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Spiritual Warfare
Dispossessing the Enemy
"Enlarge the
place of your tent, stretch your tent curtains wide, do not
hold back... For you will spread out to the right and to the
left; your descendants will dispossess nations and
settle in their desolate cities" Isaiah 54:2‑3.
The Macquarie Dictionary defines "dispossess" as
"to put (a person) out of possession, especially of real
property; to oust". Ephesians 6:12 tells us that our fight is
"against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of
the darkness of this world" (KJV). These "principalities and
powers" exercise authority over communities ‑ suburbs, cities,
regions and nations.
Principalities and Powers
The Greek words for "principalities and powers"
used in Ephesians 6:12 and elsewhere are:
Arche......."Principalities" ‑ "The rule of a
prince, the realm of a prince's rule, a princedom"
Exousia....."Powers" ‑ "Authority, mastery,
delegated influence"
Principalities are realms of authority ‑ natural
or spiritual ‑ and not intrinsically evil (see Titus 3:1; Col.
1:16). Principalities are demographically defined ‑ that is,
defined by the boundaries of human communities and their
cultures (note Acts 17:26‑27; Deut. 32:8; 2 Kings 17:29‑33; 1
Cor. 10:20).
God's Strategy
Colossians 2:10 and 15 describes the double
effect of the Cross upon the world's principalities.
They have been spoiled
"[God]
disarmed the principalities and powers ranged against us and
made a bold display and public example of them, in
triumphing over them in Him and in it [the cross]" Col. 2:15
(Amp).
That word "disarmed" literally means "to divest
wholly, to put off, to spoil". Again, the word "divest" means
"to strip or deprive of anything, to take away or alienate". The
Cross stripped each principality of its realm.
They are being dispossessed
Colossians 2:10 tells us that Christ is now
"head of all principality and power" (KJV). Every realm that
belonged to demonic principalities now rightfully belongs to
Christ. The Church now takes this "sentence against them" and
dispossesses those principalities (see also 1 Corinthians
15:24‑25).
Seats and Strongholds
"The weapons
we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the
contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds. We
demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up
against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every
thought to make it obedient to Christ" 2 Corinthians 10:4‑5.
Strongholds
Spiritual warfare targets spiritual strongholds.
A stronghold is a place of military refuge and a base for
attack. The enemy builds strongholds in the community and in
individual lives. 2 Cor. 10:5‑6 indicates that these strongholds
are made up of "lies" (John 8:44) and patterns of behavioural
"disobedience" (1 John 3:8). Spiritual strongholds are
mindsets, constructed out of five elements:
30862. Outlooks and philosophies (Col. 2:8;
Rom. 12:2) ‑ "arguments, theories and reasonings" (Amp)
30863. Pretensions ‑ "proud and lofty
things" (Amp)
30864. Misconceptions/preconceptions ‑
"thoughts"
30865. Purposes counter to God's will ‑
"purpose" (Amp)
30866. Patterns of disobedience (verse 6)
Seats
The seat of a principality is its critical
element of authority and control. The ultimate purpose of
spiritual warfare is the overthrow of the Satanic principality
(Matthew 12:29), replacing it with the Lordship of Christ, who
is now Head over every principality and power.
The Task of the Saints
"May the
praise of God be in their mouths and a double‑edged sword in
their hands, to inflict vengeance on the nations and
punishment on the peoples, to bind their kinds with fetters,
their nobles with shackles of iron, to carry out the
sentence written against them. This is the glory of all
his saints" Psalm 149:6‑9 (see also Isaiah 54:2‑3; 24:21).
The victory against evil principalities and
powers was won on the Cross. It is now the Church's charge to
participate in the "mopping up". We "carry out" the sentence
written against them: by the work of the Cross.
Deseating the Enemy
Read Daniel 9‑10. Through prayer, Daniel became
a participant in warfare between Michael ("one of the chief
princes") and the "prince of Persia". Notice, however, that
Daniel doesn't go against the Prince of Persia ‑ the
principality ‑ in direct confrontation, but through prayer
takes away his grounds for authority (see also Jude 8‑9).
The Authority
Base
"...in which
you used to live when you followed the ways of this world
and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air, the spirit
who is now at work in those who are disobedient"
Ephesians 2:2.
People are the authority base of a Satanic
principality. The community unknowingly gives the
authority to the prince power by setting up the spiritual
strongholds for him (see Proverbs 25:28).
Like Daniel, however, the people of God can
change the authority base of a principality.
Through Prayer
In Daniel 9, we see the essential elements of
Daniel's prayer:
30947. The authority of God's Word (verse
1‑2)
30948. The whole heart (verse 3)
30949. Identification with the community
(verse 4)
30950. The highest motive (verses 17‑19)
Prayer is simply becoming one in heart with the
purposes of God, speaking our desire that "your kingdom come,
your will be done on earth as it is in heaven" (Matthew 6:10).
Through prayer we "reconquer" the land for the Lord.
Through our lives
But prayer is not enough to change the Enemy's
authority base in our community. It is people's lives that
provide Satan with the authority base, and it is our lives that
take it away from him.
The tragedy is that the Enemy establishes the
same strongholds in the Church as he has in the world. We will
only be effective in our spiritual warfare as we eliminate those
strongholds from Church life. Note that the Apostle Paul was
speaking about the Corinthian Church when he talked about
demolishing spiritual strongholds.
We are called, as agents of God's warfare, to
live in the opposite spirit to that of the world. If a
community stronghold is pride, then we must emphasis humility.
If it is greed, then generosity. If competition, then
self‑sacrifice.
Again we see in Daniel's life (together
with Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego), not just in their prayers,
the victories they won over the ruling principalities.
|
Israel's Disobedience |
Daniel's Obedience |
|
(2 Kings 17) |
(Daniel 1‑9) |
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Followed idols |
"...the Lord my God" (9:4) |
|
Imitated the nations |
Refused the king's food (1:7‑8) |
| |
Fiery furnace (ch. 3) |
|
Forsook the commands of the Lord |
Obeyed the Lord (ch. 6). |
Visitation
When a Satanic principality is overthrown, the
result is visitation ‑ the moving of God's Spirit in
power, bringing multitudes into the Kingdom of God and
establishing God's Stronghold in the community (Proverbs 18:10). |