5 Phases of Sin You Need to Watch For

Share:

Once you defeat Satan, he is guaranteed to return for a rematch.

Sophia Ruffin knows a thing or two about staying in a right relationship with God. After becoming a Christian, she embarked on a journey to overcome her pre-Jesus temptations.

It wasn’t easy. In fact, life after the altar is even harder.

“Were you expecting to give your life to Christ and—poof!—all of your demons would be gone, never to return again?” Ruffin challenges readers in her book Set Free and Delivered: Strategies and Prayers to Maintain Freedom (Charisma House, 2018).

There’s no getting away from it. By becoming a follower of Christ, we become a threat to evil.

With this reality in mind, Ruffin examines five phases of the sin cycle where Christians need to guard their hearts against spiritual attack.

Temptation

“This was the place I found myself numerous times during my process,” Ruffin admits.

The enemy seeks to destroy the seed of our faith as early in the process as possible. When the door is ever-so-slightly creaked open, Satan will barge through.

Ruffin encourages Christians to be mindful of these access points. After all, the Bible doesn’t just warn about sin. It also warns about the door to sin.

When Proverbs 5:8 instructs Christians on how to resist an adulteress, it says: “Remove your way far from her, and do not go near the door of her house.”

Ruffin urges Christians to “be sober and watchful” because the enemy constantly “walks around as a roaring lion” (1 Pet. 5:8) and seeks opportunities to upend your faith.

Guilt

Too guilty to open her Bible. Too guilty to pray. Too guilty to face God.

Ruffin shares her experience of feeling crippled by guilt and spending hours in silence while the enemy tormented her. Despite feeling sincerely sorry for her sin, she could not move on.

While God desires us to have a repentant heart, He also wants us to then “go and sin no more” (John 8:11). In this place of extreme guilt, we need to be assured that if we confess our sins, then God will be “faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).

Shame

“I did whatever I could to keep the presence of God from me.”

Ruffin writes about how shame and humiliation drove her away from God. But the reality is, when sin goes unaddressed, the enemy maintains his stronghold.

“He who covers his sins will not prosper, but whoever confesses and forsakes them will have mercy” (Prov. 28:13).

When an old sin habit suddenly returns, it can be tempting to suffer in silence out of shame. But confessing your sin to a trusted brother or sister in Christ will give you a leg up in overcoming the attack.

Ruffin encourages transparency in the church because “if someone might overpower another by himself” then “two together can withstand him” and “a threefold cord is not quickly broken” (Eccl. 4:12).

Condemnation

For Ruffin, feeling condemned meant feeling unfit to be a Christian. It was as if she needed to be deserving of salvation in order to receive it.

“This is the trick of the enemy,” she says, “making you believe you can do something to earn God’s grace.”

In this phase, we need not only to recognize the pride in our hearts and come to Jesus with our failures. We should also recognize how we are saved only through the blood of Jesus. Not by our strength. Not by our works.

Forgiveness

God is not a deadbeat Father. Ruffin reflects on how He restored her when she cried out to Him.

“God hears the groans of His children, and when you cry out, He will deliver you from your bondage,” she says.

We should not only be assured that if we confess our sins, we will be forgiven. We must also “endure discipline” because “what son is there whom a father does not discipline?” (Heb. 12:7). God the Father will use our cry to grow us up as His follower.

Through these different phases of dealing with sin, Ruffin shows how having the right heart posture builds us up in the faith. In the midst of struggles and spiritual attack, we are called to remember that “tribulation produces patience, patience produces character, and character produces hope” (Rom. 5:3-4).

“Don’t allow what you are experiencing right now in the cycle to make you quit,” Ruffin says. “Get back up, dust yourself off and get back in the game. God is cheering you on.”{eoa}

This article is based on Set Free and Delivered: Strategies and Prayers to Maintain Freedom (Charisma House, 2018) by Sophia Ruffin. Ruffin is founder of Dope Chic but Holy Chic Ministries in Chicago. Gifted with a strong prophetic anointing, she has ministered throughout the United States, bringing power and a radical message of deliverance. Ruffin is a prolific minister, a sought-after conference speaker and the author of From Point Guard to Prophet, Shame and After the Altar. She resides in the Chicago area with her mother, Doris Ruffin.

+ posts
Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

The Prosperous Path: 3 Essential Rules to Follow

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2DyhGQcegQ Time has a funny way of making us reprioritize what is important in life, as well as how we view our relationship with God. When Benny Hinn sat down with Charisma Media founder Stephen Strang for an episode of...

Morning Rundown: Uncovered: Who Is the Real Benny Hinn?

Here’s a quick rundown of the top stories on charismanews.com: Uncovered: Who Is the Real Benny Hinn? https://youtu.be/f2DyhGQcegQ Who is the real Benny Hinn? After 50 years in ministry, Benny Hinn has become one of the largest voices in the...

What Is God’s Tabernacle?

We experienced a powerful day in the presence of God! As we transitioned from worship, I had a vision of folks who were tired of raising hands and waiting on the Lord. Breaking news, Spirit-filled stories. Subscribe to Charisma on...

Guiding Through Criticism: The Roadmap to Redemption

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MA-rul4E1bY Christian controversy just seems to be a thing these days. It bridges denominations, genders and borders, and when a big name in the Christian sphere stumbles or even falls on their face (metaphorically speaking), there is an army of...

Alexander Pagani and Alan DiDio: How to End Generational Curses

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LPgr8qjEFx8&t=772s In an interview between apostle Alexander Pagani and Bishop Alan DiDio on the Encounter Today podcast, the two got candid about deliverance and how generational curses can impact the life of a believer. Get your FREE CHARISMA NEWSLETTERS today!...

Jentezen Franklin: Israel’s Natural and Spiritual Glory

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTRXj-8iznE&t=173s Israel: God’s Promised Land, chosen people and spiritual family. The importance of Israel is so much more than we see even on the surface. Though most of the world sees a tiny nation in the Middle East when they...

The Heretical Bible Coming for Your Kids

Do we need a ‘normal’ bible for children? Bibles made for children to understand the Word of God are not a new phenomenon. However, when it comes the new fundraising by the organization known as The Bible for Normal People,...

Hero Braves Raging Inferno to Save 11-Month-Old

An Ohio man is being hailed a hero after risking his life to save a baby trapped inside a burning home. John Stickovich, 62, told WJW-TV he rescued the 11-month-old child Monday morning, repeatedly going inside the house to try...

Critics Blast BSA for Ditching the ‘Boy’ from Boy Scouts

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Wbsa9GqVdM After more than a century, the Boy Scouts of America is changing its name to become a more “inclusive” organization several years after welcoming girls and gay boys into its scouting program. The Texas-based organization is dropping “Boys” from...

1 2 3 4 5 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top