The Personality Profile of the Enemy

Believers don’t like to consider the devil and what he is like.  After all, he invents ways to bring devastation. But while his appetite is to kill and destroy, his greatest damage is inflicted on another battlefield, that of the mind.  The effect is tragic!  He skews our spiritual eyesight so that we can not see the glory of Jesus.  He destroys any possibility for us to be captivated by Him.  He knows that if we’re drawn to the Savior, love and devotion will be the results.  For this reason alone, we should know who he is and how he works against us.  To our peril, we ignore the topic.  

Why?  Let’s consider a couple of reasons. 

  1. We’re afraid we will be imbalanced.

There’s an argument that goes like this. ‘To give the devil any thought at all is to be imbalanced, giving him glory that only belongs to God.’ When those in military warfare give thought to the enemy they are fighting, does it exalt them?  No.  It is part of the strategy to …..achieve victory.  The Apostle Paul said, “We will not be outwitted by Satan; for we are not ignorant of his designs.”  2 Corinthians 2:11  If he wasn’t, we can’t afford to be.  

2.    We live insulated from overt manifestations of evil.

Middle-class Americans who have lived relatively peaceful lives find it hard to believe that taking the kingdom of darkness seriously is really important.  Perhaps you’ve heard a comment like, “I’ve never encountered a demon or felt attacked by one. So why learn deliverance?  That just seems too radical.”  Sound familiar?

We can’t afford to be ignorant about spiritual warfare. It touches every area of our lives—our families, relationships, church, neighborhoods, communities, and places of employment. There is no part of our existence Satan does not assert his influence.

3. We’ve adopted a Western worldview.

We believe that every effect has a physical cause; if you can’t see, touch, taste, smell, or hear it, it probably doesn’t exist.  We attest that every phenomenon can be accounted for scientifically.  If there is a spiritual realm, it has no impact on the physical whatsoever.

Here’s the biblical worldview.  Angels do God’s bidding; demons do Satan’s bidding.  They oppose God’s kingdom.  Miracles, physical healing, gifts of the Holy Spirit, and exercising spiritual authority are essential to impact the physical and spiritual kingdoms. 

Scripture explains much about the enemy and his kingdom of darkness.  We are inclined to study every topic but that one, but it is to our peril.  Becoming a casualty is the result, and it need not be.   Education is one means of protection. 

Accept Your Cherished Identity In The Story

Listen to the LORD who created you, to the One who formed you says, “Do not be afraid, for I have ransomed you. I have called you by name; you are mine.   Isaiah 43:1

Brennan Manning said, “We often feel like the homely peasant girl for whom the king has come to take a bride.” Our sense of self-condemnation often causes us to back away from God’s call to live as His beloved. We feel unworthy. Our pride says that we can’t believe His words. Our understanding of love has been compromised by our experiences with others as we have all felt degraded, excluded, ridiculed, passed over, and a host of other things related to rejection. Memories fester in our souls, and infection grows with time. 

No one gets to define my worth except my Creator. Not a parent, not a caregiver, not a teacher, not a pastor, not a child or spouse. Only God’s opinion matters because His Word trumps all others. He says I’m cherished, and that must be lived out by daily acts of faith.

Many were made to feel unworthy by their parents.  They were never anyone’s priority.  Work came first.  Or other children were preferred.  Perhaps the ministry even trumped their importance. Spouses can also tragically communicate that their mate isn’t worth much, and children often tell their parents, “You’re a bad father or bad mother.”  We tend to absorb their opinions of ourselves.  We rationalize that these are the ones who know us best, so they must have credibility.  No, not if their opinion contradicts God’s opinion.

How do I live cherished in a world where few are cherished?  I believe my Father’s proclamations of love, by faith.  I am no longer to be ruled by the hole in my soul. The story becomes a narrative that I can tell others to extol the Fatherhood of God.  My life is no longer a tragedy.  Though it contains tragic elements, the overriding theme is joyous redemption.  I’m a Daughter of Promise, and every single thing is safely under God’s providence.

Delete and Re-write

Satan was a murderer from the beginning and has nothing to do with the truth because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks out of his own character, for he is a liar and the father of lies.  John 8:44

Satan is a storyteller and a liar.  His default language is lies which means he speaks it instinctively. Satan lives and breathes falsehood.  In our justice system, someone is considered innocent until proven guilty.  But with the devil, the paradigm is flipped.  

If he whispers his version of my story in my ears, and I believe it, I will be tormented.  He will say anything to put me in dead-end thinking.  He’ll attempt to corrupt my trust in God. “See, your faith is in vain. God can’t be trusted. You’re foolish to believe His promises.  They’re not for you.”  If the relationship is fractured, I am vulnerable to his next set of lies.   

