A Historical Survey of the Concept of Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare: Spiritual Mapping, Territorial Spirits, and Related Praxis

Spiritual Mapping, Territorial Spirits, and Related Praxis

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A Historical Survey of the Concept of Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare: Spiritual Mapping, Territorial Spirits, and Related Praxis

by Paul L. King, D.Min., Th.D.

The concept of “strategic level spiritual warfare” (SLSW) involves collective or corporate strategies of doing spiritual warfare, not merely on the level of demonic deliverance of individuals on earth, but dealing with principalities and powers in the heavenlies. SLSW teaches that there are ruling demonic spirits, often called “territorial spirits,” assigned to geographical areas, such as the “prince of Persia” of Daniel 10. Consequently, the spirits need to be dislodged through war-like strategies of intercession, binding and loosing, direct rebuke or command of spirits, and spiritual mapping. Spiritual mapping is the process of determining the forces and circumstances that hold a territory in spiritual bondage.

Territorial Spirits Concept in the Church Fathers

This interpretation of the “prince of Persia” of Daniel 10 as an example of doing warfare against territorial spirits in some fashion is not a recent innovation, but has a long record in church history. For instance, as early as the 2nd century, Church Father Justin Martyr acknowledged a principality over the city of Damascus that was dislodged by the Incarnation of Christ: “For that expression in Isaiah [8:4], ‘He shall take the power of Damascus and the spoils of Samaria’ foretold the power of the evil demon that dwelt in Damascus should be overcome by Christ as soon as He was born, and this is proved to have happened.”1 Justin explained further that this demonic force had authority over all Arabia through the occultic religion of the Magi. The Incarnation of Christ conquered that power by attracting the Magi to worship Him: “For the Magi who were held in bondage for the commission of all evil deeds through the power of that demon, by coming to worship Christ, show that they have revolted from that dominion which held them captive, and this [dominion] the Scripture has showed us to reside in Damascus.”2 The third century church father Origen likewise believed in territorial spirits, noting the prince of Persia in Daniel and the prince of Tyre in Ezekiel.3

  • Justin Martyr, “Dialogue with Trypho, chapter 78,” The Ante-Nicene Fathers, eds., Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1978), 1:238.

2 Ibid.

3 Origen, De Principiis, bk 3, ch. 3, par. 2, The Ante-Nicene Fathers, 10:239, 243; bk. 1, ch. 8, The Ante-Nicene Fathers, 65.

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Renewed Teaching on Territorial Spirits and Spiritual Warfare

During the medieval period there does not seem to be teaching on territorial spirits. However, in the post-Reformation period, such emphasis appears to reemerge. Territorial revivals have been noted in the Great Awakening of 1738-40 involving Jonathan Edwards and the Great American Revival of 1858. Preceded by fervent prayer, such revivals would appear to involve the overthrow of territorial spirits, binding their influence and loosing the power of the Holy Spirit.4 Revival historian Wesley Deuwel identifies such territorial revival phenomena as “zones of holiness” or “a canopy of holy and awesome revival influence—in reality the presence of the Holy Spirit” during the 1858 revival.5

Classics scholar G. H. Pember wrote in the 1870s that from Daniel and Ezekiel 14 Satan “divides the world into different provinces according to its nationalities, appointing a powerful angel, assisted by countless subordinates, as viceroy over each kingdom to direct its energies and bend them to his will.”6 In 1897, speaking in a missiological context at a China Inland Mission Conference in London, Keswick leader Jessie Penn-Lewis, probably influenced by Pember, taught that there are “principalities who rule over various lands.”7 In 1904, S. D. Gordon declared, “Intercession is winning the victory over the chief, and service is taking the field after the chief is driven off.”8

Canadian Presbyterian missionary revivalist Jonathan Goforth was aware of conflict with territorial spirits. An article in 1920 described a revival in South China with Jonathan Goforth preaching. Missionaries reported that principalities and powers in the air and the prince of the kingdom of China were hindering, but through much prayer there was a breakthrough on the tenth day with weeping and confession with more than 700 inquiring about salvation.9 Robert Jaffray, a Canadian Presbyterian colleague of Goforth who became director of the South China mission of the Christian and Missionary

  • Neill Foster with Paul L. King, Binding and Loosing: Exercising Authority over the Dark Powers (Camp Hill, PA: Christian Publications, 1998), 254-255.

5 Wesley Deuwel, Revival Fire (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995), 102, 133.

6 G. H. Pember, Earth’s Earliest Ages (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1876; reprint, Grand Rapid, MI: Kregel, 1975), 44.

7 Jessie Penn-Lewis, The Warfare with Satan (Fort Washington, PA: Christian Literature Crusade, 1963),

  1. See also Jessie Penn-Lewis, Prayer and Evangelism (Dorset, England: Overcomer Literature Trust, [1921]), 34-35.

8 S. D. Gordon, cited by Timothy M. Warner, “Dealing with Territorial Demons,” Engaging the Enemy: How To Fight and Defeat Territorial Spirits (Ventura, CA: Regal, 1991), 53.

