Boasting Only in the Lord Amid the Spiritual Infowar
2 Corinthians 12:9-10
"But he said to me, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me. For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong."
In chapters 10-11, Paul confronts "super-apostles" who twist the gospel, promote another Jesus, or lead minds astray, just as the serpent deceived Eve by questioning God's nature and purposes. Paul frames it as spiritual warfare against strongholds of thought that exalt themselves against the knowledge of God. And he sees these strongholds as tools of Christ's enemies. Satanic forces don't overpower believers directly (the devil has no ultimate authority over those in Christ), but he exploits vulnerabilities; pride, doubt, fleshly desires, cultural pressures, or even depression to plant deceptive ideas. This creates the very divisions and misinterpretations Paul mentions; people grasping at status, works-righteousness, or distorted views of Christ instead of resting in grace alone.
Now Paul pivots from defending his ministry to boasting in what the world sees as failure, namely his weaknesses.
Paul received an unparalleled glimpse of glory (taken into the third heaven), yet God used it not to puff him up but to drive him even deeper into dependence; boasting only in weakness so Jesus Christ’s power rests on him. Paul’s takeaway is revolutionary; He will boast gladly in weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities, all for Christ’s sake. It’s a stark contrast to Satan’s schemes of pride and self-exaltation.
This isn’t masochism or a denial of his pain; it’s a reorientation of his thoughts. And it's not some sort of psychological mind game Paul is playing with himself. It's not self-deception, but a profound, Spirit-grounded certainty rooted in what he has genuinely encountered and been taught by God. Paul knows what he knows because he has been directly confronted with divine reality; the third heaven vision, the thorn in his flesh as a divine safeguard against pride, and most crucially, the Lord’s own voice declaring, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness". This isn’t psychological gymnastics; it’s experiential knowledge forged in suffering, revelation, and direct communion with Christ. He believes it deeply because it’s been proven true in his life; his weaknesses didn’t disqualify him, they became the very platform for Christ’s strength to be displayed unmistakably.
Ironically, it's in fact mind games that Satan employs when he gets into the spirit of the "super-apostles" who boasted in their outward impressiveness; eloquence, visions (real or fabricated), statuses, and performances, all to exalt themselves and draw followers to themselves. Their approach fed their pride, the very vulnerability Satan exploits. With whispers of self-sufficiency, doubt in grace’s sufficiency, or the lure of adding human effort/ritual to Christ’s finished work.
It's no coincidence that every time you come across an objection to Jesus Christ's divinity, or hear/read about how God's grace is filtered through human means, the challenge always becomes a point of pride in the strengths of the human intellect and institutions. It always comes mocking, and pumped up. The objections to Christ’s full divinity (like reducing Him to a created being, a moral teacher, or denying His eternal equality with the Father) or the insistence that grace must be "filtered" through human mediators (sacraments as essential channels, church institutions as gatekeepers, rituals/cooperation as co-contributors to salvation) almost always arrive wrapped up in the same tone. Mocking, puffed-up, intellectually superior, institutionally confident. It’s the hallmark of the pride Paul repeatedly exposes in 2 Corinthians 10–12 and elsewhere. And it's why Paul pivots now to an explanation about how our weaknesses are Christ's strength.
Satan’s strategy hasn’t changed since Eden. He doesn’t need to overpower believers outright; he exploits the flesh’s vulnerability to pride by whispering that we can (or must) add something of ourselves to make the gospel "better," "more complete," or "more respectable."
Satan whispers:
"Surely grace alone is too simple/radical/weak; we need human wisdom, tradition, performance, or hierarchy to secure it."
The result?
Always the subtle shift where Christ is diminished; either in His divine sufficiency or in His exclusive role as Mediator. And guess what then? Human effort/status takes center stage.
It all goes back to the beginning of the infowar. The serpent’s first lie: "You will be like God" (Genesis 3:5).
Pride promising god-like autonomy through forbidden knowledge/effort. Jesus called it out when he saw it in the Pharisees and the doctors of the law. Jesus called it out as prideful blindness. It's a pumped up blind faith in human efforts, and always comes mocking the cross as "foolishness". It often comes with condescension toward "simple" faith-alone believers. Whether denying Christ’s deity to fit rationalism/modern sensibilities or adding mediators/works to grace; it's always filled with pride in its own doings.
