Libranos Del Mal -

This is the one we refuse to look at. The capacity for cruelty inside your own heart. The grudge you nourish like a garden. The addiction you defend. The pride that masquerades as virtue. This is the evil Jesus pointed to when he said, “It’s not what goes into a person that defiles them, but what comes out.”

Li-bra-nos del mal.

We want to be protected from liars, but not from our own self-deception.

It’s a phrase so familiar to those raised in the Christian tradition (the final line of the Our Father ) that we often recite it on autopilot. But if we stop—if we really sit with those three Spanish words—they reveal something profound. Because mal (evil) is not just a villain in a movie. It is not just the monster under the bed. Libranos del Mal

Because until we are delivered from the evil within, no wall we build will ever be high enough to keep the evil out.

There is a moment in the night—usually around 3:00 AM—when the silence feels heavy. Not empty, but occupied . The house settles, the wind hums, and suddenly, the fears you managed to silence with daylight come roaring back. It might be a memory of something you did. It might be a dread of something coming. Or it might be a nameless weight, a feeling that something is simply... wrong .

Feel the weight of it.

And then, after the prayer, do the hard part: look at the person in the mirror. Look at the person you’ve been avoiding. Look at the quiet, ordinary evil of your own small cruelties.

You are not asking for a comfortable life. You are asking for a free one. You are admitting that you are in over your head, that the darkness is real, and that you cannot pull yourself out by your own bootstraps.

Libranos del Mal: Why We Need to Rethink the Darkness We Fear Most This is the one we refuse to look at

We want God to deliver us from the enemy, but we refuse to be delivered from our hatred of the enemy.

This is the evil we love to hate: violence, corruption, abuse, injustice. It’s the news cycle that leaves us exhausted. It’s the tyrant, the trafficker, the liar. We want deliverance from them . And rightly so. This evil is real, and it breaks the world.

We want to be saved from poverty, but not from our greed. The addiction you defend

Libranos del mal is a cry for rescue from all three. But especially the third. Here is our great spiritual mistake: we spend our lives trying to build walls against the evil out there , while the evil in here (our own resentments, fears, and selfishness) runs the show.

Que seamos librados. Hoy y siempre. (May we be delivered. Today and forever.) Libranos del Mal isn’t a magic spell. It’s a surrender. It’s the admission that the fight against evil begins not with conquering the world, but with naming the darkness inside your own room. And then, in the bravest move of all, asking for the Light to come in.