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Spiritual
Warfare and Worldview
Paul
G. Hiebert
(with permission)
In recent years, there
has been a renewed interest in the Gospel as power in the lives of people,
and in spiritual warfare between God and Satan (Anderson 1991, Arnold 1997,
Kraft 1992, Moreau 1997, Powilson 1995, Wagner 1991, Warner 1991, White 1993
to name a few).. This comes as an important corrective to the earlier emphasis
in many western churches on the Gospel as merely truth, and on evil as primarily
human weakness. Both truth and power are central themes in the Gospel and
should be in the lives of God’s people. But much literature on spiritual warfare
has been written by missionaries who are forced to question their Western
denial of this-worldly spirit realities through encounters with witchcraft,
spiritism, and demon possession, and who base their studies in experience,
and look for biblical texts to justify their views. These studies generally
lack solid, comprehensive theological reflection on the subject. The second
is by biblical scholars who seek to formulate a theological framework for
understanding spiritual warfare, but who lack a deep understanding of bewildering
array of beliefs in spirit realities found in religions around the world.
Consequently, it is hard to apply what their findings in the specific contexts
in which ministry occurs. We need a way to build bridges between the biblical
teaching and the particularity of different cultures.
Doing
Theology
How can we reflect theologically
on spiritual warfare? There are several ways to do so, each of which has its
strengths and weaknesses (figure 1).
Systematic
Theology:
Traditionally, in the
West, by theology we mean systematic theology. This emerged in the twelfth
century with the reintroduction of Greek algorithmic logic through the universities
of the Middle East and Spain (Finger 1985, 18-21). At first, it was seen as
the ‘queen of the science, but over time it became one discipline among many
in theological education--alongside biblical exegesis, hermeneutics, history,
missions and other disciplines (Young 1998, 78-79). The central question systematic
theology seeks to answer is: "What are the unchanging universals of reality?"
It assumes that there are basic, unchanging realities, and if these are known,
we can understand the structure of reality. It also assumes that ultimate
truth is ahistorical and acultural, and is true for everyone everywhere. It
uses the rules of algorithmic logic and rhetoric of Greek philosophy which
are propositional in nature, and rejects all internal contradictions and fuzziness
in categories and thought. Its goal is to construct a single systematic understanding
of ultimate truth that is comprehensive, logically consistent and conceptually
coherent. To arrive at objective truth, it, like the modern sciences, separates
cognition from feelings and values to keep the latter from introducing subjectivity
into the process.
The strength of systematic
theology is its examination of the fundamental categories and structure implicit
in Scripture. It gives us a standard against which to compare our own beliefs,
and helps us develop a biblical worldview, both of which are essential for
any contemporary reflection on spiritual warfare. Systematic theology also
has its limitations. Because it sees ultimate reality in structural, synchronic
terms, it cannot adequately deal with change. Because it seeks to be exhaustive,
it leaves little room for mystery and paradox. Because it focuses on universals,
it does not tell us how to deal with beliefs in spirits and spiritual warfare
in particular culture.
Biblical
theology:
A second theological approach
is biblical theology. Reacting to the scholasticism of post-Reformation theologians,
Philip Spener and Johann Gabler advocated a new way of doing theology. They
emphasized theology as a practical science, with a stress on experience and
the illumination of the Spirit, and a return to the study of the Bible as
text (Evans, McGrath and Gallway 1986, 170-71). Their central question was:
"What did the biblical passages mean at the time and to those writing
them, and what lessons can we learn from this for us today?" Their method
was to study Scripture in its historical context. They assumed that the heart
of revelation is historical in character--that there is a real world with
a real history of change over time which is ‘going somewhere’, and which has
meaning because it has a plot and culminates in God’s eternal reign. They
argued that this view of truth was fundamental to the Hebrew worldview and
to an understanding of Scripture.
Biblical theology uses
the methods of historiography. It uses the temporal logic of antecedent and
consequent causality, and accepts teleological explanations in which God and
humans act on the basis of intentions. Biblical theology is important because
gives meaning to life by helping us see the cosmic story in which human history
and our own biographies are embedded. It helps us understand the cosmic battle
between God and Satan--between righteousness and evil.
