Wednesday, May 20, 2026

The War Behind the World

 A war is taking place that most people cannot see.

It does not begin on battlefields.

It does not start in government buildings.

It is not merely fought with tanks, missiles, or armies.

The real war began long before man ever walked upon the earth.

Somewhere in eternity past, before Genesis 1:1 ever unfolded, there was rebellion in heaven. I do not claim to understand every detail of that first conflict. The Bible gives us glimpses, but not every answer. What we do know is that Lucifer fell because pride was found in him.

Isaiah wrote:

“How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!” — Isaiah 14:12 KJV

Ezekiel said:

“Thou wast perfect in thy ways from the day that thou wast created, till iniquity was found in thee.” — Ezekiel 28:15 KJV.

There was war.

There was rebellion.

And Satan lost.

But the conflict did not end there.

Then God created man.

The Bible says:

“And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion…” — Genesis 1:26 KJV.

Think about that for a moment.

God made man in His own image and gave him dominion over the earth. Satan had rebelled against God in heaven, and now he would strike against what God loved on earth.

So Satan came into the garden.

Not with swords.

Not with armies.

But with deception.

That has always been his greatest weapon.

Jesus said of Satan:

“...he is a liar, and the father of it.” — John 8:44 KJV

The serpent deceived Eve, and Adam rebelled against God. Sin entered the human race. Death entered creation. The earth fell under the curse.

For a moment, it looked like Satan had won.

Man was expelled from Eden.

The fellowship between God and man was broken.

Creation itself began to groan under sin.

But Satan did not understand something.

God already had a plan.

Right there in the middle of judgment, God gave a promise:

“And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.” — Genesis 3:15 KJV

That was the first prophecy of Christ.

The first promise was that a Savior would come.

The first declaration was that Satan would ultimately be destroyed.

From that moment forward, the conflict of the ages centered around one thing:

Stopping the coming of the Savior.

Cain killed Abel, and perhaps Satan thought he had destroyed the godly line. But God raised Seth.

Generation after generation, Satan tried to corrupt, destroy, and pollute humanity.

Then came Genesis 6.

The earth became filled with violence and corruption. Satan’s strategy appears clear — corrupt humanity so completely that the promised Redeemer could never come.

But Satan failed again.

Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord.

The Bible says Noah was:

“perfect in his generations…” — Genesis 6:9 KJV

God preserved a remnant.

God preserved the line.

God preserved His promise.

And all through history, Satan continued his war against the coming of Christ.

Pharaoh tried to destroy the Hebrew children.

Haman sought to annihilate the Jews.

King Herod murdered infants in Bethlehem.

Again and again, Satan attacked the line through which the Messiah would come.

But every time, he failed.

Then finally…

Jesus Christ was born.

The Word became flesh.

God stepped into human history.

And Satan unleashed hell against Him.

Religious leaders rejected Him.

The crowds mocked Him.

Rome crucified Him.

And when Christ hung upon that Cross bleeding and dying, perhaps all of hell rejoiced, thinking the battle was over.

It looked like Satan had won.

But the Cross was not Satan’s victory.

It was his defeat.

Three days later, Jesus Christ rose from the grave victorious over death, hell, and the grave.

The greatest weapon Satan possessed — death itself — had been conquered.

Paul wrote:

“O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?” — 1 Corinthians 15:55 KJV

The resurrection sealed Satan’s doom.

But the war continues.

After Christ ascended into heaven, Satan intensified his efforts against the church. Revelation speaks of another war in heaven:

“And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against the dragon…” — Revelation 12:7 KJV.

This time, Satan lost access to heaven as the accuser.

John wrote:

“And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world…” — Revelation 12:9 KJV.

Notice those words:

“The whole world.”

Never before in history has deception spread globally the way it does now.

Satan knows his time is short.

That is why darkness is increasing.

That is why nations rage.

That is why truth is mocked.

That is why churches compromise.

That is why people call evil good and good evil.

The devil is preparing the world for the final rebellion against God.

This war is spiritual before it ever becomes physical.

Paul warned us:

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers…” — Ephesians 6:12 KJV

Most people are looking only at politics, economics, and wars between nations.

But behind the curtain, there is another kingdom at work.

A kingdom of deception.

A kingdom of darkness.

A kingdom preparing for its final confrontation with Christ.

And one day that final conflict will come.

The armies of the earth will gather against the Lord.

The nations will rage against God.

The spirit of antichrist will fully manifest itself.

But hear me carefully:

Satan cannot win.

He has already lost every major battle he has ever fought.

He lost in heaven.

