Part VI — Spiritual Warfare
15 min read
Paul concludes his teaching on spiritual warfare with a command to put on the whole armor of God. This is not optional equipment for super-saints; it is the standard issue for every believer who expects to stand in the day of battle.
Ephesians 6:11-12 — "Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world."
Truth is the foundation. Satan is a liar; truth exposes his deception. The Christian who lives in honesty, integrity, and the truth of God's Word has already secured the center of the battle.
The breastplate protects the heart. When a believer walks in righteousness — not perfect sinlessness, but a life oriented toward God and away from sin — the enemy cannot penetrate the core of their being with guilt, shame, or accusation.
The believer stands firm because their standing with God is secure. The gospel of peace means we are no longer enemies of God but at peace with Him through Christ. This peace allows us to stand unshaken even when everything around us shakes.
Faith extinguishes the fiery darts of the wicked one. Every doubt, every fear, every accusation is a flaming arrow aimed at the believer's confidence. Faith — active, trusting, obedient faith — deflects them all.
The helmet protects the mind. The believer must know they are saved, sealed, and secure. Satan's primary attack is often on the assurance of salvation: "Are you really saved? Will God really keep you?" The helmet answers: Yes, by grace, through faith, in Christ.
The Word of God is the only offensive weapon. Jesus wielded it in the wilderness. The believer must know it, speak it, and trust it. The sword is not for show; it is for battle.
The armor enables us to stand; the Name of Jesus enables us to advance. Every demon must bow at the Name of Jesus Philippians 2:10. When a believer commands a demon to leave in that Name, they are not making a request — they are executing a judgment already rendered at the cross.