9 Mrs. L. L. Hess, Preaching and Prayer or Special Services at Wuchow,” The Alliance Weekly (AW), April 24, 1920, 56.

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Alliance, wrote in 1927 of territorial spirits, saying, “There is today a Prince of Tibet, of Afghanistan, of Cambodia, of Arabia, of Mohammedanism, of Bolshevism, who are prepared to defend their lands.”10 A year later while pioneering a new work in Borneo he fell under a deep depression that he recognized was a result of stepping “on the enemy’s territory,” calling that enemy “the Prince of Darkness.”11

Parallel with these developments, in 1916 E. W. Kenyon, considered the father of the modern faith movement, also believed in a concept of territorial spirits. Theologian and historian Douglas Jacobsen notes, “Kenyon believed Satan divided the world into a host of separate ‘kingdoms and states, and communities’ and gave various demons control over those territorial domains. Virtually every community was assigned a territorial demon to oppress and control all forms of life in that region of the planet.”12

Further Development of the Concept by John MacMillan

C&MA missionary John MacMillan, perhaps more than any other Christian leader of his day, began to develop more of a concept of territorial influences. Some personality trait weaknesses that are usually considered characteristic of a certain nationality or ethnic group, MacMillan suggested, are “quite as likely to be a working of that undercurrent of Satanic force.”13 He posited the atheism of Russia and the unexplainable submissiveness of its people as due to an occult power, what he calls a “hellish counterfeit.”14 For most heathen religions, MacMillan explained, “Every god is confined to definite territorial limits, outside of which his influence does not extend.”15 MacMillan viewed Daniel 10 as an example of prayer activating God’s interference with “mighty intelligences” manipulating people, governments, and circumstances.16

MacMillan suggested that unusual physical disorders which may manifest in one environment, but not another may be due to the influence of what some today call territorial spirits.17 These forms of oppression, he believed, are overcome through what

  • A. Jaffray, “Our Great Unfinished Task,” AW, July 9, 1927, 456.
  • W. Tozer, Let My People Go! (Camp Hill, PA: Christian Publications, 1990), 90.
  • Douglas Jacobsen, Thinking in the Spirit: Theologies of the Early Pentecostal Movement (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2003), 329; see E.W. Kenyon, The Father and His Family, 11th (n. p.: Kenyon’s Gospel Publishing Co., 1964), 36-37, 71, 196.
  • “The Weakness of Power,” AW, Apr. 2, 1938, 211.
  • “Our Most Stubborn Foe,” AW, June 27, 1942, 402.
  • “Daniel and the Unseen,” AW, Feb. 12, 1944, 99.
  • MacMillan explained, “Cases have been seen, on the foreign field, where a physician’s diagnosis has apparently revealed serious functional disorder, and the patient has been invalided [sent home on disability leave] home. Yet, when the home physician has examined the worker, no trace has been found of the

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are sometimes today called “truth encounters,” by exercising the authority of the believer, binding the enemy, and confessing the truths of the Word of God.18

Although MacMillan did not use the current terminology “territorial spirits,” he clearly understood the concept of demonic strongholds over a region. He appealed for intercessors at home “to roll back the powers of the air, and make it possible to bring the Truth to bear on these regions where the devil is blocking the way.”19 The “principalities” of Ephesians 6:12 he regarded as “satanic princes, angels whose principalities cover the countries of this world.”20

As a professor at the Missionary Training Institute in Nyack, New York, he would involve his students in “praying geographically,” interceding for specific locations and missionaries around the world.21 Though not nearly so sophisticated a strategy as presented today, nonetheless fifty years before the SLSW movement MacMillan taught and practiced a rudimentary form of what today is known as spiritual mapping.22

Similar to the cautions of some critiquing SLSW movement today, MacMillan cautioned that this type of ministry is not for everyone, but rather “men and women whose lives are yielded to God,” for “true geographic prayer ministry needs close abiding in God.”23 Those who engage in this kind of ministry need to exercise spiritual discernment. They are to be “watchers,” who have their heart and mind “trained in spiritual observation” and “can discern constant shifting of the lines of combat, which is indicated trouble. The change of environment has seemed to remove all signs of physical weakness. If we consider this to have any connection with the working of the enemy, it would appear as if there was oppression on the field, which did not exist at home, the pressure being removed when the patient reached the homeland.” John A. MacMillan, Encounter with Darkness (Harrisburg, PA: Christian Publications, 1980), 50-51.

  • , 55-59.
  • A. MacMillan, “Our Mohammedan Problem in the Philippines,” AW, June 22, 1929, 404.
  • The Full Gospel Sunday School Quarterly, Aug. 9, 1953, 18.
  • Paul L. King, A Believer with Authority (Camp Hill, PA: Christian Publications, 2001), 153.
  • MacMillan wrote, “There is among the saints of the Most High a chosen group—perhaps larger than we think—whose divinely appointed ministry is that of the prayer closet. There, on their knees with a world map before them, its members individually and methodically pray out the problems of the advance of the kingdom. They precede missionaries into areas where Christ has not been named; they observe them as they attack firmly-placed barriers, breaking down by the high explosive of authoritative prayer the Satanic opposition that continues impedes the forward progress of the gospel. Because the working of the Spirit of God is everywhere, working through some mysterious law, dependent on intercession, these unseen workers are the real pioneers of Christian missions. Unknown to themselves their word in the heavenlies is mighty through God to the overthrowing of principalities and powers. National boundaries are melting down before the faith and fervor of their supplications.” John MacMillan, “Praying Geographically,” AW, Sept. 14, 1946, 579; The Full Gospel Sunday School Quarterly, Aug. 9, 1953, 18. This is not to say that he would embrace all that is taught and practiced regarding these concepts today.
  • MacMillan, “Praying Geographically,” 579.

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not obvious to others.” He warned that “it is also a service of peculiar peril to those involved. For the enemy strikes with malignant vigor and keen knowledge at every opportunity.”24 He spoke out of the authority of his own experience, having done battle with such spirits in the Philippines.25 He had viewed his battle for his wife’s life as an “infernal fiat” intended to crush them because they were dislodging the spirits that held the territories of the Philippines in darkness. MacMillan thus promoted the idea of praying against territorial forces, but not directly commanding or rebuking such forces as advocated by SLSW proponents today.

