The most dangerous patterns are often the ones we’ve grown comfortable with.
Speaker: Not provided
The Potter’s House of Dallas
Summary
Main message: Habitual sin numbs your taste for righteousness so that what is good becomes bitter and what is sinful becomes appealing. Often the obstacle to God's will is not a demon but your own habits, body, and patterns.
Key points:
- Repeatedly "eating junk" (sin) desensitizes you to its harm and flips your moral taste.
- After cleansing or a change, the same sin can feel clearly wrong and make you sick (analogy: fast food).
- The spiritual struggle can come from within—your own members, ways, and system—not always from an external demonic force.
- Awareness and cleansing reveal the truth about what you've been tolerating.
Scriptures mentioned: none
