This 2-word phrase gripped my heart as I listened to an explanation of how cunning and insidious sin has been presenting itself in the lives of Christ-followers in the modern age. The speaker noted that things once black/white issues are no longer the focus. Believers are worn down by arguments and subtleties of logic and emotion.
Encyclopedia Britannica explains Guerrilla Warfare as "protracted harassment accomplished by extremely subtle, flexible tactics designed to wear down the enemy."
(Asprey, 2024).
During the Vietnam War, the insurgents were individuals, disguised or hidden until the moment their victims couldn't react to save their lives. Mind games were common.
It is no different today. The tactics have not changed. Nor has our enemy.
We often don't even recognize the attack until the fruit appears. And even then, do we understand we have been the target of an insidious plot to numb our senses and render us ineffective in the Kingdom of God?
When we do realize the truth, we can ask one of two questions:
- How did I get here?
- How do I reclaim the ground that has been stolen?
The answers are found in Scripture. First, we are given examples of individuals throughout the Bible who were devoted to the work of God, called by Him, and given special strength and/or wisdom. For example, Sampson was dedicated to God by his parents. They were given specific instructions regarding his upbringing, which would prove to set him apart for the LORD. He was noted to have strength beyond anything anyone had ever seen--a sort of superhero of our day. His exploits were unbeatable. This troubled his enemy, and they sought to find a way to defeat him. Sadly, his one weakness was women. He eventually won the attention of Delilah (so he thought). What he didn't know about was her love for money and her subsequent deal with the enemy to ascertain the source of his strength. She would badger him daily for information. Eventually, she'd begged enough, wore down his defenses enough, that Judges 16 tells us "and it came to pass, when she pestered him daily with her words and pressed him, so that his soul was vexed to death, that he told her all his heart, and said to her, 'No razor has ever come upon my head, for I have been a Nazirite to God from my mother's womb. If I am shaven, then my strength will leave me ...'" (v16, 17). Although she'd pestered him and received deceptive replies, she couldn't take the chance that this was also a lie. She alerted the Philistines, telling them her plan to get him to sleep and shave his head. Afterward, she yelled as she had many times before, "The Philistines are coming!"
What happened next unsettles my heart every time I read. "Then she lulled him to sleep on her knees, and called for a man and had him shave off the seven locks of his head. Then she began to torment him, and his strength left him. And she said, "The Philistines are upon you, Sampson!" So he awoke from his sleep, and said, "I will go out as before, at other times, and shake myself free!" But he did not know that the LORD had departed from him.
The song Slow Fade says it well. We don't give ourselves away in a moment.
The next answer is also found in the story of Sampson. He was taken captive, eyes gouged out, working at the stone grinder, chained in bronze shackles. He had time to spend alone. And it appears he used his time wisely, repenting of his pride and arrogance. Scripture tells us his hair began to grow back, and one night, while his captors held a feast, he requested to be positioned between two pillars. Not just any pillars. These were those that held the structure together. He prayed again, asking the LORD, in essence, "one more time" (Judges 16). And the LORD gave him strength enough to bring down the entire palace.
He was humbled before the LORD and the LORD heard his cry.
Humility is one strategy. Others are to know how your enemy works. He doesn't always come at us with boldness, honesty, or transparency telling us what he's about to do. If he's got us lulled enough, he might tell us straight up what he's about to do. But not if we're alert and aware. He'll wait until we're too entrenched in other traps:
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