He lost in the flood.

He lost at Bethlehem.

He lost at Calvary.

He lost at the resurrection.

And he will lose again.

The Bible says:

“And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone…” — Revelation 20:10 KJV.

That is the end of the war.

Not with Satan reigning.

Not with darkness victorious.

Not with evil triumphing.

But with Jesus Christ reigning forever as King of Kings and Lord of Lords.

Friend, this is why the church must wake up.

This world is not drifting toward revival apart from repentance.

Humanity is not evolving upward spiritually.

The battle between light and darkness is intensifying.

But this is not the hour for fear.

It is the hour to stand faithful.

Watch and pray.

Stay in the Word of God.

Keep your heart pure.

Do not be deceived by the spirit of this age.

Because the King is coming soon.

And when He comes, the war behind the world will finally be over.

The Two Wars In Heaven

There are some things an old country preacher notices after living long enough to watch the world change.

I remember when people used to leave their doors unlocked. Children played outside until dark. Churches were full on Sunday nights. Prayer meetings mattered. The Bible was respected even by many who did not live by it. Sin was still called sin, and right was still called right.

But somewhere along the road, this world changed.

Not all at once.

Little by little.

Like a slow-moving storm cloud crawling across the horizon.

And the more I read my Bible, especially the words of Jesus and the Book of Revelation, the more I realize we are not just watching political problems or social changes. We are watching a spiritual battle intensifying before our eyes.

Many Christians do not realize that the war with Satan did not begin in Revelation.

It began before Adam ever took his first breath.

Before there was a Garden of Eden…

Before there was a serpent in the tree…

Before Cain killed Abel…

There had already been a rebellion in heaven.

The prophet Isaiah wrote:

“How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!” — Isaiah 14:12 KJV

Ezekiel spoke of a being created perfect until pride filled his heart.

Lucifer wanted the throne.

He wanted worship.

He wanted to exalt himself above God.

And there was war.

And Satan lost.

Jesus Himself said:

“I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven.” — Luke 10:18 KJV

Now, some folks think that was the end of it, but it was not. The Bible shows us that even after his fall, Satan still had limited access before God as the accuser.

In the Book of Job, the Scripture says:

“Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the LORD, and Satan came also among them.” — Job 1:6 KJV

There he stood, accusing Job.

That is what Satan does.

He accuses.

He condemns.

He deceives.

He destroys.

But Revelation shows another war in heaven.

John saw Satan cast out again.

Not from his original exalted position this time — but cast down permanently as the accuser.

“And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world…” — Revelation 12:9 KJV

Notice those words carefully:

“The whole world.”

Friend, that is what makes this generation different.

Every generation has seen evil.

Every generation has seen war.

But no generation before ours has seen the entire world connected the way it is now.

One war shakes every economy.

One virus circles the globe.

One lie spreads across nations in minutes.

Billions can watch one act of violence before sundown.

The devil has always deceived, but now deception travels at the speed of light.

And over the last hundred years, the works of darkness have exploded across the earth.

Think about it.

Two world wars.

Communist slaughter.

Genocide.

Atomic bombs.

Terrorism.

Drug epidemics.

Human trafficking.

Pornography is pumped into homes and phones day and night.

Children are confused and broken.

Churches are compromising truth to please society.

Violence is celebrated as entertainment.

Mockery of God becoming normal.

Paul warned Timothy:

“This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come.” — 2 Timothy 3:1 KJV

Brother, we are there.

People have become lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God—men mock holiness. Truth is twisted. Many churches no longer preach repentance because they fear offending people.

But the greatest danger is not merely what is happening in the world.

It is what is happening in the church.

Spiritual sleep.

Many Christians know more about politics than they do about prayer.

More about social media than Scripture.

More about entertainment than eternity.

Jesus warned repeatedly:

“Watch therefore…” — Matthew 24:42 KJV

Not panic.

Watch.

Pray.

Discern.

Stay awake spiritually.

Because Revelation says Satan knows something:

“...he knoweth that he hath but a short time.” — Revelation 12:12 KJV

The enemy is raging because his time is short.

And if there was ever a generation that needed strong faith, it is this one.

This is no hour for shallow religion.

A little Sunday religion will not stand in the days ahead.

A powerless church cannot help a collapsing world.

A prayerless Christian will struggle to endure spiritual darkness.

We need old-fashioned repentance again.

We need Holy Ghost conviction again.

We need churches filled with prayer again.

We need believers who know the Word of God better than they know the voice of the culture.

But here is the good news.

The devil may rage…

Darkness may spread…

The world may tremble…

…but Jesus Christ is still King.