Satan packages his deception in piety, intellect, and tradition. Appealing to the flesh’s desire for control, and prestige. It's why they built up impressive cathedrals and monuments to their own glory and the work of their hands. Pride doesn’t just whisper self-exaltation; it builds monuments to itself, cloaked in the language of devotion to God, because simple dependence on grace alone threatens the prestige of human achievement. Soaring heights symbolizing aspiration toward heaven, funded partly through indulgences (promises of reduced time in purgatory for donations) and heavy taxation. No mention of that human achievement of course. Their extravagance diverted resources from feeding the poor or supporting hospitals; spending that reflected misplaced priorities, where the church’s power and prestige took precedence.
Jesus calls these things, "whitewashed tombs". Beautiful on the outside, dead inside, because their system prioritized performance, status, and control over heart-level faith.
When grace is filtered through human channels it inevitably shifts trust from Christ’s sufficiency to our own systems. The architecture and furniture follows; it is the fruit of their works. Cathedrals, with their relics, altars, and towering spires, can become physical embodiments of that shift, where the structure itself becomes a mediator, drawing awe to human craftsmanship and institutional power rather than to the cross alone.
And of course they'll always argue that it is not worshipping those idols, but an appreciation. It’s not worship (latria, reserved for God alone); it’s veneration (dulia) or honor given to the saint, relic, or image because of what they represent.
And of course my reply is then:
"So why are you on your knees before it?"
Cutting right through the semantic layers and landing flat on the observable reality. The posture itself tells the truth.
Scripture repeatedly associates kneeling and bowing with worship, submission, and adoration in contexts reserved for God alone. And scripture thoroughly admonishes bowing before statues, angels, or any created thing.
As the angel told John:
"Don’t do that! …Worship God!" (Revelation 19:10)
Likewise as with the bronze serpent that started out as a God-ordained healing tool but soon became an idol (Nehushtan) when people burned incense to it, prompting God's harsh punishment (2 Kings 18:4). God told them look at it, not kneel before it, celebrate it, not even reflect on it, just look. But per usual...
You can nuance the language about forms of worship all you want, but honestly it sounds a lot like a child trying to mello out their parents rebuke by shoving all their toys under the bed and calling the room picked up. The mess is still right there, just hidden. Sounds sophisticated on paper, but when the outward actions mirror what Scripture condemns; kneeling, bowing, prostrating, praying before created things, and elevating men above or as substitutes for Christ, the distinction feels more like a convenient cover than a biblical safeguard. Scripture is clear, it doesn’t carve out a safe space for religious bowing or kneeling before images, angels, or saints.
Yes intentions matter.
So let your intentions be known boldly and clearly as Paul does. Be bold in your weaknesses in Christ, bold in your love for God alone. Speak of Him and His gospel, not your traditions. Praise His name, and no other. Kneel before Him, prostrate your heart, mind, spirit and strength at His feet. Pray to Him for forgiveness, protection, provision, and mercy . Serve Him and His Family (the church). Worship Him, and Him alone.
Drop all the pompous tricks of the trade. Be bold, unapologetic, stripped-down to the essence of true worship, Spirit and truth. No hidden toys under the bed, no semantic sleight-of-hand to soften the rebuke. The posture, the direction of reverence, the focus of the heart, all matter because they reveal where trust truly rests.
Paul saw through it all: his former credentials were "rubbish" compared to knowing Christ (Philippians 3:8). He didn’t boast in his visions or his status; he boasted gladly in his weaknesses so Christ’s power would rest on him.
This is why I have such a heart for prison ministry. In Kairos prison ministry, this unadorned gospel cuts through the fog of the spiritual infowarfare like a sword because the setting strips away all our illusions of human impressiveness. No grand architecture to hide behind, no traditions, no rituals to perform for show, just raw need meeting raw grace. And the Holy Spirit ALWAYS shows up. Men there often come to see this quickly, that true freedom isn’t in adding layers but in shedding them. Surrendering their pride, trusting Christ alone, and finding strength in admitted weakness (something you never do in prison).
Let's get back to a pure devotion to Christ; undefiled by mind games or added yokes. Let your intentions be known boldly; speak of Him, His gospel, His finished work. Worship Him, and Him alone.
In Christ's Holy name, Amen