Biblical theology has
its limits. Because it focuses on diachronic meaning, the fundamental structure
of reality remains out of focus--in our peripheral vision. Moreover, it focuses
on cosmic and biblical history, and does not focus on the lives and histories
of people living today. Consequently, it is does not directly offer us applications
of biblical truth to the problems we face in our everyday ministries.
Missiological
Theology
To deal with the problems
we face in missions, we need a third way of doing theology--a way of thinking
biblically about our lives here and now. Martin Khler wrote almost a century
ago that mission, "is the mother of theology." Missionaries, by
the very nature of their task, must do theological reflection to bring the
message of Scripture to bear on the particularities of human lives. David
Bosch notes, "Paul was the first Christian theologian precisely because
he was the first Christian missionary (1991, 124).".
What is missiological
theology? Clearly, it draw on systematic and biblical theologies to understand
Scripture, but it must build the bridge of applying these truths in the sociocultural
and historical contexts in which the missionary serve. Its central question
is: "What does God’s Word say to humans in this particular situation?"
Evangelical mission theologians assume that the Gospel is universal truth
for all. They also assume that all humans live in different historical and
sociocultural settings, and that the Gospel must be made known to them in
the particularity of these contexts. Eugene Peterson writes,
This is the gospel focus:
you are the man; you are the woman. The gospel is never about
everybody else; it is always about you, about me. The gospel is never truth
in general; it’s always a truth in specific. The gospel is never a commentary
on ideas or culture or conditions; it’s always about actual persons, actual
pains, actual troubles, actual sin; you, me; who you are and what you’ve done;
whom I am and what I’ve done (1997, 185).
The task of the mission
theologian is to translate and apply the Gospel in the lives of people living
today so that it transforms them and their cultures into what God wants them
to be. Missiological theology seeks to bridge the gulf between Biblical revelation
given millennia ago to human contexts today.
The first step in missiological
theology is phenomenology--to exegete both Scripture and the ministry
setting, and to build a bridge of understanding between them. Mission theologians
may begin with questions emerging either out of the study of Scripture or
with questions emerging out of human life. They then start by examining the
problem in its particular historical/sociocultural ministry context. They
must try to understand the world as the people they serve understand it. They
must also examine their own worldviews--the assumptions and logic which they
bring to their analysis. Here the methods developed by the social science
to exegete human realities can be of help..
The second step in missiological
theology is ontology--to evaluate both the people’s and the theologian’s
understandings of reality in the light of biblical truth. Reflection in missiological
theology must include systematic and biblical theologies, for these provide
critical insights to the process. Just as an architect makes different blueprints
for the same building--structural, electrical, plumbing and so on, so theologians
need to look at reality from different perspectives and through different
lenses. We need systematic theology to help us understand the questions, assumptions,
categories and logic found in Scripture regarding the structure of reality
by using the methods of algorithmic thought. We need biblical theology to
help us understand the cosmic story unfolding in Scripture, the ‘mystery’
now revealed to us. We need missiological theology to communicate the transforming
Gospel into the particular contexts in which humans find themselves.
The final step in missiological
theology is missiology--helping people move from where they are to
where God wants them to be. It recognizes that humans all live in and are
shaped by particular cultural and historical contexts, and that they can only
begin an ongoing process of transformation by starting with their existing
systems of thought. We cannot expect people to simply abandon their old ways
and adopt new ones. This transformation must also involve whole communities
as well as individuals.
Human
Understandings of Spiritual Warfare
Applying this model of
missiological theology to the current debates regarding "spiritual warfare,"
we must first examine the worldviews we and the people we serve bring to the
discussion. Stories of battles between good and evil, and of power encounters
between good gods and evil demons are found in all religions. In Hinduism,
Rama battles Ravana, in Buddhism Buddha fights Mara, in Islam Allah wars against
Shaitan, and in traditional religions tribal gods fight one another for conquest.
It is not our purpose
here to examine the many views of spiritual warfare found in religions around
the world. Rather, it is to examine our own worldviews to see how these shape
our reading of Scripture. If we are not aware of our own worldviews, we are
in danger of reading the understandings of war and warfare of our culture
into Scripture and so distort its message. We will briefly examine three worldviews
underlying the current debate in the West regarding the nature of spiritual
warfare to see how they have shaped the current debate regarding spiritual
warfare.
