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| Copyright © 2004 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| October 11, 2004 |
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THE BELIEVER’S BULLET-PROOF VEST
#1
LUCIFER’S CUTE CANNONS I don’t know if it’s in our heads because we’ve seen too many episodes of M*A*S*H, or maybe Vietnam-era war films on TV, but are you familiar with the battle warning: INCOMING!! Maybe it’s bombs, or bullets, or just a wave of enemy soldiers, but the word “Incoming” is usually not good news. Deadly hailfire is coming in your direction, or, as one “dogface” put it in a recent Hollywood depiction, “The metal hits the meat.” We’ve come to a 13th and final week of Bible study here
in this wonderful, life-changing book of Ephesians. And you know, for
most of these past three months together, it’s been a very positive message.
Paul preaches about the importance of unity. He lifts up the centrality
of the Cross of Jesus Christ. He describes God’s glorious plan to bring
the entire universe back to peace and harmony in His eternal kingdom.
“Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” Back in October of 2001, only a few weeks after the
World Trade Center attack, and just as the United States and its allies
declared open war on the Taliban forces in Afghanistan, Newsweek magazine
ran a cover article with this title: “Special Ops: Can Our Commandos Finish
the Job?” And there was a full-cover picture of an Army Fifth Special
Forces Group soldier – a Green Beret with all of his Year 2001 military
gear. First of all, an M4 carbine machine gun with a detachable 40 mm
grenade launcher and, of course, a night-vision sight for when you’re
parachuted into hostile territory off an MC-130H transport plane in the
middle of the night. Your helmet is equipped with a “whisper mike” so
you can communicate silently back to headquarters; you also have GPS technology
— Global Positioning Satellite capability so that you and others can know,
to within 35 feet, where you are at all times. You carry an M9 Beretta
pistol, 9 mm, and a K-Bar fighting knife. And of course, the very latest
in weather-proof footwear and light, mobile combat fatigues. Not to mention
— at least someone in your division has one — a laptop computer so you
can download the latest intelligence figures and stay in touch with each
other while in the battle zone. “[Some] point to [Paul’s] knowledge of the armor of the Roman soldier,” the scholars write, “because he was chained to one for several years.” Then they add this encouraging good news: “The armor is God’s because He is the One who provides each particular piece of equipment. We are asked to put it on and to fight valiantly the battle. The One who forged the armor guarantees its effectiveness.” In Eugene Peterson’s The Message paraphrase, he seems to focus on that same point — about these weapons being of excellent quality considering who made them. Notice: “So take everything the Master has set out for you,” Paul writes, “well-made weapons of the best materials. And put them to use so you will be able to stand up to everything the Devil throws your way.” One thing that is very plain in Scripture is that Christians should consider the devil to be a very real foe. All through the Bible, from the serpent of Genesis 3 to the dragon in Revelation 20, this fallen angel named Lucifer or Satan is not just a spiritual metaphor. He is real and his armies are real and his attack plans are real and his weaponry is real. I don’t know how literally God’s people should take all the swordplay and sparks and cloaks and daggers in books like Frank Peretti’s bestseller, This Present Darkness, but when God invites us to put on the whole armor, we’re not suiting up just to play Paintball or for a bit of spiritual theater. This is a very real battle you and I are in — and I think, deep in our heart, we know it. We’ve felt the sting of his arrows, and we’ve heard the whine of his incoming missiles. Am I right? Again borrowing from that great paraphrase, The Message, the warning sounds like this: “This is no afternoon athletic contest that we’ll walk away from and forget about in a couple of hours. This is for keeps, a LIFE-OR-DEATH FIGHT TO THE FINISH against the Devil and all his angels.” I think there’s a temptation, because this “put on
the armor” line is so familiar and also kind of poetic, to dismiss the
whole idea as “cute.” And we say, “Yes, yes, the breastplate of righteousness,
very nice.” And we don’t DO anything different from before, maybe also
because we’re not sure what it means to put ON that breastplate of righteousness.
But let me tell you something: there’s nothing poetic or cute about Satan’s
arrows. They’re real and we both know it. A person commits adultery and
loses their spouse and kids over it. Is that cute? A person lies and forfeits
the trust and respect of their friends; is that an imaginary thing or
a real wound? So when the Bible says, in response, “Okay, put on the whole
armor of God,” it behooves us to take that seriously and say, “All right,
forget poetry and ‘cute.’ What exactly IS the armor, and how do I suit
up, right now, today? And again tomorrow? And every day that this war
continues?” I know we sometimes sound like a broken record — or I guess
we should say, now, a scratched CD or scrambled MP3 file — saying, “Tune
in again tomorrow. Get into the Word. Join our many friends who are fortifying
themselves with our Discover Bible Course.” But friend, the only reason
we’re here is to just help outfit one another with this God-given armor. “[This passage is] a caution,” they write, “against lashing out against human opponents as though they were the real enemy . . . and ALSO against assuming that the battle can be fought using merely human resources.” You know, every time I go into Barnes & Noble,
it’s interesting that there are so many books about how to deal with difficult
people or how to best your opponent on the corporate level. Airline magazines
always have an ad for the Karrass Negotiating Seminar, where you use this
tactic and that psychological “weapon” to defend your company’s turf.
But here in the Christian arena, we’re not fighting against that kind
of enemy! And we can’t use those kinds of weapons! We have to use God’s
weapons in order to defeat God’s enemy. “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for Thou art with me.” |
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