Spiritual warfare

The longer I walk with the Lord, the more I realize that nothing happens as coincidence, as bad or good luck, as fate, happenstance, or any other cultural mindset to preclude the existence and intervention of an omnipotent, omniscient, and sovereign God.

If you look closely at world patterns, at religion and belief systems, ideologies, you begin to see the way that the enemy has infiltrated our thought patterns, behaviors, and social norms. His undermining of God’s authority has come by the interweaving of a double sided coin intended to spread lies and suppress truth. The enemy would have us believe that we have more control in the outcome of our circumstances than God. We may not consciously think this, but how often do we plan out our day without consulting Him? How often do we seek His kingdom over our own? How often do we sacrifice comfort for the labor of taking up our own cross to follow him? How often do we die to self in order to obey?

God is either sovereign over all or He is sovereign over nothing. His word is either infallible or it isn’t. There is no middle ground by which we’re able to accept the pieces that make sense and dismiss, modernize, or ignore the pieces that we don’t understand. We don’t have to understand it to accept it. In fact, without the Holy Spirit, the Helper, teaching and revealing truth to us we won’t understand a bit of it. God has chosen to reveal Himself to His people through His word, but it is the Holy Spirit who opens our spiritual eyes, who removes the veil so that we may see the truth of God’s word, and as we journey in our walk with Him, the revelation of God will come during the process of our individual sanctification.

To ignore the intervention and action of the enemy would be short sighted. It would dismiss fundamental truths taught in scripture. It would ignore the experience and example of Jesus’ life and ministry. From the very first book of the Bible, Genesis chapter 3, at the very beginning of scripture, the enemy heard the prophecy concerning a coming Messiah who would crush him. He knew that this foretold Messiah would defeat him. From this point forward, Satan has sought to destroy God’s plan. He has gone to extreme lengths, including the genocide of Jewish boys beginning in the book of Exodus, the second book of the Bible. Pharroh realized that the Jews had grown mighty in number as slaves under his command. He ordered the murder of thousands of Jewish male children. In this story a baby named Moses was delivered by God through the hand of his mother in the Nile. Later, God would use Moses as a picture of redemption when he would raise Moses up as deliverer to lead the Israelites out of Egypt, out of their bondage and slavery.

Satan tried again when Herod heard, through wise men traveling to Bethlehem, that a king for the Israelites had been born. Again, this wicked king sought to destroy the male toddlers and babies born in that region during this time, and he succeeded to kill many. But, Jesus was delivered to Egypt through a dream sent to Joseph, the husband of Jesus’ mother Mary, warning him that the family was in danger.

Satan has sought to destroy the Israelite people since the beginning of scripture in order to prevent the foretold Messiah from accomplishing the will of God to bring redemption for mankind and reconcile us to the Father. He thought that he had succeeded when Jesus drew his final breath on the cross.

At the point of Jesus’ death, Satan knew that Jesus was the foretold Messiah. God announced the ministry of Jesus, Himself, as Jesus obeyed in a public declaration of faith by being baptized by John in the Jordan. Immediately after Jesus was proclaimed as Messiah, Satan began his attempt to destroy him. You can read about this in the book of Matthew chapter 4. He followed Jesus into the desert and sought to entrap Him into sin, which would have invalidated His ability to offer Himself as the sinless savior. But, Jesus was able to resist Him by refuting His lies with truth. In our engagement with the enemy, the Bible doesn’t tell us to declare war, take up arms, and seek to do God’s job. Vengeance is mine, says the Lord. As far as we’re told, we are to resist the devil, and he will flee” (James 4:7).

Satan must have sighed in relief as Jesus’ body was laid in the tomb but, oh, how he must have trembled when that stone rolled aside. Satan knows that God’s people are key to the second coming of Christ, so he has continued His attempt to defy God and stop God’s plan by the destruction of God’s people, and His church during this time. However, the books of Isaiah, Revelation, the Gospels, all reveal that Jesus has already defeated Satan. He is simply working within his God ordained time until the day when Jesus crushes him once and for all. The Bible says that the enemy will ramp up the attack as he feels the last days coming.