Late 20th Century Development of Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare

In 1955 Gordon Lindsay, founder of Christ for the Nations Institute, taught on the basis of Daniel 10, “The real ruler of a Gentile nation is not a king or a human potentate, but rather a prince of the kingdom of darkness. This powerful spirit prince has a legion of lesser sprits under him, who carry out his orders, and by them, Satan maintains his kingdom and accomplishes his purpose of seducing and deceiving men.”26 He acknowledges, “Spiritual powers in high places are dislodged only by spiritual warfare.”27 For Lindsay, such spiritual warfare consists of persistent, persevering prayer such as Daniel’s, which “aided in releasing the spiritual power [reinforcements by the Archangel Michael] that in the end defeated the powers of darkness.”28 He gives the example of Charles Finney wrestling and agonizing in prayer before the great 1857-57 revival broke out.29

Although he did not teach directly on SLSW, Frank Peretti’s fictional books This Present Darkness and Piercing the Darkness have probably had more impact than anything else in raising the awareness and popularizing the concept of warfare in the heavenlies. Additionally, according to Keith Bailey, “Timothy M. Warner is credited with being the first missiologist to use the term ‘territorial spirits.’”3

  • John A. MacMillan, The Authority of the Believer (Harrisburg, PA: Christian Publications, 1980), 38.
  • Gordon Lindsay, The Secret of Prayer That Moves Mountains (Dallas, TX: Voice of Healing Publishing Co., 1955), 88.
  • , 90.
  • , 90-92.
  • Keith M. Bailey, Strange Gods: Responding to the Rise of Spirit Worship in America (Camp Hill, PA: Christian Publications, 1998), 229.

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John Dawson’s book Taking Our Cities for God signaled a new level of strategy in dealing with territorial spirits. Yet, as a seemingly prophetic harbinger of the future SLSW movement, he also cautioned:

Very little is revealed about specific territorial spirits in the Bible, and that’s no accident. . . . [The reality of territorial spirits] should not be taken as a mandate for the development of spiritual maps in which we seek knowledge for the sake of knowledge. If we gain knowledge of the name and nature of an evil spirit and publish it broadly, the enemy will only attempt to glorify himself.31

Prayer walking, the practice of walking around a geographic area interceding for the area and people of the area, though practiced broadly outside of the SLSW movement, has become an integral part of strategic level spiritual warfare.32 “Marches for Jesus” became popular, beginning in London in 1987, and organized in 142 American and European cities on May 23, 1992.33 Foster and King support the idea of prayerwalking as biblical, but also give cautions concerning misuse of the concept.34 It should be noted that many churches and ministries engage in prayerwalking without embracing the theology and practices of SLSW. Hawthorne and Kendrick, leaders in the prayerwalking movement, point out, “Exorcism routines that are suitable for dealing with demonized individuals are not necessarily appropriate when dealing with neighborhoods or territories.”35 On the other hand, many of the SLSW proponents practice binding and loosing of territorial spirits in a corporate setting. Ed Silvoso of Harvest Evangelism, and the brother-in-law of evangelist Luis Palau, has engaged in prayer walking, breaking down strongholds, and SLSW, especially in his native country of Argentina.36

  1. Peter Wagner, one of the chief promoters of SLSW, cites C&MA Navajo Indian pastor Herman Williams becoming sick and going off the reservation for treatment. When he arrived at the doctor, the pain was gone, and the doctor could find nothing wrong. When he returned to the reservation the pain returned and he discerned that there was a problem with territorial spirits.37 Cindy Jacobs, founder of the General of Intercession ministry, advertises their mission as “achieving societal reformation
  2. John Dawson, Taking Our Cities for God (Lake Mary, FL: Creation House, 1989), 156.
  • Steve Hawthorne and Graham Kendrick, Prayer-walking: Praying on Site with Insight (Lake Mary, FL: Creation House, 1993).
  • , 198.
  • Foster and King, 276-278.
  • Hawthorne and Kendrick, 141.
  • Hawthorne and Kendrick, 120.
  • C Peter Wagner, “The Key To Victory Is Binding the ‘Strong Man,’” Ministries Today, Nov./Dec. 1986, 84; see also George Otis, Jr., The Twilight Labyrinth (Grand Rapids, MI: Chosen Books, 1997), 194-195.

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through intercession and the prophetic.38 She has produced a series of teaching videos entitled Societal Reformation and Transformation Video Series, as well as numerous books, including Warfare Prayer: Laying Siege to a City through Intercession and Possessing the Gates of the Enemy.39

The ministries of Jacobs, Wagner, Chuck Pierce, and others intersect the prophetic movement with the spiritual warfare movement. This is not to say that everyone in the SLSW movement agrees or identifies with each one, nor that everyone in the spiritual warfare movement is involved in the prophetic movement.

Though not active proponents of the SLSW movement per se, many members of the modern prophetic movement, such as Paul Cain and Rick Joyner, practice corporate spiritual warfare and utilize some of the SLSW principles. Likewise, the New Apostolic Movement also intersects and intertwines with SLSW movement, though not all are involved with both movements. End time Handmaidens leader Gwen Shaw utilizes some principles of the SLSW movement, but is not a leader in the movement. She is somewhat controversial, claimed by some to engage in New Age theology.

George Otis, Jr., explained spiritual mapping as “nothing more ethereal than creating a spiritual profile of a community carefully based on research.”40 Otis elaborates on and documents what he calls principalities as “governmental co-conspirators,” “regional deities,” and “territorial dynasties,” as well as “territorial counterattacks” and in his 1997 book The Twilight Labyrinth.41 He writes of “collective possession and cultural exorcism” in which “whole communities have entered into collective pacts with the spirit world.”42 Otis organized the A.D. 2000 United Prayer Track for evangelism and collective spiritual warfare. He has produced “Transformation” videos, which provide documentaries of cities and regions transformed through spiritual warfare. Otis has formed the Sentinel Group, which promotes itself as “a Christian research and information agency dedicated to helping the Church pray knowledgably for end-time global evangelization and enabling communities to discover the pathway to genuine

  • See the Generals of Intercession website at http://generalsorg.zoovy.com/
  • Cindy Jacobs, Warfare Prayer: Laying Siege to a City through Intercession; Cindy Jacobs, Possessing the Gates of the Enemy (Tarrytown, NY: Chosen Books, 1991).
  • George Otis, Jr., as cited by Art Moore, “Spiritual Mapping Gains Credibility among Leaders,” Christianity Today, January 12, 1998, 53.
  • Otis, The Twilight Labyrinth,181-229, 236-238.
  • 274-277.