Modern Supernatural/Natural
Dualism
The worldviews of the
West have been shaped since the sixteenth century by the Cartesian dualism
that divides the cosmos into two realities--the supernatural world of God,
angels and demons, and the natural material world of humans, animals, plants
and matter (Newbigin 1995, 20-24). This has led to two views of spiritual
warfare. First, as secularism spread, the reality of the supernatural world
was denied. In this materialist worldview the only reality is the natural
world which can best be studied by science. For modern secular people, there
is no spiritual warfare because there are no gods, angels or demons. There
is only natural war between humans, communities and nations. Some Christians
accept this denial of spiritual realities, and demythologize the Scriptures
to make it fit modern secular scientific beliefs. Angels, demons, miracles
and other supernatural realities are explained away in scientific terms. The
battle, they claim, is between good and evil in human social systems. The
church is called to fight against poverty, injustice, oppression, and other
evils which are due to oppressive, exploitative human systems of government,
business and religion.
The second view of spiritual
warfare emerging out of this dualism is that God, angels and demons are involved
in a cosmic battle in the heavens, but the everyday events on earth are best
explained and controlled by science and technology (figure 2). People pray
to God for their salvation, but turn to modern medicine for healing and psychology
for deliverance from so called demon possession, because demons, if they exist,
exist in the heavens, not on earth. Western missionaries influenced by this
dualism denied the realities of witchcraft, spirit possession, evil eye and
magic in the cultures where they served. Consequently they failed to provide
biblical answers to the people’s fears of earthly spirits and powers, and
to deal with the reality of Satan’s work on earth.
Tribal Religions
For most tribal peoples,
ancestors, earthly spirits, witchcraft and magic are very real. The people
see the earth and sky as full of beings (gods, earthly divinities, ancestors,
ghosts, evil shades, humans, animals and nature spirits) that relate, deceive,
bully and battle one another for power and personal gain. These beings are
neither totally good nor totally evil. They help those who serve or placate
them. They harm those who oppose their wishes or who neglect them or refuse
to honor them. Humans must placate them to avoid terrible disasters.
Spiritual warfare in animistic
societies is seen as an ongoing battle between different alliances of beings
(figure 3). For the most part these alliances are based on ethnicity and territory.
The battle is not primarily between "good" and "evil,"
but between "us" and "them." The gods, spirits, ancestors
and people of one village or tribe are in constant battle with those of surrounding
villages and tribes. When the men of one group defeat those of another, they
attribute their success to the power of their gods and spirits. When they
are defeated, they blame this on the weakness of their gods and spirits. We
see this in the Old Testament in way the Arameans viewed their battles with
the Israelites (I Kings 20:23,-30).
Land plays an important
role in tribal views of spiritual warfare. Gods, spirits and ancestors reside
in specific territories or objects, and protect their people who reside on
their lands. Their powers do not extend to other areas. When people go on
distant trips, they are no longer under the protection of their gods. When
a community is defeated, the people are expected to change their allegiance
to the stronger God and serve him. Conversions to new gods often follow dramatic
"power encounters."
Some Christians interpret
the biblical data on spiritual warfare using the traditional tribal themes
of territory and power encounter (Peretti 1988, and Wagner 1991). Satan is
viewed as having authority over the earth, an authority he exercises through
delegation to his demonic hierarchy. As Chuck Lowe points out (1998), this
view of territorial spirits has little biblical justification.
Cosmic Dualism
A third worldview of spiritual
warfare is based on a cosmic dualism (figure 4). This is found in Zoroastrianism,
Manicheism and Hinduism, and in cultures shaped by the Indo-European worldview.
In it mighty gods battle for control of the universe: one seeking to establish
a kingdom of righteousness and order, and the other an evil empire. The outcome
is uncertain, for both sides are equally strong, and the battle is unending
for when good or evil are defeated they rise to fight again. All reality is
divided into two camps: good gods and bad gods, angels and demons, good nations
and evil ones, good humans and wicked ones. The line between the two camps
is sharp.
Central to this worldview
is the myth of redemptive violence. Order can be established only when one
side defeats the other in spiritual warfare. In other words, violence is necessary
to bring about a better society (Larson 1974, Puhvel 1970, Wink 1992). To
win, therefore, is everything. The focus, therefore, is on the battle. The
myths tell of the battles between the gods, and their effect on humans. Conflicts
and competition are intrinsic to the world, and lead to evolution (biology),
progress (civilization), development (economic), and prowess (sports).
