Shadows of Our Own Making
Shadows of Our Own Making
By man’s own imagination, heinous things have been created.
What we call demons and evil spirits are not always foreign entities—they are often the shadows of our very selves.
When light is cast upon an image, it creates a shadow. And these devils—these spirits that trouble us—are often nothing more than projections of our fears, lusts, greed, jealousy, doubts, and all that stirs the fires of hell within.
Everything we see in this world came to be because someone first imagined it.
People often say, “If we can imagine it, it means it exists.”
But here’s the deeper question:
Do we imagine it because it already exists? Or does it exist because we imagined it?
Because of humanity’s fallen nature, our imagination is often filled with darkness. We imagine from a place of fear, ego, lust, and pain. And as creators, made in God’s image, we give birth to what we envision—good or evil.
We have created monsters.
We have imagined devils.
We have given form to demons.
They are not independent beings.
They are shadows of our own brokenness.
Just like a camera lens distorts an image if the glass is cracked, our fallen spirits distort what we project from within. The result? Shadows. Miscreations. Imaginary terrors that we treat as truth.
These demons and gods we fear are the results of our own internal chaos—fear, disbelief, lust, greed, and selfishness. They are the pigment of our imagination made manifest.
But just as God’s thoughts are real, so too are ours.
That’s how powerful we are.
And the same way we have created them, we can uncreate them.
In doing so, we reclaim the authority we gave to the enemy.
Satan feeds on what we provide—our fear, our doubt, our hatred.
He lives on our negative energy.
And because we made the environment for him, by us he thrives.
But if we stop feeding the darkness, it dies.
We created these shadows.
We gave them life.
But I’m here to remind you:
We can uncreate them.
And when we do, we take back the power we gave away.