The War Inside
If you're a new creation, why does the old way of living still pull at you?
If you’ve ever felt like there are two versions of you fighting for control, you’re not crazy. You’re normal.
Paul described it like this:
“For I do not do the good I want to do, but the evil I do not want to do — this I keep on doing.” — Romans 7:19
One of the most important figures in Christian history wrote that. Think about that for a second.
Two pulls
When you become a new creation in Christ, the old patterns don’t instantly disappear. It’s like muscle memory from a life you no longer live.
The Spirit in you pulls one direction: toward love, truth, generosity, peace.
The flesh — the old habit of self-sourcing — pulls the other direction: toward selfishness, comparison, control, fear.
“For the flesh desires what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is contrary to the flesh. They are in conflict with each other.” — Galatians 5:17
This conflict is actually evidence that you’re alive. Dead people don’t feel tension. If you feel the pull of both, it’s because the new life is real — and the old pattern is fighting to stay relevant.
What doesn’t work
White-knuckling it. Gritting your teeth. Making promises you can’t keep. Beating yourself up when you fail.
None of that works. Because the problem was never a lack of willpower. The problem was trying to fight in your own strength — which is just more self-sourcing.
What does work
“Walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh.” — Galatians 5:16
Notice it doesn’t say “fight the flesh and you’ll end up in the Spirit.” It says walk by the Spirit and the flesh loses its power.
It’s like turning on a light in a dark room. You don’t fight the darkness. You just switch on what’s already there.
Walking by the Spirit means:
- Admitting you can’t do this on your own (that’s not weakness — it’s wisdom)
- Asking the Spirit for help (seriously, just ask)
- Staying connected to the Source (reading Scripture, talking to God, being around other believers)
- Choosing to believe what God says about you over what the flesh says about you
Grace on the battlefield
When you fail — and you will — remember: there’s no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus.
Conviction? Yes. The Spirit will show you when you’re off track. But not to crush you. To redirect you. Like a GPS that says “recalculating” instead of “you’re a terrible driver.”
The war is real. But the outcome isn’t in question. You’re on the winning side. The Spirit inside you is stronger than anything pulling at you from the outside.
“The one who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world.” — 1 John 4:4
You’re going to be OK. Not because you’re strong. Because He is.