Spiritual Warfare: Ephesians 6:12 - Part 2
In the first part of this blog post, I described my experience praying for a lady. When I rebuked the spirit of rejection in the name of Jesus, she started to react in a very odd and aggressive manner. She was convulsing and squirming on the ground, screaming. I jokingly remarked, “was it something I said?” Guess what? Yes, it was because of something I said.
In the first part of this blog, we took time to read up on the different realms of warfare described in Ephesians 6:12. We wage war not against the physical, but against the rulers, the authorities, the cosmic powers, and spiritual forces in the heavenly realm. I want to spend some time to share a simple and practical way we fight this fight. We fight with our words.
In James 3, James writes how our tongues are like a raging fire set ablaze by hell. Throughout the book of Proverbs, we see many verses talking about how we should be slow to speak. In Matthew 15, Jesus talks about how it is what comes out of our mouths that makes us dirty. Remember, Satan was able to deceive Adam and Eve by mere words. He didn't force them to eat the fruit, he only used his words to plant doubt and deception. Those words led to our disobedience, which brought death and corruption into God's creation.
In Ephesians 4:27, Paul talks about how not to give the devil a foothold. During my time in ministry, I noticed a lot of issues people have towards their brother or sister in Christ is due to a misunderstanding or miscommunication. I've run into folks who were deceived and manipulated because of gossip, or because they got caught up on what and how someone said something to them. A personal example, I got caught up in politics with some of my friends during this recent political season. I am very opinionated, and will share freely. When the political season was over, and the candidate I was very critical of won the election, my friends called me and asked me if we were still friends. I was taken aback. They were my friends, and no matter our political views and opinions, we will always be friends. We are more than friends, we are brothers in Christ! I realized that every time I shared my opinions, I gave the devil a foothold. I tried to shut the door on him, but couldn't because his foot was in the way. He started laying bricks, and those bricks eventually turned into a foundation. After some time that foundation became a wall, separating me from my friends. Just merely sharing my opinion created this spiritual wall between me and my brothers.
There are some things that we don't say enough. Sometimes we do not say these very simple words enough, “I love you.” Maybe you're reading this and go that's not true in my life. If that is the case, that is great! God bless you! Keep speaking those truths into the people around you. However, coming from my family and cultural/societal context, saying “I love you” is very rare. In fact, it is awkward and difficult for us to say it. 1 John 4, it states that God IS love. He doesn't just love, HE IS LOVE. If God is love, what is love? To put very simply, the love being described in 1 John 4 is a total commitment and faithfulness, and the willingness to act on that. John 3:16 is a perfect example of that love. For God so loved the world, as in He was totally committed and faithful to man even though we were rebellious and sinful, he willingly acted on that commitment and faithfulness by sending His one and only Son to die on the cross to save us. So when we earnestly say a simple phrase like, “I love you,” we are making that statement that I am totally committed and faithful to you, and I am willing to act on that. Of course we cannot be the savior of anyone. I'm not saying take the place of God. What I'm saying is earnestly let your loved knows you are totally committed and faithful to them.
I know some of you might be reading this going, “why does this matter?” In Genesis, God spoke and creation came to be. He simply spoke words, and the whole earth and the universe was created. The same breath behind the spoken words of creation is the same breath that was breathed into us when we were created. There is authority and power behind our words. Growing up in Baltimore, Maryland, I remember always repeating the phrase, “sticks and stones will break my bones, but words will never hurt me,” when I was in elementary and middle school. When I was in high school, I stopped saying it because I realized I was very hurt by all the insults I received. It wasn't just from school peers, but also from family. My parents' dreams of me becoming a doctor, lawyer, engineer were shot by my terrible grades. I was always told I was never good enough, that I needed to compare myself to my cousins or other family members. At school I was told I wasn't American enough, that even though I was born and raised in Baltimore, I was still considered a foreigner just because of how I looked. After so many of years being told, “I just wasn't enough,” I said forget it. I'm just going to be bad. So my high school years were some dark times in my life.
In Ephesians 6:12, we do not fight with the physical. We fight against the spiritual realms. How do we fight? An in depth look into how we fight is continued in Ephesians 6. However, one practical but important step into fighting is through our words. With our words we pray, proclaim the Word of God, and we fight with our praise and worship.