Morality in the Indo-European
battle is based on the notion of "fairness," "equal opportunity."
To be fair, the conflict must be between those thought to be more or less
equal in might. The outcome must be uncertain. It is "unfair" to
pit a professional ball team against a team of amateurs. Equal opportunity
means that both sides must be able to use the same means to gain victory.
If the evil side uses illegal and wicked means, the good side is justified
in using them. In movies, the policeman cannot shoot first. When the criminal
draws his gun, however, the policeman can shoot him without a trial. In the
end, both the good and the bad sides use violence, deceit, and intimidation
to win the battle. In this worldview, chaos is the greatest evil and power
and control are the greatest good.
Indo-European religious
beliefs have largely died in the West, but as Walter Wink points out (1992),
the Indo-European worldview continues to dominate modern western thought.
It is the basis for the theories of evolution and capitalism, and is the dominant
theme in western entertainment and sports. People pay to see the football
battle, and go home at the end claiming victory or making excuses for the
loss. The story ends when the detective unmasks the villain, the cowboys defeat
the Indians, Luke Skywalker and Princess Leah thwart the Evil Empire, and
Superman destroys the enemies of humankind. Victory in the Indo-European myth
is never final, however, nor is evil fully defeated. Evil rises again to challenge
the good, so good must constantly be on guard against future attacks.
Many current Christian
interpretations of spiritual warfare are based on an Indo-European worldview
which sees it as a cosmic battle between God and his angels, and Satan and
his demons for the control of people and lands. The battle is fought in the
heavens, but it ranges over sky and earth. The central question is one of
power--can God defeat Satan? Because the outcome is in doubt, intense prayer
is necessary to enable God and his angels to gain victory over the demonic
powers. Humans are victims of this struggle. Even those who turn to Christ
are subject to bodily attacks by Satan.
Biblical
Views of Spiritual Warfare
Warfare is an important
metaphor in Scripture and we must take it seriously. Eugene Peterson writes,
There is a spiritual war
in progress, an all-out moral battle. There is evil and cruelty, unhappiness
and illness. There is superstition and ignorance, brutality and pain. God
is in continuous and energetic battle against all of it. God is for life and
against death. God is for love and against hate. God is for hope and against
despair. God is for heaven and against hell. There is no neutral ground in
the universe. Every square foot of space is contested (1997, 122-123).
The question is, what
is the nature of this battle in biblical terms? One thing is clear, the biblical
images of spiritual warfare are radically different from those in the materialistic,
dualistic, animistic and Indo-European myths (figure 5). For example, in the
Old Testament the surrounding nations saw Israel’s defeats as evidence that
their gods were more powerful, but the Old Testament writers are clear--Israel’s
defeats are not at the hand of pagan gods, but the judgment of Yahweh for
their sins (Judg. 4:1-2; 6:1; 10:7; 1 Sam. 28:17-19; 1 Kings 16:2-3; 2 Kings
17:7-23). Similarly, the battle between God and Satan is not one of power
(Job 1:1-12, Jud. 9:23-24). The whole world belongs to God. The gods of the
pagans are, in fact, no gods. They are merely human-made images fashioned
from wood and stone (Is. 44:46). Satan is a fallen angel created by God.
In the New Testament the
focus shifts to a more spiritual view of battle. The Gospels clearly demonstrate
the existence of demons, or unclean spirits, who oppress people. The exorcists
of Jesus’ day used techniques such as shoving a smelly root up the possessed
person’s nose to drive the spirit away, or by invoking a higher spirit through
magical incantations (Keener 1993). Jesus, in contrast, simply drove the demons
out on the basis of his own authority (Mk. 1:21-27; 9:14-32). He was not simply
some mighty sorcerer who learned to manipulate the spirits through more powerful
magic. He is the sovereign God of the universe exerting his will and authority
over Satan and his helpers.
The Nature of the Battle
The Bible is clear: there
is a cosmic battle between God and Satan (Eph. 6:12). There is, however, no
doubt about its outcome. The dualism of God and Satan, good and evil, is not
eternal and coexistent. In the beginning was God, eternal, righteous, loving
and good. Satan, sin and sinners appear in creation. Moreover, God’s creation
is an ongoing process. The very existence of Satan and sinners, and that the
power they use in their rebellion is given them by God, is a testimony to
his mercy and love.