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revival and societal transformation.”43 Other research sources refute the extent of transformation claimed by the videos.44

Some teach a concept of territorial generational curses, meaning that a demonic curse can blanket a specific geographical area or nation because of unresolved sins committed by people of earlier generations. Some may in direct commanding prayer break generational curses, while others use a more indirect approach such as corporate repentance, asking specific people or people groups for forgiveness in behalf of former generations’ sins towards that particular people group. This is known as variously as identificational repentance or confession. John Dawson appears to be one of the earliest promoters of this concept, particularly through his book Healing America’s Wounds.45 Some cite historical examples of identificational repentance in the Book of Common Prayer, Elizabethan Prayer Book, the Episcopalian Book of Occasional Services, and the Lutheran Stuttgart Confession of Guilt.46

Another teaching that intersects with SLSW and the apostolic and prophetic movements is the “Joel’s Army” concept, based on Joel 2:2-3, which teaches that God is raising up an end-time army of believers to exercise spiritual authority on the earth and bring end-time “latter rain” revival. Some, though not all, who teach a Joel’s Army idea embrace Dominion theology, the belief that the church will take dominion of the earth (often aligned with post-millennial eschatology). Others are Restorationists, who emphasize end-time restoration of early church characteristics and power that have been lost to the church. Among the proponents of the Joel’s army teaching are prophetic leaders like Rick Joyner, Jack Deere, Latter Rain leader Paul Cain, Francis Frangipane, Bob Beckett, and many others.47

Criticisms of Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare

C&MA scholar Keith Bailey questions the exegesis and interpretation of Daniel 10 and other passages of Scripture and biblical concepts such as stoicheia in relation to

  • See The Sentinel Group website at: http://www.sentinelgroup.org/
  • See the website: http://www.geocities.com/smithtj.geo/transformations1.html
  • John Dawson, Healing America’s Wounds (Ventura, CA: Regal, 1994).
  • Gary S. Greig, “The Biblical Foundations of Identificational Repentance as One Prayer Pattern Useful to Advance God’s Kingdom and Evangelism,” April 2001, published online at http://www.cwgministries.org/books/Biblical-Foundation-for-Identificational-Repentance.pdf. Greig’s paper is a scholarly treatment supporting identificational repentance.
  • See Rick Joyner, The Harvest; Jack Deere, “Joel’s Army,” It Sounds Like the Mother of All Battles, Barbara Aho, “The Elijah Revolution: Joel’s Army Coming of Age,” accessed online at http://watch.pair.com/elijah.html

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territorial spirits, saying that “Daniel did not do battle with the prince of Persia. It was the angel who fought this wicked power. It was a battle in the heavenlies with angels and demons.”48 He views ruling spirits as being assigned to political ruling entities rather than geographical locations.

Clinton Arnold concurs that territorial spirits do exist, but opposes the SLSW movement, citing that Scripture illustrates that believers can cast out individual spirits, but there is no scriptural support for commanding territorial spirits: “The Bible nowhere narrates, describes or instructs us on how, or even whether, we are to engage these high-ranking territorial spirits . . . a strategy for taking on territorial spirits is absent.”49 Foster and King agree with Arnold, concluding, “Spiritual mapping, if it takes a form which focuses on the occult or territoriality of the various dark powers, is likely to carry its practitioners into peril. But spiritual mapping which is more akin to the old-fashioned field study, including some description of the demon powers of false religions, is the kind of spiritual mapping which could be acceptable.”50

Michael Reid, in his book Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare: A Modern Mythology? holds a similar position with Arnold, King, and Foster regarding SLSW, but disagrees on matters of possible demonization of Christians. Reid comments of Wimber, “Although Wimber believed in ‘custodian’ territorial spirits, he rejected the concept of aggressive warfare against the spirits, concluding that it is God who determines the strategy, engages the enemy, and wins the victory. He believed that Christians must oppose Satan but they do not confront the ruling spirits, only the low-level demons.”51

Chuck Lowe, in his book Territorial Spirits and World Evangelization?, presents one of the most broadly touted critiques of the SLSW movement.52 He concludes that there are no such things as territorial spirits, though possibly custodial tutelary spirits, and observes no “shred of support” for the practice of warfare prayer in Scripture.53 He also questions the hermeneutic of some in the movement that if it is not in the Bible it is permissible.

  • Bailey, 231.
  • Clinton Arnold, 3 Crucial Questions about Spiritual Warfare (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1997),
  • Foster and King, 263.
  • Michael S. B. Reid, Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare: A Modern Mythology? (Fairfax, VA: Xulon Press, 2002), 103.
  • Chuck Lowe, Territorial Spirits and World Evangelization? (Sevenoaks, Kent, UK: OMF, 1998, 2001)
  • , 20, 144.

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Writing in the Journal of Asian Mission, Malaysian minister Yee Tham Wan has presented a critique of the broader spiritual warfare movement, including in his appraisal a wide array of those who are not identified with SLSW such as Warren Wiersbe, David Bryant and Evelyn Christianson.54 He asserts that the success of the general spiritual warfare movement is due to populist, pragmatic and triumphalistic approaches and techniques, not to theological or biblical soundness.55 Citing Robert Guelich,56 he claims that “Paul writes very little about Satan and demons or evil spirits,” and thus spiritual warfare is a limited concept in the Bible.57 Wan does not, however, engage the comprehensive work by Gregory Boyd tracing the spiritual warfare motif throughout the Bible entitled God at War: The Bible and Spiritual Conflict.58 Nor does he take into consideration New Testament scholar Clinton Arnold’s extensive studies on the powers of darkness in Paul’s writings.59

