The enemy’s strategy is often subtle. He makes you say, “It’s not a big deal.” That is how the cracks remain open. The Bible calls them the little foxes that spoil the vine (Song of Solomon 2:15). They seem small, but at the right moment the devil applies pressure, and the whole structure collapses.
David’s weakness was women. Judas loved money. Peter struggled with fear and pride. Gideon, even after great victories, made an idol. He began by tearing down idols in his father’s house, but later he built a shrine from the spoils of battle. That shrine drew Israel into sin and destroyed his family. Out of his seventy sons, sixty-nine were killed. His end was marked by the very thing he once overcame.
This is why no weakness should be ignored. What you call “small” is what the devil will exploit. When anger, greed, or lust are not dealt with, they lie in wait for the enemy’s timing. At the right moment, he presses, and everything collapses.
Full communiqué: https://youtu.be/ClIh7g_t6E8?feature=shared
[Published on 04/10/2025]

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