The Biblical Reason Narcissists Can’t Stop Lying (Exposed)
There comes a moment—not all at once, but slowly, like dusk creeping across a valley—when the narcissist starts to lose grip, not just on truth but on the very sense of truth. Scripture puts it like this: “Although they knew God, they neither glorified Him as God nor gave thanks to Him. Their thinking became futile, and their foolish hearts were darkened.” You hear that? Not uninformed, not unaware, but futile and darkened. That’s the beginning of a mind unraveling from reality.
When someone keeps lying long enough—when they bend the truth, crush it, hide it, and twist it—it doesn’t just fool others; eventually, it fogs their own soul. At first, it’s just denial—here a little blame-shifting, there nothing too dramatic. But then the lies pile up, layer upon layer, until one day the narcissist looks in the mirror and no longer sees clearly. The truth is buried; the weight of the stories they’ve told themselves does not help. Psychologists have a term for this: confabulation. But Scripture was there long before the textbooks. This is more than memory tricks; this is moral decay. The narcissist starts believing their own fantasy, not because it’s real, but because it’s safer than facing the ruin of their choices.
And here’s the terrifying part: when someone rewrites their own history long enough, it becomes easier to stay in the fantasy than step out of it. Facing the truth feels like death because to admit the truth means they’d have to face themselves; they’d have to admit they were never the hero of their own story, but the saboteur. And as the lies tighten their grip, clarity fades. The narcissist walks through life with a smile and a script, but that heart? That heart’s darkened, numb, hollow. The soul gets blurry, and relationships suffer because how can you build anything real on a foundation of fiction?
So friend, when you wonder, “Do they really believe what they’re saying?” the answer is sometimes yes, because they’ve built a whole world out of lies and they’ve moved in.
Stage Four: When God Lets Them Have What They Want
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