Posted by at 13th March, 2007
It’s amazing how we believe in things of the Bible, but don’t believe them in the context of our lives. I believe that we are afraid to admit (especially in church circles) the existence of demons. We are comfortable talking generally about “spiritual warfare” and “the enemy”, but if we were called to truly explain what we were talking about – we’d freeze, stutter and talk around the topic.
So this brings me to a few questions to ask yourself: 1) Do you believe that demons (and the devil) exist and 2) What role do you think they play in our world today.
“The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he did not exist.” – The Usual Suspects
I think as Christians we are comfortable talking about spiritual matters from the context of story [from the Bible], but don’t see how the story fits into our lives today. “Did Jesus cast out demons? Yes, and that’s a nice story that doesn’t apply to me today.” We fear being tossed into the category of being called Charismatic or Pentecostal and then we’d have to handle snakes while speaking in tongues.
Now, I don’t have a complete theological argument to make here, I only know what I can speak of from experience. Let me tell you a story (which makes me uncomfortable to talk about because I fear talking about these issues) about a student we had on our snow retreat.
Jimmy (name changed) has had a deep history of drug abuse and when he arrived for our retreat something was off – way off. I’ve known this kid for over 6 months and seen him high on occasion, but this was different. On the ride up, I sat next to him and found him carrying on a one sided conversation. He wasn’t babbling to himself, it was almost as if I was just hearing one side of a conversation (and he was hearing the other). The thought of demons ran through my mind, but I quickly buried it. So I prayed for him and decided to keep my eye open.
More of this kind of thing went on all weekend. One of our volunteers decided to engage him specifically on who he was talking to (after we had the uncomfortable taboo conversation amongst each other). Johnny said that there were called “the 5″ and they hurt him, but also loved him. He said they hated Jesus and that He was bad.” I’ve been around kid on all sorts of drugs, and I’ll tell you this was definitely different. Way different. He didn’t want us to pray for him because he said it would hurt him.
I can’t deny what I and others experienced [and I have other stories]. But I will tell you this, we were all uncomfortable talking about it. And that fear really effected the boldness of our actions. We’ve continued to pray for him since that weekend, but I’ll tell you, we were dealing with something I can’t explain. Are demons real? I believe so. Do oppressions or possessions happen. I think so. I know that it says in Ephesians that we do not fight “against flesh and blood, but against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.”
So if we could just start to recognize that there is a devil out there and he does have demons opposing us – how would that effect the way we cling to Jesus for life. It would certainly change our prayers. It would change our world view.
Any ideas on this? Or should I just start handling snakes?
[For a good article on the flip side of my argument go here.]
Posted by at 26th September, 2006

Over the weekend, in a talk Jerry Falwell insinuated that Hillary Clinton was the devil (Lucifer). Now, I’m not putting any validity into Faldie – he’s a joke into himself. But he does bring up an interesting question: is Hillary evil? Christian conservatives have long demonized her (and some times for good reason). She’s liberal and morally left… and she’s a Clinton!
But comparing her to the devil, in my opinion, actually underscores the capacity of Satan and falsely establishes our opinion of what evil actually is. As Christians we engage daily in spiritual warfare against an the enemy of the cross and our Lord. There is a formidable enemy. Hillary is not that enemy. As Christian we know that victory is already won, Christ has come, died on the cross and conquered death. So we know that evil doesn’t win. That’s something to put our hope in, but that doesn’t get us off the hook or pull us out of the battle that we find ourselves in.
To see Hillary (an anyone else on this earth) as the ultimate enemy is foolish and wrong. All it means to do is take our eyes off the calling, our Lord, and the one who opposes it. It forces us to focus on the wrong thing. That’s one thing that makes me sick with conservative Christians. The focus on the wrong thing. I’m not saying that abortion and the plethora of other causes that liberals push are good. What I am saying is that you can choose to fight the symptoms or the source. Fighting the symptoms leads to an endless race of putting out fires. It’s kind of like playing whack-a-mole. You squish one and then another pops up.
Now, to fight the source that’s another story. Once we focus on this, then our perspectives change. Then we find our true selves and calling and see that we are set into a battle that’s been raging on for centuries. Then we truly realize that this story isn’t all about us. Sure we’re apart of it, but it’s about our Lord. Once we have this perspective our outlook on life changes.
If we were to spend our time focused on our Lord and what he has for our lives and less on poloticizing our faith our country would be transformed. But, we would rather follow enlist a program or picket a clinic than spend time with Jesus. We would rather do things in on our own power, in our own strength, as opposed leaning on the strength and power of our Father and walking in faith. Do we even know what that is anymore?
Your thoughts?