Of Spiritual Warfare and Spiritual Armor

Many in the faith are drawn to the mystical, the dramatic, the spectacular. Seldom do we see this more than when we discuss issues of spiritual warfare. One need only mention the supernatural, angels, demons, possession, exorcism, and the like before others get wide-eyed and fascinated.

I remember as a high school student going to a youth retreat where the topic of teaching was the armor of God. We took multiple sessions of study to examine each piece of the Roman soldier’s armor and see how each of those pieces symbolically applies to our Christian lives. I remember other settings where I heard of Christians who declared to me that they pray each morning to don each piece of the armor of God. And while I am grateful to God for the spiritual encouragement I gained from that retreat and for the sincerity of the believer “praying on their helmet,” I think there is a better way for us to think about this issue.

Ephesians 6:14–18a

14 Stand therefore, having fastened on the belt of truth, and having put on the breastplate of righteousness, 15 and, as shoes for your feet, having put on the readiness given by the gospel of peace. 16 In all circumstances take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming darts of the evil one; 17 and take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God, 18 praying at all times in the Spirit, with all prayer and supplication.

As Paul draws his letter to the Ephesians to a close, the imprisoned disciple seems to draw a metaphor from the battle uniform of a Roman soldier. Perhaps Paul is even looking across the room at one. All of these elements are metaphorical ways to look at doing spiritual rather than physical battle. After all, Paul tells us that our struggle is not one against flesh and blood.

What some may fine disappointing—what I as a teenager would have found dull—is the fact that this metaphor from Paul is a dramatic picture focusing believers on ordinary means of living for Jesus. Yes, the uniform is dramatic. But, no, the things it represents are not.

If you were to ask somebody, “How do I battle for my soul against the devil,” what would they tell you? First and foremost, let’s remember that our souls are secure in Christ because of his work and not based on our goodness. But with that said, how do we participate in spiritual warfare? Do we have to learn strategies against the devil? Do we have to learn MMA submission holds to make the demons tap out?

I’ll tell you what we have to do. But, before I do, let me warn you against a soft Gnosticism. Remember, in the late first and second centuries, Gnostics were folks that claimed to have found secret spiritual knowledge that would elevate them to the locked places of heavenly existence. And the Scripture, though written before Gnosticism flourished, warned sharply against such thinking. So, do not think that there is any value in you learning a spiritual secret. There are no good spiritual secrets for you to learn. What you should learn is Scripture. Learn to do the will of God by obeying and conforming to his holy word.

Now, let’s talk spiritual warfare. Particularly, let’s talk about the tools apart from the imagery. What do you use to defeat the devil and win the battle? God says to fight with these weapons and defenses: truth, righteousness, gospel, faith, salvation, Scripture, and prayer. I’m not even going to break those down. Just think about them. Do they sound like a secret? Are they extra dramatic? How would you classify living by truth, righteousness, gospel, faith, salvation, Scripture, and prayer?

The point that God is making for us in Ephesians 6 is not that there is a secret way to beat up the devil. Instead, the point is that you, believer, fight the spiritual battle by participating in ordinary means of grace, ordinary spiritual disciplines, ordinary methods of following Jesus. You trust Jesus. You love the word. You rely on the finished work of the Savior. You seek to grow based on Scripture. You seek to repent of sin. You pray. You share the gospel. You live an ordinary, faithful, Jesus-loving, Bible-saturated Christian life, and this is how you fight the spiritual war that rages.

You will never faithfully fight the spiritual war while embracing sin. You will never win the battle apart from the local church. You will never find victory seeking something outside of the Scripture. You will never find a secret code word to make the devil turn tail and run. You will never find a way to please God beyond trusting Jesus, repenting of Sin, and loving the Lord and your neighbor.

I know, ordinary sounds so, well, ordinary. But the ordinary way of living the true Christian life is a great joy. And the ordinary way of following Jesus is exactly how we play our role in the spiritual battle. Sure, there are things going on in the heavenly places we do not see. Sure, there are angels and demons doing battle. But the truth is, this is none of our business. God never called us to look for devils. God called us to love Jesus, love one another, love his word, and be faithful. Our God who is the Almighty, he will handle the invisible battlefield, and this should give us hope.

Cup of Demons

One of the sad results of our modern age is that even Christians have been taught to look down our noses at the supernatural. Perhaps we understand that miracles happened in biblical times. Perhaps we will be like the world and look for naturalistic explanations to explain away what biblical authors clearly knew to be miracles. But for many Christians, there seems to be a bit of a blush, a shaking of the head, a shrugging of the shoulders when topics like angels and demons come up. It is as if we are people who have an embarrassing drunken grandmother whom we still have to claim as family; we wish we did not have to, but she is family, and we love her nonetheless.

But, Christians, if you love the word of God, you cannot shake your head at the word’s claim of the supernatural. You must believe that God created the earth out of nothing but his word. You must believe that Jesus lived, died, and rose again. You must believe that supernatural spiritual beings called angels and demons exist. And no matter how modern you want to be, you cannot ignore these points.

Look at what Paul said about those who worshipped idols in temples back in the first century.

1 Corinthians 10:19-20 – 19 What do I imply then? That food offered to idols is anything, or that an idol is anything? 20 No, I imply that what pagans sacrifice they offer to demons and not to God. I do not want you to be participants with demons.

Paul said that pagans in temples offered sacrifices to demons. Note that Paul is not saying that nothing spiritual or supernatural took place in those religions. Rather, Paul said that the worship in those temples was evil, men sacrificing to and worshipping demons. It was very real, very spiritual, very evil.

The reason we need to think about this today is that we must not become so scientifically smug in our generation that we ignore the very plain word of
God regarding the spiritual world. Angels are real. Demons exist. Things beyond the scientifically explainable have happened, still do happen, and will happen in the future.

What should we do with this thought? Not much, really. Know that we live in a world that is far more complex than what we can see or explain. Know that the miraculous is not foolish, primitive superstition. Know that it is quite possible that those who claim miraculous spiritual encounters from other religions may well be telling the truth, even if the spirits they encounter are demonic. Stop letting yourself think that we somehow understand the universe better than did Jesus or Paul. Don’t go on a mission to find and cast out the demons like you are in a bad Christian novel. Just obey God, believe his word, and take the spiritual seriously.