Ephesians 4:19
Who being past feeling have given themselves over unto lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness.
Cross-reference
Ephesians 5:3 commands that impurity not even be named — the direct ethical opposite of giving oneself up to it.
Romans 1:24-26 describes God giving people over to their lusts—same pattern of callousness and surrender to impurity.
In 1 Timothy 4:2, Paul describes those with seared consciences — the same calloused insensitivity to sin as 'past feeling' here.
2 Peter 2:12-14 portrays false teachers as slaves to lust and greed—mirroring the callous pursuit of impurity.
Romans 1:26 says God gave people over to dishonorable passions — the divine counterpart to self-abandonment to impurity.
Colossians 3:5 commands putting to death impurity and covetousness — the active opposite of indulging them.
1 Thessalonians 4:7 states God's call is to holiness, not impurity — opposing the self-abandonment to impurity.
Judges 19:25 depicts the gang rape of a woman — a horrific example of callousness and giving over to sensuality.
1 Peter 4:3 catalogs similar Gentile practices—sensuality, passions, and debauchery that believers have left behind.
Proverbs 23:35 describes the drunkard's callous indifference and insatiable craving — mirroring the greed for impurity.
2 Peter 2:10 describes those who indulge in defiling passions — a similar portrayal of giving in to sensual impurity.
Revelation 18:3 ties nations' corruption to the prostitute's immorality and greed—parallel to greedy impurity here.