How can I know if I’ve succumbed to the enemy’s re-write of my own story?  I look for the feelings that point to lies: despair, hopelessness, depression, unresolved anger, and futility, these are just a few.  I need to be on guard and remember that life presents one sifting exercise after another.  Thoughts come in ~ I examine them ~ and I decide to keep them or throw them away.

I used to believe that an event or a person could ruin my life. It wasn’t true. They can cause pain, but it will be my interpretation of the event and my interpretation of their words that potentially puts me in long-term bondage. Jesus was never trapped by futility and despair.  Though He suffered more than any human being, He never believed lies about his pain. He knew that everything He suffered was redemptive and led to glory.  

I need to figure out where I’ve been lied to and renounce it.  I will have a list of things to discard.  In prayer, I will be making a confession to Jesus, “I used to believe ‘this,’ but I repent and renounce it.  Now, I believe ‘this.” It’s an exchange of the enemy’s lie for God’s truth.  The devil’s stronghold is broken, the torment from the lie is removed, and peace moves in.  

Eighty Pounds Of Wool

 That is why I was angry with that generation; I said, ‘Their hearts are always going astray, and they have not known my ways.’ Hebrews 3:10

Sheep follow any leader.  They are easily distracted.  Going astray doesn’t always begin with malicious intent.  The shepherd and the rest of the flock might move on while one lone sheep remains behind to enjoy a good meal.  Whatever the reason, the outcome is always to his peril.  Separation from the shepherd makes him vulnerable to danger.  It’s often predators, or starvation, or the accumulation of eighty pounds of wool that make him immobile.

What started out as a beautiful rescue in Egypt, morphed into moments of both ecstasy and tragedy.  As the children of Israel despaired, then trusted God, they saw Him move in such stunning ways that it made their enemies tremble.  After a Red Sea parted to allow them safe passage, and then proceeded to swallow an Egyptian army into its depths, one would think that a people would hang tight to their Great Shepherd.  He led them clearly; a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night.  Never was a shepherd clearer to light the path in front of them.

Despite God’s kindness towards His sheep in an unkind wilderness, they strayed.  If I weren’t guilty of the same thing, I’d shake my head in disbelief at their behavior but after a lifetime of mountaintops, how many times have I despaired and then left the path to find more promising pastures?  I’ve been distracted.  I’ve followed other leaders.  I’ve been encumbered by the likes of eighty pounds of wool as the weight of my sin made it hard to move forward.  I languished under the wrath of God.  I knew the crushing weight of sin that made me long to see the face of a Savior.

God said that He was angry with His people for going astray. His fury was kindled by their infidelity.  It didn’t take long for them to complain, to feel entitled, and to build a golden calf.  It didn’t take long in their history to ask for God’s resignation as King so that they could crown their own.  God was longsuffering.  The Great Shepherd sent prophets to woo them back.  Because they were blind, He gave specific directions for their return.  Sometimes they listened, many more times they didn’t.

For the children of Israel, their sin was covered over by the next sacrifice.  For us, the wrath of God was poured out on His Son instead of on us.  Our sins were forgiven and eighty pounds of wool were lifted from our shoulders.  His Word, both the cloud and the pillar of fire, make the pathway on front of us plain to follow.  Jesus promises to lead with a clear voice, to know each of His sheep by name, to nurture intimate relationships so that other voices and other faces will be known as counterfeit.  ‘Astray’ begs to be my history, not my future.

As a child of Yours whose heart is full, I love Your voice.  You lead me to green pastures and banquet tables in Your presence.  I do not want and I need You today as much as yesterday to make my path.  Amen

Go To The Place You Want To Avoid

In John Chapter 4, Jesus talked with the woman at the well in Samaria.  He took intentional steps to prepare her heart to recognize and receive Him.  He began by having them talk about mundane things: water, thirst, and drinking.  He then made a segue way to their spiritual counterparts; spiritual water, a spiritual drink, and spiritual thirst.  Jesus crafted this whole conversation to precede the revelation of Himself as Messiah. Before that could happen, she had to get in touch with her own spiritual thirst.  She needed to wake up her hope.

She came alive as Jesus talked and rose to engage Him in animated conversation.  She finally voiced a desire for what He was offering.  Give me this drink,” she said.  But Jesus didn’t answer, saying, “I am the drink; this is how you consume me.”  Instead, he brought up the subject of her husband, unearthing the most painful topic.  She had been married five times and lived with a sixth man.  It might have appeared as if Jesus changed the subject, but it was only so He could put His finger on the most painful place in her life.  By doing so, His message was clear ~If you want the most profound encounter possible with Me, you must drink of Me where you need Me the mostBecause she didn’t shy away, she received new life. 