If the cosmic struggle
between God and Satan is not one of power, what is it about? It is the establishment
of God’s reign on earth as it is in heaven. It is for human hearts and godly
societies. God in his mercy is inviting sinners to repent and turn to him.
Two parables help
us understand the nature of the warfare we face. The first is the wayward
son (Bailey 1998). The father lavishes his love on his son, but the son rebels
and turns against his father. The father is not interested in punishing his
son, but in winning him back, so the father reaches out in unconditional love.
The son wants to provoke the father into hating him, and thereby to justify
his rebellion, but the father takes all the evil his son heaps on him and
continues to love. When the son repents, he is restored back fully into the
family (Luke 15:21-24). Similarly, God loves his rebellious creations, and
longs to save them. If he were to do less, he would be less than perfect love.
In this battle for human allegiances, humans are not passive victims. They
are active co-conspirators with Satan and his host in rebellion against God,
and God urges them to turn to him for salvation.
The second parable is
the rebellious vassals or stewards (Matt. 21:33-44). At first, the stewards
are faithful, and their appointment gives them legitimate authority over part
of the kingdom. Later they rebel and persecute the righteous. In Indo-European
mythology the king must defeat the rebels by might and destroy them. In the
biblical worldview the king first seeks reconciliation, so he sends his servants.
When they are mistreated, he sends his son. The son is tried in the vassal’s
court, found guilty and put to death. The case is appealed to the king who
finds the lower court evil and removes it from power. The central question
in Scripture is not power but authority.
Angels and Demons
A biblical view of spiritual
warfare calls for a theology of angels and demons. Satan and his hosts are
dreadfully real and represent the powers of darkness arrayed in battle against
God’s Kingdom of Light. Walter Kaiser and his colleagues point out that,
. . . demons are part
of the cosmic or spiritual conflict going on behind the outward actions of
preaching, teaching and healing. Demons fit into the New Testament picture
of what the reign of God means and the fact that salvation is not simply deliverance
from physical sickness or political oppression or poverty, but at root a deliverance
from final judgment, from spiritual sin and from the oppression by evil spiritual
forces connected to these things (1996,81).
Misfortunes and illnesses
are the result of sin, but most are not directly caused by demonic sources.
They are part of the fallen estate of humans and the judgment of sin. The
greatest hindrance to people coming to Christ is not demon activity, real
as it is, but human sin and rebellion expressed in fallen cultural and social
systems which lead people to the worship themselves rather than the Creator
(Rom 1:21-25).
Scripture is clear: children
are delivered from the power that Satan formerly had over them. Every person
who is "in Christ" shares in Christ's uniqueness, and need not be apprehensive
or feel paralyzed with fear concerning Satan and evil spirits (I John 4:4).
Satan and his demons have no power over believers other than what God permits.
The belief in spirits
who rule territories and control people implies that these people are hapless
victims of the cosmic battles of the gods, and that once they are delivered
they will be ready to convert to Christ in mass. This sells human sinfulness
short. Even if demons are driven out, humans call them back and renew their
individual and corporate rebellion against God. Christians should not identify
Satan and his followers with territories that can be exorcized. To do so is
to introduce animistic beliefs into the Christian worldview.
Belief in evil spirits
now ruling geographic territories also denies the work of the Cross. Whatever
delegated authority Satan had at the time of creation was taken away after
the resurrection when Christ declared, "And now all authority has been
given unto me (Matt. 28:16)." Satan now has no authority over the earth,
only the authority given him by his demonic and human followers.
The Weapons of Warfare
Scripture makes it clear
that the weapons of spiritual warfare are different for God and for Satan.
Satan blinds the minds of humans to the truth through lies and deception.
He tempts them with the pleasures of sin by appealing to their old nature.
He intimidate them with fear by sending misfortunes. He accuses them of their
sins. Above all, he invites them to worship themselves as gods (Gen. 3:1-7,
2 Tim. 3:2). God uses the weapons of truth to enlighten the mind, righteousness
to combat sin, and peace and shalom to counter temptation. Above all,
he invites all into the Kingdom of God in which Christ reigns in perfect love
and justice.
