1. Josh quoted his three-year-old: "Every day has swords." Where in your life right now is the fight most obvious — where are you taking the most hits?
2. Paul says the real enemy is not flesh and blood, but we spend most of our energy fighting people. Who or what are you actually mad at right now, and is there any chance that's the wrong target?
3. The sermon argued that every conversion is a direct loss for the cosmic powers — souls that used to belong to them, gone. Does that raise the stakes for you on evangelism? Why do you think we treat it like a low-priority activity when the powers apparently don't?
4. Paul puts forgiveness and unity inside the body of Christ on the list of active battlefields — the devil is specifically scheming to blow up your relationships in this church. Where are you most tempted to let an offense sit rather than deal with it? What's your plan?
5. The whole sermon is built on the argument that prayer is the fight, not the warm-up to the fight. Be straight with yourself: are you actually praying like you're in a war, or are you mostly praying when you're desperate? What changes this week?