Satan is not winning.

His judgment is already sealed.

Calvary crushed the power of death and hell.

And Revelation declares the victory of the saints:

“And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony…” — Revelation 12:11 KJV

That is still the answer.

Not fear.

Not panic.

Not despair.

The Blood of the Lamb.

So child of God, keep watching.

Keep praying.

Keep your lamp trimmed and burning.

Stay faithful to Christ even if the whole world turns toward darkness.

Because one day soon, the trumpet will sound, the heavens will open, and the King of Kings will return in power and glory.

And on that day, every battle with Satan will finally come to an end. 

The World Is Different Today

 There was a time when wars were fought on distant fields with swords, horses, and marching armies. One nation might rise against another, but much of the world continued untouched. A famine in one land did not empty the shelves in another. A plague in one region did not shut down the entire earth. News traveled slowly. Economies were local. Nations were isolated.

But this generation is different.

For the first time in human history, the entire world is tied together like links in one giant chain. Oil in the Middle East affects food prices in Indiana. The war in Europe affects factories in America. Conflict in Asia is shaking markets worldwide. A disease in one nation can circle the earth in weeks. A cyberattack can cripple banks, transportation, and communication across continents in hours.

Jesus warned us that this day would come.

In Matthew 24, the disciples asked Him, “What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?” And Jesus answered:

“And ye shall hear of wars and rumors of wars: see that ye be not troubled... For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these are the beginning of sorrows.” — Matthew 24:6–8 KJV.

Notice those words carefully:

“The beginning of sorrows.”

Not the end.

The beginning.

The phrase paints the picture of birth pains. At first, the pains are spread apart. Then they grow stronger. Closer together. More intense. More frequent. Jesus was warning that the earth itself would enter a season of increasing travail before His return.

Every generation of Christians has looked at troubled times and wondered if they were seeing those sorrows begin. The early church faced Roman persecution. Europe saw plagues and world wars. Entire nations collapsed throughout history.

But what makes this hour different is not merely the existence of war.

It is the global reach of its consequences.

The modern world is interconnected in a way no civilization has ever experienced before. One conflict now ripples through every nation. Supply chains break. Fuel prices rise. Food shortages spread. Medicines become scarce. Markets tremble. Fear multiplies. Entire populations become unstable.

And Revelation describes exactly this kind of cascading destruction.

John saw the rider on the pale horse:

“And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death…” — Revelation 6:8 KJV

Notice the progression.

Sword.

Hunger.

Death.

War is only the beginning. Behind war comes famine. Behind famine comes sickness. Behind sickness comes social collapse. Behind collapse comes fear, violence, despair, and spiritual deception.

The destruction is not only physical.

It is spiritual.

Jesus warned that iniquity would abound and the love of many would grow cold. We are watching that happen before our eyes. Men have become lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God. Truth is mocked. Holiness is abandoned. Churches grow comfortable while the world grows darker. Many have a form of godliness but deny the power thereof.

The greatest danger of this hour may not be missiles, tanks, or economic collapse.

It may be spiritual sleep.

Jesus said:

“And what I say unto you I say unto all, Watch.” — Mark 13:37 KJV

Watch.

Not panic.

Not hysteria.

Not hopeless fear.

Watch.

Be spiritually awake.

The church must stop acting as though tomorrow is guaranteed. We must stop living distracted, entertained, and spiritually numb while the foundations of the world shake around us.

This is not the hour to play church.

This is the hour to pray.

This is the hour to search our hearts.

This is the hour to return to holiness, repentance, and truth.

Jesus also said:

“Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things…” — Luke 21:36 KJV

Prayerless Christians will not survive spiritually in the days ahead. A powerless church cannot stand against a collapsing world. The hour demands discernment. It demands courage. It demands a faith deeply rooted in Christ.

The answer is not found in governments, political parties, world systems, or earthly kingdoms.

The answer is still Jesus Christ.

The Gospel still saves.

The Blood still cleanses.

The Holy Ghost still empowers.

The Word of God still stands true.

As the shadows grow darker, the church must shine brighter.

The world may be entering the beginning of sorrows, but for the child of God, this is not a time to surrender in fear. It is a time to lift our heads, redeem the time, warn the lost, strengthen the weak, and keep our eyes upon Christ.

Watch and pray.

The King is coming.

Who Shall Separate Us?

 The Perseverance of the Saints — A Rambling from Romans Chapter 8

Some Scriptures rise like a mountain in the middle of a storm.

Romans chapter 8 is one of them.