What is the worst part of your story? Have you dared unearth the need associated with the memory?  Where does it feel risky to trust God?  What would Jesus say if He sat on the edge of the well with you?  “I saw you at twenty-four when you wanted to give up.”  Or, “When you were little, scared and hiding, thinking no one cared, did you know that I was there?”  In these crises of faith, in the darkest places of unbelief, Jesus calls us to a new awareness that there is such a thing as Living Water.  If we drink of Him, we will never need to look again at fickle sources to give us what we think we need to feel whole.  We will find Him to be enough.  

The Gospel is life-changing only when it intersects with great spiritual need.

Hear The Storyteller

If you’re going to take the plunge and prayerfullyidentify the lies and the truths that have made up your perceptions, you must develop spiritual skills that enable you to hear God’s version of your story.   There is no abundant life without knowing how to hear the voice of the only Storyteller who matters.  

He wants to reveal your personalized redemptive version and believe me; you will want to hear it over and over again as you grow older and prepare to meet Him face to face.  Too many voices in this world attempt to nullify it.  

If God’s version of your story is the only one that matters, how do you hear it?   How do you go to the feet of your Father, sit as a child and listen?  I never knew the answer to this question until I was well into my late forties.  So  I’m going to tell you.  You must learn to live in the presence of God.  This is the secret to intimacy.  The secret to abundant life.  The secret to healing and wholeness.

You and I do that through meditation and prayer.  We are near Him as we process our story so that His ‘take’ on our lives is perceptible.  We sense His reactions to our thoughts, feelings, and events so that we have an accurate barometer for our own.  

The concepts of meditation and prayer are so much a part of our everyday Christian language that they risk becoming cliches. It’s hard to feel the impact of their great significance.  We say, ‘Read the bible and pray’ like we might say, ‘Don’t forget to say please and thank you.’  Taking them seriously is hard unless we spend our lives practicing them. 

In the next chapter, I will show you some ways to engage in biblical meditation, because as you live in the presence of God, you will sense His reaction to things as they happen. You feel His joy over praiseworthy things, and His heavy heart over what is dangerous to your peace.  You will discern His displeasure over some activities and pleasure over others. You’ll get to the point when you will often predict His responses ahead of time.

God’s voice will be a rudder, revealing His version of events and correcting other narratives you’ve always believed were true.  Scripture and prayer will re-wire the ways you think.  They will also align your feelings and slowly change you into someone who thinks, feels, and then acts like Jesus.

This is the lifestyle of one who looks to God as their storyteller.  The Holy Spirit of the Rabbi, Jesus has much to reveal.  His version of your story never ends in tragedy.  Senseless pain is never the last chapter of your life if you trust Him for redemption.  While pain is a thread in the plot line, it does not have the last word.  Glory and redemption are what dazzles.  If you can’t see any trace of a redemptive plot, know that you are not yet seeing your life through God’s eyes.  

What An Iceberg Demonstrates

Consider the iceberg that fatally wounded the Titanic in the Spring of 1912. By the time Murdoch spotted it, there wasn’t enough time to turn sharply enough to avoid it. When they hit, a jagged piece of iceberg under the water ripped part of the hull. 

The part of the iceberg protruding above the waterline was not the most dangerous part. It was what lay beneath. The part visible was small and unimposing compared to what was hidden. Many seafaring novices have been fooled to their peril. 

Let’s think this through further. The part above the waterline is connected to the lower part that catches the currents of the sea. What is visible above water has no power on its own. Is this not a metaphor for the inward life? Beneath the surface of our exterior lies a massive world of beliefs, lies, righteous thinking and erroneous assumptions ~ which are responses to our life’s story. These create a mindset, the very current that takes us on the ride of our lives. What others see and experience on the outside is a shallow and often artificial representation of what is really going on inside. 

It is this hidden world that God wants us to spend time on, to bring it into the Light of His presence. He will affirm what is true, expose what is not, and encourage us to act in faith accordingly. Many Christians believe that the past is irrelevant to the present because they are made new in Christ. While we are new creations, adopted children of our Heavenly Father, and destined for glory, past events still affect us. They have defined us, and the process of sanctification requires us to take each part captive, examine it, and deal with it under the direction of our wonderful Counselor and Healer. 

I am praying for you. Oh, but Jesus is also praying for you. Remember, He will guide you through unchartered territory. 

Let There Be Peace On Earth

And suddenly there appeared with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying, “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among men with whom He is pleased.” Luke 2:14

Greeting card companies have used this quote to promote wishes for peace for all who buy and send their cards. It’s lovely to wish someone we care about a peaceful life, but is this what the angels meant when they announced it? I must look at their entire declaration to understand the meaning ~ ‘peace among men with whom He is pleased.’ 

