Spiritual warfare Essays

  • This Present Darkness Is An Eye Opening Book About Spiritual Warfare

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    This Present Darkness is an eye-opening book about spiritual warfare. In this book, Paretti gives a brief insight to his theological stance on spiritual warfare. He mainly focuses on the involvement and effects of demons and angels on human behaviors. Early in the book Parretti gives the assumption that Demons can take over or even possess people without their own will. In chapter 7 Sandy is listening to Shawn talk about being in tune with the universe, and how everything was connected. All the while

  • Spiritual Warfare In The Bible

    1366 Words  | 3 Pages

    Spiritual warfare is when Christians take a stand against evil forces (Satan, fallen angels, and demons). It is very evident throughout the Bible that there is a battle between the supernatural. 1 Peter 5:8 says, “Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary

  • Spiritual Battle Against Spirits in The Air.

    1907 Words  | 4 Pages

    Spiritual Battle against Spirits in the Air. There are many events that happen in this world; the Bible explained that what Happened is related to the spiritual world. In this paper, let us try to understand the meaning Of spiritual warfare. Almost everyone believes may already know that there is a spiritual battle between us and the evil Spirits. This truth is clearly taught in the Bible. Paul stated that our battle is not against flesh and blood but evil spirits (Ephesians 6:12). James advises

  • This Present Darkness

    1530 Words  | 4 Pages

    have been a controversial and abstract enigma of man’s spiritual life. On the way to find the truth, many people seem to lose their initial purpose as well as their beliefs. Throughout his Christian novel, This Present Darkness, Frank E. Peretti calls attention, mostly from the Christians, to the importance of prayer and faith in God in a Christian’s life. Throughout the Western culture, Christianity has played a crucial role in the spiritual life of many people. In fact, it is a one of the largest

  • Spiritual Warfare Research Paper

    960 Words  | 2 Pages

    is to examine the role that spiritual warfare plays in the cross-cultural proclamation of the gospel. There is a spiritual battle for the hearts and souls of humans. More than 40 percent of the world holds to some sort of animism, or the belief in personal spiritual beings and impersonal spiritual forces that have power over human affairs. The Bible speaks about the reality of a conflict we face as believers, and we call that conflict spiritual warfare. Spiritual warfare in its simplest form is our

  • Spiritual Warfare, Doctrines and Dispensationalists

    1510 Words  | 4 Pages

    Silencing the enemy is a very fitting title for this book. It is fitting because the author, Robert Gay, explains how God suppresses the devices of the adversary through the praise and worship of His people. Although the term “spiritual warfare” is not found in scripture, Paul expounds on the concept throughout the New Testament. He encourages the saints to “Put on the whole armor of God that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil”. This scripture informs us that we are in a battle

  • The Importance Of Spiritual Warfare In My Life

    1068 Words  | 3 Pages

    have to deal with spiritual warfare. Spiritual warfare is something that target us from our moment of conversion up until either Jesus comes again or until we experience a physical death. Depending on where we are in our walk, we will lose some battles and we will win some. Whether we win or lose, there will be other battles to follow. In the beginning of my spiritual walk, I had two major battles—one I lost, and the other I won. Also, I am currently fighting to major spiritual battles—one I seem

  • Spiritual Warfare: Where Does Trouble Come From?

    635 Words  | 2 Pages

    Spiritual warfare requires understanding that God is good. There is no promise that once you become a Christian bad things won't happen. However, it is key to know that God is not the source of trouble; He is our source of help. "The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble." Nahum 1:7 Where Does Trouble Come From? Whether you acknowledge it or not, we have a spiritual enemy: the devil. The Bible tells us that anything that kills, steals, or destroys comes from the devil. Then it goes

  • My Spiritual Walk

    1067 Words  | 3 Pages

    big grand story. But then again, I have been immersed in God's life for all of mine and I can't complain about that. I was born on a Thursday in January and as soon as I was able, about a week and a half later, I was in church. That is where my spiritual knowledge started. That goes a bit too far back though to make this a two page paper. My actual individual walk with Jesus started much later. As I said, I grew up in the church and I appreciate that fact. All of my life I had heard about Jesus

  • James H. Cone's The Spirituals and the Blues

    1775 Words  | 4 Pages

    James H. Cone's The Spirituals and the Blues The book, The Spirituals and the Blues, by James H. Cone, illustrates how the slave spirituals and the blues reflected the struggle for black survival under the harsh reality of slavery and segregation. The spirituals are historical songs which speak out about the rupture of black lives in a religious sense, telling us about people in a land of bondage, and what they did to stay united and somehow fight back. The blues are somewhat different from