Kenneth Hagin, in his book The Triumphant Church, acknowledges that demons can “dominate” or “gang up in certain parts of the world or in certain countries,” but believes that people who think they are pulling down strongholds over cities or regions are misguided and such actions are not warranted by Scripture.60 He asserts that Daniel “prayed to God, not against the devil,” yet he believes that Christians can bind the devil in his operations.61

John Paul Jackson, a leader in the prophetic movement that often engages in strategic level spiritual warfare, nonetheless teaches in his book Needless Casualties of War that believers are authorized to do spiritual warfare only in the terrestrial, or earthly, realm, not in the second heaven, which he considers “the command post of Satan and his diabolical spiritual dignitaries which include principalities, powers, rulers of darkness,

  • Yee Tham Wan, “A Critique of the Spiritual Warfare Movement,” Journal of Asian Mission 4:2 (2002).
  • Wan, 180-186
  • Robert A. Guelich, “Jesus, Paul and Peretti,” Pneuma 13:1 (Spring 1991), 42, 45.
  • Wan, 184.
  • Gregory A. Boyd, God at War: The Bible and Spiritual Conflict (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1997). Boyd only briefly addresses Guelich’s claims directly, but throughout his book counters the idea that spiritual warfare is merely a metaphor that is a minor theme in Scripture. (See pp. 280, 310n66, 392n35.)

 

  • Clinton E. Arnold, Powers of Darkness: Principalities and Powers in Paul’s Letters (Downers Gove, IL: InterVarsity, 1992); Clinton E. Arnold, Ephesians, Power and Magic: The Concept of Power in Ephesians in Light of Its Historical Setting (Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1989); Clinton E.

Arnold, The Colossian Syncretism: The Interface Between Christianity and Folk Belief at Colosse (Grand

Rapids, MI: Baker, 1996).

  • Kenneth E. Hagin, The Triumphant Church: Dominion Over All the Powers of Darkness (Tulsa, OK: Kenneth Hagin Ministries, 1993), 201-222.
  • , 239, 242.

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and spiritual hosts of wickedness.”62 He illustrates many instances of demonic attack on those who have attempted to do warfare on their own with territorial spirits beyond their sphere of authority: tragedies, illness, miscarriage, depression and death.63

While there are some who disagree totally with the concept of territorial spirits (such as Bailey, Reid, Lowe), others acknowledge their reality, but disagree with the direct encounter approach. Veteran missionary Ed Murphy, for instance, similar to Arnold, advocates asking God to subdue territorial spirits, rather than commanding them.64

Others, like Otis, argue for the need of collective strategic level spiritual warfare: “The spiritual dynamics [of collective pacts with the spirit world] are no longer individualized. Collective action has forced the issue to a higher level. Deliverance strategies must now take into consideration a wide range of sociopolitical expression, each of which may be linked (sometimes quite explicitly) to demonic shadow rulers.”65 At the same time, he cautions against “reckless claims and baseless expectations”, noting that a spiritual warfare rally in San Francisco on Halloween in 1990 (perhaps speaking of Larry Lea) did not “reverse the curse” as claimed.66 He counsels:

Asking God to banish demonic powers from an entire community is to suggest that He set aside the logical consequences of a people’s misplaced choices. It is to assume that our role as “King’s kids” gives us the authority to nullify residents’ free will or the devil’s ability to respond to explicit human overtures. . . . In reality, I have yet to come across a single case study in which this approach has been applied successfully. It is simply not realistic to expect that we can facilitate the wholesale elimination of demonic powers prior to the Second Coming.67

He advocates engaging in strategic level intercession that involves primarily prayer, and direct confrontation with territorial principalities and power only when clear direction and authority have been given by God to do so in a particular situation: “This authority is not for us to use at our own initiative or discretion. It is ambassadorial authority, which means it is to be exercised only at the bidding of the Sovereign.” He indicates that in

  • John Paul Jackson, Needless Casualties of War (Fort Worth, TX: Streams Publications, 1999), 55. For Jackson’s discussion of this limitation on spiritual warfare see Jackson, 55-72.
  • Jackson, 11-42.
  • Ed Murphy, The Handbook for Spiritual Warfare (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1992, 1996), 536.
  • Otis, The Twilight Labyrinth, 275-276.
  • , 278-279. This is probably the same event led by Larry Lea. Some have seen in Larry Lea’s unsuccessful attempt to dislodge spirits over San Francisco the eventual demise of his ministry as he came under spiritual attack with moral and financial accusations and a nervous breakdown.
  • , 279.

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scriptural passages in the Psalms that deal with warfare, in only about one percent of the time, does the psalmist speak directly to the enemy.68

Some question identificational repentance, claiming it is neither biblical nor necessary.69 However, while widely practiced in the SLSW movement, identificational confession is also often practiced by many who would not want to identify with SLSW.

Conclusion

Due to the multitude of writings and people in the spiritual warfare movement and the brevity of this essay, many significant writings and leaders of the SLSW movement have been omitted of this survey. It is impossible in a brief overview to touch on all of the significant people, writings, and concepts, but we have endeavored to address the most important ones here.

Most serious students of spiritual warfare throughout church history recognize that territorial spirits do exist in some fashion, but there is great disagreement regarding the appropriate role of Christians in directly countering spirits at that level through spiritual warfare. Likewise, spiritual warfare praxis encompasses a wide range of practices, not used or advocated by all, including spiritual mapping, direct warfare prayer, prayerwalking, generational repentance, and so on. The soundest counsel seems to be that which is thoroughly biblically-based, and has the track record of church history. It is the assessment of many theologians and ministers that much of the current emphasis on SLSW has gone into the realm of speculative theology and praxis. There are signs that leaders of the SLSW movement are beginning to back off their claims, and beginning to return to a biblically-based theology and praxis of spiritual warfare, but the controversies continue.70

  • , 282.
  • Frank Green, “Identificational Repentance—Is It Necessary? Is It Biblical?”, Manchester, England: September 1999, C.Net Theological Forum, accessed online at http://www.eauk.org/contentmanager/content/acute/green.pdf
  • Lowe observes, “Even now the first hints are emerging that SLSW is on its way out. At least the latest book has shifted the focus of its accolades to what was previously an attendant activity, identificational repentance.” Lowe, 150. He is referring to the following book: C Peter Wagner, Praying with Power: How to Pray Effectively and Hear Clearly from God (Ventura, CA: Regal, 1997).