This phrase is connected to another time in the life of Jesus when He was being baptized. His Father said, “This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased.”  So to whom does peace come? To those with whom the Father is pleased. The conditions for pleasing the Father are to love and accept His Son and to embrace Him as Savior and Lord. For every one who does this, there is peace with God.

This sentiment from the angels cannot be misconstrued to mean that in the coming year, the world will be a more peaceful place. It probably won’t. Times here will only prove more perilous as end times play out. God’s plan moves along according to God’s timetable, leading us to the day when Jesus will reign on earth, and we will enjoy peace – internally and externally – for the first time.

For every one of us who has made peace with God through Christ, peace is ours now. We needed Jesus to bear the Father’s wrath in our place. And because He did that, we can rest in the peace of forgiven sins. We must rest in the peace that exists between us and the Father.

Peace with you is my greatest treasure! Thank you. Amen

The Infant Light Of The World

Before the foundation of the world, Jesus was Light.  That didn’t change at His incarnation.  Whether infant, boy child or the adult Jesus in full-time ministry, He was always the Light of the world. And I know what spiritual light does.  It draws and warms the searching heart but also exposes and convicts.  I am naive to think that the full ramifications of living as God’s righteous Son only began in His adulthood.  It wouldn’t be long after Jesus’ birth that His righteous gaze saw clear through people, even the souls of His parents.  I sometimes wonder if young Jesus was punished simply because the adults felt exposed by His light.   Guilt and shame often initiate rash acts of revenge.

Though scripture doesn’t fill in the blanks of Jesus’ childhood, there are things I can safely assume because of who Jesus is.  His light exposes darkness, whether a child, adolescent, or adult.  It divides children’s play.  It challenged the rabbis in the temple.  It pierced the conversations at family gatherings.  I am to live the life Jesus lived by choosing light and rejecting darkness.  With Him dwelling in me, He enables me to sort one against another. This spiritually inductive process happens all day long and has the same combustible reactions in a group that Jesus experienced.  From the moment I am set apart for sanctification, His light in me draws or offends.

Other disciples can lead me in paths of righteousness, but not always.  How well I sort out and separate light from darkness will depend on how well I know Jesus.   I affirm my worship of the Light of the world, even as the cooing infant in Mary’s arms.

Light is clean, direct, and reveals everything in its path.  Darkness is obscure, tormenting, and hides the path I am to take.  Oh Lord Jesus, I choose Your way.  Amen

Jesus Went To The Missionfield

Instead, he gave up his divine privileges. He [Jesus] took the humble position of a slave and was born as a human being. Philippians 2:7

I’ve witnessed the pain a parent feels when their child boards a plane for far off places. The mission field beckons with all of its rewards and its dangers. The parents can’t foretell the future so they are not certain they will see their child again. They grieve as if they might not. Yet, they rejoice that some future reunion will ultimately be an eternal one.

Christian parents know it won’t be easy. The more hostile the culture to Christianity, the more danger their child faces. There will be want, discouragement, defeat, even threats of persecution. There will also be mountaintops, spiritual victories, and unexpected miracles. Does God understand a parent’s misgivings and broken heart when goodbyes are said? Yes, He experienced it firsthand.

The Trinity had always been together, functioning in perfect harmony from before time. Their synergy is described in terms of a rhythmic slow dance. They moved in perfect sync. Each had a clearly defined role and the execution of them was achieved without the slightest hint of friction.

Imagine how their rhythm was disrupted when the Son left the Trinity to go to His mission field. Intimacy was disrupted as the Son became a child in Mary’s womb. God, the Father, bade His Son goodbye and watched Him leave. God was able to see into the future. There was no fear of the unknown but there was pain. He knew what awaited His child. He envisioned the 40 days of temptation in the desert. He knew Lucifer intimately and could predict the all out war that would be waged. God knew who would accept Jesus as the Messiah. He knew the faces of those who would openly reject Him, too. He foresaw the close calls; the brushes with death as crowds plotted to kill Jesus. He meticulously planned each way of escape to ensure that His Son would fulfill His mission at Calvary. And yes, the Father also rejoiced, in advance, over the disciples that would be called and mentored. He looked down through the ages and saw an unstoppable church on the move. It would be battered but it would prevail. He saw it all and He felt what human parents feel at their child’s departure. Joy and agony.

As Mary welcomed her newborn Messiah, God had just said goodbye to a part of Himself. From a human perspective, the plan was ludicrous and treacherous. From a divine perspective, there was no other way. The love story of the ages was being written. It was the only way His estranged creation could be restored to paradise.

Father, You gave it all up too. Thank you for counting the cost and deciding that Your creation was worth loving so recklessly. Amen