  • Banquo - a Spiritual Force in Shakespeare's Macbeth

    2391 Words  | 5 Pages

    Banquo - a Spiritual Force in Macbeth Who cannot learn from Shakespeare's Macbeth this moral lesson: That crime does not pay? And who can deny that the playwright created a spiritual force in the play in the person of Banquo? This essay is his story. Lily B. Campbell in her volume of criticism, Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes: Slaves of Passion, discusses how fear enters the life of Banquo with the murder of Duncan and his two attendants: And as Lady Macbeth is helped from the room

  • Social and Spiritual Energy in Middlemarch

    2140 Words  | 5 Pages

    Social and Spiritual Energy in Middlemarch I do not believe that it is sufficient to say that Middlemarch explores the ways in which social and spiritual energy can be frustrated; it would be more appropriate to say that Middlemarch explores the ways in which social and spiritual energies (ideals if you will) are completely destroyed and perverted. One need only look to Lydgate to see an example of idealism being destroyed by the environment in which it is found. At the start of the novel, we

  • Spiritual Murder in Buchner's Woyzeck

    2399 Words  | 5 Pages

    Spiritual Murder in Georg Buchner's Woyzeck Throughout dramatic history, tragedies have depicted a hero's humanity being stripped from him. Usually, as in Shakespeare's classic paradigms, we see the hero, whether King Lear or Othello, reduced from his original noble stature to nothingness and death. Yet Georg Buchner's fragmentary play Woyzeck shows us a protagonist already stripped of humanity, transformed into and treated as an animal. Indeed, Woyzeck, far from being a simple tale of a village

  • Jack Kerouac’s On The Road - The Spiritual Quest, the Search for Self and Identity

    1323 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Spiritual Quest in On the Road A disillusioned youth roams the country without truly establishing himself in one of the many cities he falls in love with. In doing so, he manages with the thought or presence of his best friend. What is he searching for? While journeying on the road, Sal Paradise is not searching for a home, a job, or a wife. Instead, he longs for a mental utopia offered by Dean Moriarty. This object of his brotherly love grew up in the streets of America. Through the hardships

  • Music - Bono's Path Towards Spiritual Enlightenment

    1926 Words  | 4 Pages

    Bono's Path Towards Spiritual Enlightenment While most celebrities keep their religious beliefs private, the music of the Irish rock group U2, with lyrics written by lead singer Bono, contains many religious references and ideas. A closer analysis of the song lyrics shows an evolution of the religious ideas contained within. The changing and development of these ideas corresponds to many psychological and sociological theories of faith evolution, including those of Alfred Adler and James Fowler

  • Swing Low Sweet Chariot Analysis

    1612 Words  | 4 Pages

    American Negro Spiritual originally sung by black slaves during their time working of the fields. Although performers in the 20th century acknowledged the historic significance of this piece, it has also been used as an instrument of cultural appropriation by white Americans and Europeans. The meaning of this song radiates in the words and exposes its purpose to those who study the music of slaves and its transformation into the Gospel and Jazz genres. The origin of the spiritual was likely one-hundred

  • blues

    1061 Words  | 3 Pages

    region from the Mississippi Delta to East Texas”(Barlow 3). It was believed that this began as a call and response style, which matured into the work song. From that standpoint, after the release of the slaves, the work song then matured into their Spirituals, and later was introduced to the whites through black-faced Minstrel of Medicine shows (How the Blues Overview). As the music matured and became more renowned, its influence became prominent in the music styles of the time, and in the intertwining

  • journeyhod Spiritual Voyages in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness

    759 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Spiritual Voyages of Heart of Darkness Heart of Darkness describes an outward journey to the heart of Africa that parallels an inward journey to the heart and depths of man's being. Two spiritual voyages are made by Kurtz and Marlow. Kurtz was a great man who discovered a flaw in himself while working in Africa. He lacked "restraint" to control the emerging dark side which he found within himself. He plumbs the depths of man's dark side -a side which civilization and culture represses -

  • Essay on Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart: Spiritual and Traditional Aspects

    700 Words  | 2 Pages

    Spiritual and Traditional Aspects of Things Fall Apart Chinua Achebe describes in his book Things Fall Apart (1958) some interesting features of what life could look like in an African village during late 19th century. The society that the Nigerian author presents is in most ways considerably different from our western society of today. Life in the African village of Umuofia was, among many other things, spiritual and traditional. The spiritual aspect of life in Umuofia is well illustrated

  • Canticle For Leibowitz: Walter Miller

    838 Words  | 2 Pages

    that lead to regressive thinking. The novel pokes fun at the attention to impractical details, such as to the spent copying the Leibowitz blueprints. Miller also mocks humans by describing the inordinate amount of attention and energy given to a spiritual being such as Leibowitz, as today's society worships God. Finally, the most absurd way Miller mocks today's society occurs when he describes how they do not give something very important the considered attention that it deserves. These are three