70 Comments

  • Reply January 18, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    @isara mo Link Hudson to yalls attention a historical overview of the praxis Thank you Dr. Paul L. King for making this available to us in the group

  • Reply January 18, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    Due to the multitude of writings and people in the spiritual warfare movement and the brevity of this essay, many significant writings and leaders of the SLSW movement have been omitted of this survey. It is impossible in a brief overview to touch on all of the significant people, writings, and concepts, but we have endeavored to address the most important ones here.

    Peter Wagner, one of the chief promoters of SLSW, cites C&MA Navajo Indian pastor Herman Williams becoming sick and going off the reservation for treatment. When he arrived at the doctor, the pain was gone, and the doctor could find nothing wrong. When he returned to the reservation the pain returned and he discerned that there was a problem with territorial spirits.37 Cindy Jacobs, founder of the General of Intercession ministry, advertises their mission as “achieving societal reformation

    Dr Paul L. King has personally talked with Herman Williams before he passed away and verified the story

  • Reply January 19, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    surprised of non-takers Joe Absher Link Hudson

    • Link Hudson
      Reply January 19, 2019

      Link Hudson

      Too many threads to keep up with.

    • Reply January 20, 2019

      Varnel Watson

      nope – not really – this is just a good new resource

  • Joe Absher
    Reply January 19, 2019

    Joe Absher

    When we discussed this last. I Ithink the consensus was we believe:
    “Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.
    For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.”
    – Ephesians 6:10,11
    Just as it’s written, but I think the conversation fell apart at the practice and implimentation of the believers authority in Christ. Jesus Christ the Righteous

  • Reply January 19, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    Paul L. King I appreciate very much the reference to the much forgotten and often negated Keswick leader Jessie Penn-Lewis

    • Paul L. King
      Reply January 19, 2019

      Paul L. King

      Troy Day I have done a fair amount of study of Penn-Lewis, the good, the bad, and the ugly. War on the Saints had elements of truth, but sometimes went overboard

    • Reply January 20, 2019

      Varnel Watson

      I agree She also went overboard Yet her work on the subject is still monumental for most to learn

    • Paul L. King
      Reply January 20, 2019

      Paul L. King

      Troy Day penn-Lewis and MacMillan met in Canada

  • Reply January 19, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    Also Symeon the New Theologian comes to mind with his mystic experiences. During the medieval period there does not seem to be teaching on territorial spirits – could be disputed on the grounds of Luther and most reformers believing very much the Ottoman empire was to bring a pre-Millenial return of Christ – the Turks being the beast himself. Later on Luther switched to a more convenient antiChrist – the Pope AND even argued displacement of demonic spirits from the Orient to Rome during the Great Schism

    • Paul L. King
      Reply January 19, 2019

      Paul L. King

      Troy Day I was not aware of territorial spirit thought in Luther, but he did have varied and changing views of the supernatural and demons” he had very real encounters. later Luther seemed to be more aware of the demonic

    • Reply January 20, 2019

      Varnel Watson

      Not sure he called it territorial spirit per se BUT his eschatology and Philip Melanchthon of course did see islamic Turkey as moving / displacing the spirit of anritChrist from Asia toward Europe and the saw it as spiritual threat and warfare

      Now I’ve always found it interesting that the term displacing used for territorial spirits is used by both Penn-Lewis and MacMillon especially as related to mission related territories

      On another note I’ve made many attempts to bring one more resource to the group with no luck yet – namely J. Stephen Conn who in early 80s when few spoke about it The Devil Called Collect He has been less on the internet now as a cruise chaplain but still posts on a cross-platform Link

  • Isara Mo
    Reply January 20, 2019

    Isara Mo

    Dr King thanks for your contribution.

  • Reply January 20, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    Yes indeed There is also another great work comparing Karl Barth and Merrill Unger’s on the Demonic which will publish soon

  • Reply May 12, 2023

    Anonymous

    I definitely believe there are territorial spirits. Some teach that we need some anointed apostles and do some spiritual mapping and all kinds of junk. But we have a very perfect biblical example of how to deal territorial principalities.

    Luke 10:1-20. They went out and preached the Kingdom is at hand. They healed the sick and cast out devils. Then what did Jesus say to them when they returned?

    Luke 10:18-19 (KJV) 18 And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven. 19 Behold, I give unto you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy: and nothing shall by any means hurt you.

    So what are we to do today? Go preach the gospel, heal the sick and cast out devils.

    The mission field isn’t only in 3rd world countries. It’s right here in our back yard.

    • Reply May 12, 2023

      Anonymous

      Brett Dobbs tell us more about this – how do you practice it today?

    • Reply May 12, 2023

      Anonymous

      Troy Day go to areas where there’s lots of sin. And preach the gospel.

    • Reply May 12, 2023

      Anonymous

      Brett Dobbs you may want to re-read what SPIRITUAL MAPPING, TERRITORIAL SPIRITS, AND RELATED PRAXIS are as explained by Dr. Paul L. King

  • Reply May 13, 2023

    Anonymous

    no

  • Reply May 13, 2023

    Anonymous

    This is all false teaching, not found taught anywhere in Scripture. Do not be deceived.

    Spiritual Mapping, Territorial Spirits, and Related Praxis

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      Duane L Burgess this is ACTUALLY a pretty BIBLICAL teaching John Digsby and Brett Dobbs made some great points A Historical Survey of the Concept of Strategic Level Spiritual Warfare: Spiritual Mapping, Territorial Spirits, and Related Praxis

      by Paul L. King, D.Min., Th.D.