When this old world starts shaking…

When the devil whispers defeat into your ear…

When sickness weakens the body…

When burdens press down on the soul…

When tears fall in the dark where nobody else can see…

Romans 8 still stands.

The Apostle Paul did not write these words from a place of comfort and ease. He wrote them as a man who knew persecution, suffering, rejection, imprisonment, hardship, and spiritual warfare. Yet out of all those troubles came one of the greatest declarations of assurance ever written under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost.

“And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are called according to his purpose.” — Romans 8:28 KJV.

Notice Paul did not say all things are good.

Some things hurt.

Some things break us.

Some things leave scars we carry the rest of our lives.

But God is so sovereign and so powerful that He can take even the darkest valleys and still accomplish His eternal purpose through them.

That is the perseverance of the saints.

Not that believers never struggle.

Not that Christians never fall into discouragement.

Not that we never face temptation, sorrow, fear, or weakness.

But true salvation endures because Christ holds His people.

The foundation of our hope is not our ability to hold onto Him…

…it is His power to hold onto us.

There are days when our grip grows weak.

But he never does.

Paul builds this chapter like a mighty crescendo until he arrives at one thunderous question:

“Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?” — Romans 8:35 KJV

Friend, that question still echoes across every generation.

Who shall separate us?

Shall tribulation?

Many believers today are walking through tribulation. Some carry burdens nobody else knows about. Financial pressure. Family troubles. Sickness. Anxiety. Grief. Persecution. Sleepless nights.

Yet hardship does not mean God has abandoned His children.

Sometimes the storm is the very place where God proves His faithfulness.

“Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?” — Romans 8:35 KJV

Paul was not writing theology from an air-conditioned office.

He lived this.

He bore scars for the Gospel.

He knew what it meant to suffer for Christ.

Today, many American Christians panic when comfort is disturbed, but the early church walked through prisons, beatings, and martyrdom while still singing praises unto God.

Their faith was not built on convenience.

It was built on Christ.

There is a shallow Christianity in this generation that believes faith should remove all suffering. But Scripture teaches something far different. The Christian life is not the absence of battle. It is the presence of Christ in the battle.

The saints persevere because the Lord preserves them.

There is a great difference between weak faith and false faith.

Even weary saints still cling to Jesus.

Like Peter sinking in the water, they cry:

“Lord, save me.”

And immediately the Lord stretched forth His hand.

I have lived long enough to watch many storms come and go. I have seen believers walk through cancer, funerals, broken homes, financial collapse, and heartbreak. I have watched old saints whisper Scripture through trembling lips while lying in hospital beds.

And through it all, Christ kept them.

Not because they were strong…

…but because He is faithful.

Paul continues:

“Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us.” — Romans 8:37 KJV.

Notice he did not say we avoid these things.

He said in these things.

Right in the middle of suffering…

Right in the middle of persecution…

Right in the middle of uncertainty…

…the child of God still overcomes through Christ.

This world measures victory by comfort, wealth, popularity, and success.

God measures victory by faithfulness.

Some of the greatest conquerors in church history died in prisons, were burned at the stake, wandered in deserts, or preached the Gospel in poverty and affliction. Heaven does not define victory the same way Earth does.

Then Paul closes the chapter with words that have comforted saints for nearly two thousand years:

“For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come,

Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” — Romans 8:38–39 KJV

Paul said, “I am persuaded.”

Not guessing.

Not hoping.

Persuaded.

That word means settled.

Established.

Convinced.

The older I get, the more precious that assurance becomes.

This world is changing rapidly. Nations rage. Economies shake. Morality collapses. Churches compromise. Many hearts fail for fear of what is coming upon the Earth.

But Romans 8 still stands like a lighthouse in the storm.

The child of God does not stand secure because the government is stable.

Not because the economy is strong.

Not because the culture is moral.

We stand secure because Christ remains faithful.

The perseverance of the saints is not confidence in human strength.

It is confidence in divine grace.

If salvation depended entirely upon human ability, none of us would make it.

But Jesus said:

“And I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand.” — John 10:28 KJV.

That does not give license for careless living.

True grace produces holiness, obedience, repentance, and perseverance.

A changed heart continues following Christ.

The same grace that saves also keeps.

Friend, there may be someone reading this today who feels exhausted from the battle. Maybe you feel overwhelmed by life itself. Maybe your faith feels weak and your spirit weary.

Remember this:

Your salvation does not rest upon the strength of your emotions.

It rests upon the finished work of Jesus Christ.

And if you belong to Him…

nothing in Heaven…

nothing on Earth…

nothing in Hell…

can separate you from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.