Satan and his followers
[demonic and human] devise cultures and societies of rebellion that blind
human minds. They seek to control those who turn themselves over to the rebellion,
to keep sinners from converting, and to cause the saved to fall. Human rebellion
is both individual and corporate. God and his followers [angelic and human]
create the church as a counter-cultural community where Christ is recognized
and worshiped as Lord, and where truth, love and righteousness reign. In the
battle, God, his angels and his saints minister to protect and guide his people
(2 Ki 6:17, Gen 24:7; 31:11-12; Dan 8:15-16, 9:20-23; Matt 1:20).
Power Encounters
At the heart of much of
the current debate regarding spiritual warfare is the concept of ‘power encounter.’
Often this is seen in Indo-European terms. Proponents see such encounters
as opportunities to demonstrate the might of God through dramatic healings,
casting out of demons and divine protection, and assume that when people see
God’s miraculous interventions, they will believe. Scripture and church history
show that demonstrations of God’s power often lead some to believe, but they
also excite the enemy to greater opposition leading to persecution and death
(figure 6). We see this in the book of Acts where victories are followed by
persecution, imprisonment and death (appendix 1). Above all we see it in John
where Jesus confronts the religious and political establishments and is crucified
(appendix 2). In biblical spiritual warfare the Cross is the ultimate and
final victory (1 Cor. 1:18-25). There Satan used his full might to destroy
Christ, or to provoke him to use his divinity wrongly. Either would have meant
defeat for Christ--the first because Satan would have overcome him and the
second because it would have destroyed God’s plan of salvation through the
use of unrighteous means.
The cross as victory makes
no sense in the Indo-European or tribal worldviews. In the Indo-European worldview
(figure 7), Christ should have taken up the challenge of his tormentors, called
down his angelic hosts waiting ready in heaven, and come down from the cross
in triumph to establish his kingdom. In the Scriptures the cross is the demonstration
of victory through weakness. At the cross Satan stands judged because he put
Christ, God incarnate as perfect man, to death. On the cross Jesus bore the
sins of the world and triumphed over all the powers of evil. His obedience
unto death "rendered powerless him who had the power of death that is the
devil" (Heb. 2:14). The cross was Satan's undoing (Col. 2:15), but Satan's
defeat was not an end in itself. Rather it removes the obstacles to God's
purpose of creating people fit for His Kingdom (Gen. 12:1; Ex 19:3ff; I Peter
2:9). The cross is the victory of righteousness over evil, of love over hate,
of God’s way over Satan’s way. If our understanding of spiritual warfare does
not see the cross as the final triumph, it is wrong.
Christians and churches
are in desperate need of showing God’s power in transformed lives and in a
Christlike confrontation of evil wherever they find it, whether demonic, systemic
or personal. Here we face two dangers. On the one hand, we may avoid bold
demonstrations of power for fear these may become magic. The church then is
poor in the manifestations of God’s might. On the other hand, in our zeal
to demonstrate God’s power we can run after the sensational and be tempted
to use power for our own glory. Neither miracles nor the Cross can be taken
out of the gospel without distorting it.
Demonization
Along with territorial
spirits, demonization and deliverance is a central issue in the current debate
on spiritual warfare. Biblically, it is clear that demons are real and that
they plague people, but they must submit to the authority of Christ. We, too,
must take their attacks seriously. When encountering spirit oppression, we
must be prepared to pray and minister to the victims. For those raised in
the West, this often means rethinking their understanding of demonic realities
in light of Scripture.
The first step in dealing
with people who appear to be oppressed by demons is discernment. We must not
confuse phenomenology with ontology. Some who appear to be possessed, in fact,
may be subconsciously or consciously seeking attention. This is often the
case when the exorcism seems to be temporary and the victims return repeatedly
for more exorcisms. Other cases are cases of mental illness. To seek to exorcize
these patients often makes their condition worse. Still other cases of demonic
oppression are real, and must be dealt with as such. One thing is clear, Satan
is a master of deceit and wants humans to fear him even when he isn’t there.
Discernment of demonic oppression is difficult because of the complexity of
the human personality, and to human tendencies to self-deception. People who
are psychologically ill frequently suffer from delusions of being demon possessed.
Those who are truly demonized do not commonly refer to that fact. Exorcism
should not be the first approach to a problem, but come only after ruling
out other biophysical causes. In diagnosing cases that appear to be possession,
it is good to involve a team, such as a doctor, counselor and minister.
