what I know leads me further from Him.
Sin is patient. It waits until the moment you’re spiritually dry, emotionally vulnerable, or just hungry for affection, attention, or control. And when it finds an opening, it doesn’t ask permission. It slides in like an old lover who knows just what to say.
And the worst part? Sometimes I say yes.
The Rationalization and Rebellion
“I’ll repent later.”
“I’ve already done it before, what’s one more time?”
“I’m human.”
I’ve used every excuse in the book to justify going back to things I know break God’s heart and mine too, honestly. It’s not just rebellion… it’s self-betrayal. Because every time I choose sin, I betray the healed, whole, obedient version of me that I’ve been praying to become.
And yet… God doesn’t stop loving me.
That’s what makes this so complex.
The same love that should anchor me… sometimes becomes the thing I take for granted.
The Hidden Cost
Sin doesn’t send an invoice right away. It waits.
At first, everything feels good, even freeing. But later… comes the shame. The distance. The confusion. The heavy silence in prayer. The feeling that I can’t look Jesus in the eyes, not because He turned away from me, but because I’m hiding, like Adam and Eve in the garden.
Sin has cost me clarity, peace, spiritual confidence, and time. It’s made me question whether I’ll ever really change. Whether I’m capable of true commitment to Christ. It’s made me feel like a fraud even while leading or encouraging others.
But grace won’t stop chasing me.
The Turning Point
There’s no single dramatic moment I can point to where everything shifted. For me, it’s been a series of quiet convictions. The kind of conviction that doesn’t shame me, but gently pulls me back to the feet of Jesus. The Holy Spirit doesn’t yell, He whispers.
Sometimes, the turning point looks like me deleting a number. Saying “no” when my body wants to say “yes.” Being honest in prayer and saying, “God, I still want this… help me not to.”
And sometimes, the turning point is just getting back up after I fall.
Coming Back Home
I’ve learned that repentance isn’t about perfection. It’s about posture.
God isn’t asking for flawless behavior, He’s asking for a loyal heart.
And loyalty looks like showing up, even after I’ve messed up.
It looks like surrendering again and again.
It looks like trusting that Jesus already paid for my failures, and I don’t have to keep paying for them with shame.
Every time I return to Him, I find open arms.
Not punishment. Not distance.
But grace. Healing. Renewal.
And somehow… He still calls me His.
Final Reflection: Torn, But Choosing Love
I don’t write this from a place of having arrived, I’m still on the journey. I still get tempted. I still feel weak sometimes. But I’m learning how to fight differently. I’m learning how to recognize the lie before I agree with it. I’m learning how to choose God, not just because He loves me, but because I love Him back.
And that love? It’s worth protecting.
If you’re struggling like me, torn between what you know is right and what your flesh still craves, you’re not alone. And you’re not too far gone.
God sees your heart. He sees the effort. The tears. The wrestling.
Keep coming back to Him.
Every time you do, He’ll still be there… arms open, heart ready, grace fully available.
Reflection Question:
Do I love God enough to walk away from what keeps separating me from Him?
Prayer
Lord, I don’t want to keep choosing what pulls me away from You.
Give me the strength to walk away from what feels good, but harms my soul.
Remind me of Your love when I feel weak and help me to love You more than I love my comfort, my habits, or my desires.
Don’t allow me to have peace with the things that try to keep me separate from you.
Thank You for never giving up on me, even when I’ve wandered.
Today, I choose You again.
Amen.

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