      The concept of “strategic level spiritual warfare” (SLSW) involves collective or corporate strategies of doing spiritual warfare, not merely on the level of demonic deliverance of individuals on earth, but dealing with principalities and powers in the heavenlies. SLSW teaches that there are ruling demonic spirits, often called “territorial spirits,” assigned to geographical areas, such as the “prince of Persia” of Daniel 10. Consequently, the spirits need to be dislodged through war-like strategies of intercession, binding and loosing, direct rebuke or command of spirits, and spiritual mapping. Spiritual mapping is the process of determining the forces and circumstances that hold a territory in spiritual bondage.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      Troy Day there arent any demonic influences. Nobody is assigned to anywhere other than where they are needed. So ya got an angel in persia, at a necessary function. What else do we have, oh the angel that presided over egypt before lopping off heads of infants….

      overreading.

      no angels fell. they didnt become demons and forget all that supernatural stuff when ya cant even acquire the holy ghost.
      Christian ego thinks they are moving in spiritual realms when they are still entry level and literal only and half catholic.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      forget all that demonology… demon isnt in a king james version, why read other versions.. because they are easier to read. What no faith that God can help ya out? or are ya in it for intstant gratification?
      yer yer own worst enemy so lean on God and dont stop until you for real man, get an answer from God. Thats the only way to correctness. Yer gonna have to put yourself out on that limb, make a deeper commitment and slow down.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby If you think as Charismatic being the second wave in 50-70s who came from mainline denominations – maybe, but if you go back to Wagner is very much Charismatic

      As already mentioned to Gary Micheal New Apostolic Reformation originates directly from C. Peter Wagner (1930-2016) who took the idea from G12 while in South America and coined the term in 1994 after trying several alternatives such as “Neopentecostal,” “Neocharismatic,” “Independent,” “Post denominational” or “Nondenominational.” and Third-wave” (also a term coined by Wagner)

      There are several factors here
      1. After stating 1 thing in his Secular City, in Fire from Heaven Harvey Cox expounded on South America exploding for the Gospel while North American churches – in the city – slowly dying

      2. Wagner @ Fuller and AG were all seeking an answer for church growth and they found it in
      1) charismatic renewal in N America
      2) S American revivalism in the 1980s – I think particularly Brazil, though Wagner was in a different area but borrowed a lot from G12 and also Cox, who as a thinker nailed the Pentecostal growth idea

      3rd wave IMO was not only Wagner’s term. It was used naturally after the Charismatics and Yes it was more Charismatic theology as most of South American Pentecostals came running straight from the Catholic churches “Independent” and “Post denominational” were also not his terms but he tried them well. “Neopentecostal” and “Neocharismatic” he used both almost interchangeably But the term that stuck was NAR Wagner subsequently wrote of NAR in his books:
      The New Apostolic Churches (1998);
      Churchquake! (1999);
      Apostles and Prophets (2000);
      Changing Church (2004);
      and Apostles Today (2006).

      Now back to Toronto airport revival – there is IMO no other place in hte 90s where NAR was more prominent. Terry Wiles may correct me of course but Toronto had every facet of NAR present within them. This IMO characterizes their theology strictly Charismatic all the way to the time when Wagner (and others) made the curve to post-Trib and in some cases even to post-Mil also borrowed from the very Catholic theology of Augustine spread in S America and in some point even into the Liberation Gospel and Rushdoony’s Christian reconstructionism

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      Troy Day irrelevant

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby your 1 line irrelevant non-theological comments ???

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      it doesnt matter what others do.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      If you think as Charismatic being the second wave in 50-70s who came from mainline denominations – maybe, but if you go back to Wagner is very much Charismatic

  • Reply May 14, 2023

    Anonymous

    It is all false teaching, deception, tossing to and fro by every wind of doctrine.

  • Reply May 16, 2023

    Anonymous

    John Digsby stated forget all that demonology… demon isnt in a king james version

    can you prove him wrong? William DeArteaga Isara Mo

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      angels dont fall.
      figure it out.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby why dont you enlighten us on angel subjects? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallen_angel

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      get ready for a church lesson
      the article mentions zoroastra…. why cant ya take a hint from that? Good God and bad God warring with each other….. thats constantines contribution to the Roman catholic religion.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      eze 28 is about the prince of tyre (nice guy) being crowned king (bad guy). Nebuchad-nezzar

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      ya dont get the word satan in the book of job.
      word origin for satan… 900 ad< the a's are masoretic and not even part of a word in this case.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      so much ya havent researched while ya spent time reading about calvanism etc…

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      more on eze 28… you were in the garden of God, eden.
      if ya check chapter 31, pharoah has the exact same language applied to him.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      this is what i do… i take apart what is said and correct it.
      yah, it hurt and my brain hurt because i needed to forget all i know and become as a little child – knowing nothing, a clean slate.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby are there any catholic or orthodox doctrines that you do agree with?
      Or are they 100% wrong?

      For example: the Holy Trinity, Hypostatic Union of Christ, do you believe that Jesus is God in the flesh, fully God and fully man?

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      i dont see why yahweh would let someone else be in the body yahweh made and said to name it jesus. thats what doesnt make sense to me, when god can do to the jesus body what God does to us through the holy ghost baptism, possesses us. takes up residence inside us because its nice to be in us.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      ya dont need a trinity to realize its ALL yahweh.

      jesus is yahweh
      holy ghost is not a person its the power of God described to you via written text.
      yahweh is yahweh

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      in the beginning was yahweh.
      yahweh in jesus.
      yahweh comes back.
      you pray to yahweh (who is now named jesusbut theres no jesus BODY, that got discarded upon ascension and yahweh, outside of the body is now back to the glory he had before the foundation of the world – his original oneness.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      hypowhat?

