Spiritual warfare

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Jesus reveals that we:

  • are at war
  • have spiritual enemies
  • have guardian angels
  • can expel demons
  • are under His care and protection

The Weapons of War

  • Repentance and amendment for our own sins.
  • Natural virtues: prudence, justice, temperance, fortitude.
  • Supernatural virtues: Faith, hope, and love.
  • Gifts
  • Fruits
  • Creed, code, cult
  • spiritual directors or regular confessors
  • Exorcisms
  • Blessings
  • sacramentals: holy water, rosaries, medals, scapulars, images, etc.
  • Pilgrimage sites
  • Churches and chapels
  • Forgiveness prayer.
  • Works of Mercy.
  • Intercessory prayer.
  • Fortress Church:
- "The gates of Hell shall not prevail against it."
- "United we stand; divided we fall."
- Seven sacraments--infallible means of grace.
- Communion of saints.

Understanding the Enemy

I hate demon-chasing.

Some awareness of the tactics of the enemy may prove useful.

We must not become hypnotized by focusing on what the enemy can and cannot do. Our focus should always be on God, Who has delivered us from evil by the death and resurrection of Jesus.

Victory is ours for the asking

Each one of us is sovereign. No devil can steal us away from the Good Shepherd.

No one is in Heaven against their will.

No one is in Hell against their will.

Jesus does not tell us to become like X-Men, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Captain America and the Avengers, or any of the other superheroes of our day. Our King asks us to become like little children and to follow Him on the way of the Cross. We gain power over our enemies by letting God have power over us.

The war is inside of us

We're born again. That's our personality transplant. By rebirth in Baptism, we have a new identity, a new Father, and a whole new family. Our new nature is at war with our old nature. We are sovereign, by God's grace. He gives us the power to choose. Jesus has won the war. We can join Him in victory--or not--as we choose.

"The patient are better than warriors, and those who [conquer themselves are] better than one who conquers a city" (Prv 16:32, revised).

The war is outside of us

"Touchstone interview of Hadley Arkes: 'Courage and Conversion.'
Leo Strauss of the University of Chicago, wrote his critical book, Natural Right and History, in 1953. That was mid-century and he was already standing against the currents of relativism. Already they were deeply at work. Here was a country established on the Declaration of Independence—on truths grounded in nature, objective moral truths, self-evident truths—and yet falling into the wave of relativism. Strauss spoke about the effect of German philosophy on America—and here I’m paraphrasing—that it would not be the first time that a country defeated on the battlefield imposed on the victor the yoke of its own thought. Here we defeated the Germans, and yet German philosophy in its worst forms was taking hold in this country.

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