God is either sovereign over all or He is sovereign over nothing. We know how the story ends. Those who have been redeemed by the blood of Jesus, who have had truth revealed to them by the power of the Holy Spirit, know what’s coming. If you don’t know how the story ends, seek the Lord today.

Today is the day of salvation. The plan includes defeating Satan once and for all and establishing a new heaven and new earth where he will no longer have any reign or control. Don’t ignore the spiritual attacks the enemy will wage against you to keep you blind and consider the truth of the gospel. The Bible says, “for the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God” (1 Corinthians 1:18).

God bless.

Even if

The study of scripture and making it part of daily practice, even when we don’t feel like it, is part of the refining process that God uses to make us more into the image of Christ. I remind myself, when I’m called to obedience that just feels too hard, that if I’m not sweating drops of blood due to the agony of understanding what obedience will require, I still haven’t been asked to obey to the same extent as my Lord. But life really has a way of knocking us down. In some of those hard moments, I’m prone to sarcastically, even bitterly, lament, “well, I’m not Jesus. I don’t have the strength that He did.” He was, after all, God in human form.

While it is true that Jesus is God, and was God while He was on earth, when he took on flesh He became fully man, which means He surrendered His authority, willingly submitting Himself to the will of the Father. At the point that Jesus sweat blood in the garden of Gethsemane, He had the same amount of power that I have access to by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. So, really, when I find myself in a pool of self-pity thinking that I have every right to wallow because I’m not Jesus, what I’m really saying is, I’d rather wallow in this pool of pity than I am willing to come to the table of discipline and ask God, “what,” instead of “why.” When we ask God, “in what way are you desiring me to grow in your likeness through this,” rather than, “why could you let this happen to me,” we enable the sort of growth that the Lord mercifully uses to sanctify us.

Anxiety drives a lot of my function. I’m afraid of the outcome of events, to an almost paralyzing degree at times, even if all that is being asked of me is simply to interact in social settings. My thoughts turn into a raging series of “what-ifs,” that play like a highlight reel in my mind. Some of these fears are products of things I have actually experienced. Some are the result of knowledge I have due to some of those experiences, but remain hypothetical, and only serve to make me more anxious and more withdrawn. When I fall into these pits of fear and worry, it’s most often during periods of time when I’ve placed myself into the driver’s seat, thinking that if I can just budget well enough, if I can parent well enough, if I wife well enough, if I daughter well enough, if I person well enough, that all will go well. But, the diligent study of scripture teaches us that when things go well, it is simply because of God’s grace, and not as a result of anything we’ve done or not done well enough.

We study scripture because it teaches us about God’s character and rightly positions Him in the driver’s seat. What I learn from my savior, is that willing submission leads to the accomplishing of God’s will through me. When I yield to His control, rather than seeking to cling to the idea that I harbor the capacity for control myself, He is able to accomplish His will through me. Nothing I do will prevent His will from coming to fruition, but when I toil, wrestle with God, seek to fulfill what I believe His plan to be on my own terms, I rob myself of the ability to be used by Him. As long as I dwell in the fear of “what if,” I will never abide in the perfect peace of “even if.”

Even if things go poorly, His plan is perfect. Even if everything looks hopeless, He is still on the throne. Even if I feel like I can’t go on, I know His strength will sustain me. Even if I am called to sacrifice for the name and glory of God, I know that He is making all things new, and will one day restore all that I’ve lost. Studying scripture, even when I don’t know where to start or what to do, and diligently practicing the implementation of its instruction, brings me into the shadow of His wings, as I dwell in the secret place of the Most High. (Psalm 91:1)

Even if I can’t see the plan unfolding, and don’t know the outcome, I can be certain He is bringing together all things for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purpose (Romans 8:28).

Today is the day of salvation. Even if you’ve spent a lifetime running, rejected, hurting, alone, it’s not too late to see Him work miracles for your good, and to His glory.

Isaiah 55: 6-7 provides this promise:

Seek the Lord while he may be found;
    call upon him while he is near;
let the wicked forsake his way,
    and the unrighteous man his thoughts;
let him return to the Lord, that he may have compassion on him,
    and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.

No matter where you are in life, seek the Lord. He will have compassion. He will abundantly pardon even if you’ve run from Him for a long time. His desire is for you to come to Him.

God bless.