The second step in dealing
with demon possession is to prepare beforehand. We need to examine our personal
attitudes and relationship to Christ. Deliverance ministries should never
be done merely out of curiosity or experiment. Demons know our hidden sins
(Act 19:13ff). Complete honesty and openness is needed, and a right heart
before God. Unconfessed sin, resentment and an unforgiving spirit block ministry.
The possessed person must also want deliverance if it is to be successful.
God does not deliver people against their will. Moreover, care must be taken
to avoid undue emotional involvement, and to maintain as much objectivity
as possible. Because such ministries are already very subjective and lend
themselves readily to excesses and sensationalism, missionaries should not
enter such ministry triumphantly.
Third, exorcisms
must be surrounded by prayer for protection, discernment, and ministry. We
are powerless; it is God who must drive out the spirits. Consequently, we
should speak primarily to God, not with the spirits. Evil spirits are liars
and we cannot trust their word. It is not important for us to know their names
to call for God’s deliverance. We must avoid all magical tendencies in the
deliverance process. It is not dependent on the use of special words, or right
gestures. The deliverance is by Christ and the Holy Spirit, not by our actions.
We must avoid the sensationalism commonly associated with some healing and
exorcism ministries. Following the deliverance it is important to incorporate
those who are delivered into a Christian community of support and instruction
that does not stigmatize them. This requires months of follow-up ministry
by mature Christians.
Deliverance ministries
should not focus on our ministry. Rather it is to proclaim the Good News of
God’s salvation in Christ. Jesus did not go seeking out the possessed, but
when people came he ministered to them. His central purpose was to declare
the coming of the Kingdom of God in salvation, righteousness, peace and justice.
When the people wanted miracles and not his message, Jesus ceased doing them.
The Coming Kingdom
Finally, a biblical view
of spiritual warfare points to the final establishment of the Kingdom of God
throughout the whole universe. When we focus too much on the current battle,
we lose sight of the cosmic picture in which the real story is not the battle,
but the eternal reign of Christ. That vision transformed the early church,
and it should be our focus in ministry today.
References
Cited
Anderson, Neil. 1990.
Victory over the Darkness: Realizing the Power of Your Identity in Christ.
Ventura, CA: Regal Books.
Arnold, Clinton. 1997.
Three Crucial Questions about Spiritual Warfare. Grand Rapids: Baker
Book House.
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For a more complete listing
of literature on one perspective of spiritual warfare see The Arsenal
published by The Resource Arm of the A.D. 2000's United Prayer Track.
Appendix
1: Power
Encounters in Acts
Chapters:
2: Pentecost:
power of the Holy Spirit-->ridicule, some believe
3: Peter heals
a crippled man--->put in jail, some believe
5: Ananias
and Saphira die from God’s judgment --->fear
6:-7: Stephen
does signs and wonders --->Stephen killed, persecution
11:-12: Growth
of the church--->persecution, death of James
13: Paul
confront Elymas--->proconsul believes
14:1 Paul
and Barnabas do signs and wonders--some believe, persecution
14:8 Paul
heals a man--->stoned
16:16 Paul
and Silas cast out a demon--->beaten and put in jail
17:22 Paul
preaches--->some scoff, others believe
21:-28: Paul preaches
and defends himself--->jail and death
Appendix
2: Jesus
Confronts the Powers of Jerusalem and Rome
[Power encounters
in John]
1. Birth: challenges
Herod and earthly kingdoms.
2. Overturns the tables;
challenges the corrupt religious order.
3. Nicodemus: challenges
a leader of the religious establishment.
4. Samaritan woman:
violates Jewish religious exclusivism.
5. Heals on the Sabbath:
confronts the legalism of the establishment.
6. Feeds the five thousand:
shows failure of establishment to care for the people.
7. Feast of Booths:
confronts the religious leaders.
8. Preaches: challenges
the merciless interpretation of the law.
9. Heals. shows
the powerlessness of the religious establishment.
10. Confronts the Pharisees:
challenges their teachings.
11. Raises the dead:
shows the powerlessness of the religious leaders.
12. Triumphal Entry:
challenges the leaders’ understanding of the Kingdom.
13-19. Jewish and Roman
Leaders Conspire and Kill Jesus.
20-21. Jesus rises
from the dead. defeats Satan and the establishment and establishes
his kingdom.
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