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      everybody is fooled by the body.
      God needed a messiah.
      so he made one when the time was right.
      moses was faithful unto the end when he blew it. Messiah doesnt have the luxury to blow it. This ONE TIME shot has to go through perfectly. Who better to do that and why make a body if yer not gonna make use of that body.
      The missing ingredient is that a body is the husk, temple, housing for the person(ality) inside. the body is separate from personality.Yahweh is the personality of jesus because personalities form over time, enough time for God to move in and take over and begin a sinless life.

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby do what now?

    • Reply May 16, 2023

      Anonymous

      Troy Day forget trinity

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby ???? Brett Dobbs Duane L Burgess

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      Troy Day u asked “and do wh at now” and i said, forget trinity.
      So forget trinity, pray to God to give ya the right answer.

      let me know what ya find out
      That is the pattern, after all, isnt it?

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby In Him was life, and the life was the Light of men. The Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not [b]comprehend it.
      I know that this light has something do with having life. What do you people say?

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      notice ya got a capital L on Light and some places ya dont got a capital L on light, if i am recalling properly.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby what about the Father?

      Are you saying that Jesus in flesh was just God creating himself a meat puppet for a 33 years?

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby hypostatic union- the combination of divine and human natures in the single person of Christ.

      100% man/human and 100% God.

      Hebrews 1:1-7 (KJV) 1 God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, 2 Hath in these last days spoken unto us by [his] Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds; 3 Who being the brightness of [his] glory, and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high; 4 Being made so much better than the angels, as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they. 5 For unto which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son? 6 And again, when he bringeth in the firstbegotten into the world, he saith, And let all the angels of God worship him. 7 And of the angels he saith, Who maketh his angels spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire.

      Philippians 2:5-9 (KJV) 5 Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: 6 Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: 7 But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: 8 And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. 9 Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name:

      Colossians 2:9 (KJV) For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily.

      Hebrews 2:14 (KJV) Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same; that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil;

      1 John 5:6-11 (KJV) 6 This is he that came by water and blood, [even] Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth. 7 For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one. 8 And there are three that bear witness in earth, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood: and these three agree in one. 9 If we receive the witness of men, the witness of God is greater: for this is the witness of God which he hath testified of his Son. 10 He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself: he that believeth not God hath made him a liar; because he believeth not the record that God gave of his Son. 11 And this is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      Brett Dobbs Are you saying that Jesus in flesh was just God creating himself a meat puppet for a 33 years?

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      Troy Day I’m asking if that’s what John Digsby believes because it seems that is basically what he’s saying

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      Brett Dobbs ya know what you’re reading;
      Colossians 2:9 (KJV) For in him dwelleth >>all the fulness <>the same; << i wouldnt say meat puppet, thats what your version gives you. Making a body to start messiahship and using a body to take to the cross is all yahwehs plan. Gods not hurting jesus, God is gonna kill the body though, cuz ya cant take it with ya (and death etc empty tomb = resurrection is very important)

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby Colossians 2:9 shows fully God
      Hebrews 2:14 shows fully human.

      Jesus died. He was raised from the dead. Jesus in his body ascended into heaven and his body was glorified.

      Acts 1:11 (KJV) Which also said, Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven.

      1 Corinthians 15:20-23 (KJV) 20 But now is Christ risen from the dead, [and] become the firstfruits of them that slept. 21 For since by man [came] death, by man [came] also the resurrection of the dead. 22 For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. 23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.

      Acts 7:56 (KJV) And said, Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of man standing on the right hand of God.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      Brett Dobbs acts 7 is a vision. Visions are not movies. Where is Gods right hand that can be stood beside. Yer either a literalist which doesnt really make sense here or you are grasping at metaphors without knowing it.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      a glorified body is a spiritual body, not a flesh and blood glorified body.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby I’m a literalist unless it’s stated otherwise.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      Hebrews 2:14 shows fully human or fully in a body that is made of flesh and blood and has a name, we all get names, jesus and looks human cuz of mary etc…

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      Brett Dobbs and if yer thinking jesus is standing on a literal right hand of God in realtime…. i gotta think, hmmmm.
      there is no god beside me lol.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby here if John’s vision, John seems to say in Rev 4:1 that he was in the spirit. So John’s spirit is literally present to see this literally occur.

      Revelation 5:1-7 (KJV) 1 And I saw in the right hand of him that sat on the throne a book written within and on the backside, sealed with seven seals. 2 And I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, Who is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof? 3 And no man in heaven, nor in earth, neither under the earth, was able to open the book, neither to look thereon. 4 And I wept much, because no man was found worthy to open and to read the book, neither to look thereon. 5 And one of the elders saith unto me, Weep not: behold, the Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof. 6 And I beheld, and, lo, in the midst of the throne and of the four beasts, and in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as it had been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven Spirits of God sent forth into all the earth. 7 And he came and took the book out of the right hand of him that sat upon the throne.

    • Reply May 17, 2023

      Anonymous

      John Digsby spiritual things is a reality

      John 3:8-12 (KJV) 8 The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit. 9 Nicodemus answered and said unto him, How can these things be? 10 Jesus answered and said unto him, Art thou a master of Israel, and knowest not these things? 11 Verily, verily, I say unto thee, We speak that we do know, and testify that we have seen; and ye receive not our witness. 12 If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye believe, if I tell you [of] heavenly things?

    • Reply May 18, 2023

      Anonymous

      Brett Dobbs yes brett to be in the spirit only means what you want it to mean, and there is no room whatsoever for any other view.
      have a nice life.

    • Reply May 19, 2023

      Anonymous

  • Reply May 16, 2023

    Anonymous

    Narcissists, even the pathological kind, can be found in church leadership. They are cunning in how they convince people they are champions of truth & fighters for righteousness, but in actuality, they are self-serving and greedy for power.

  • Reply May 17, 2023

    Anonymous

    I found some good spiritual mapping by false prophet Chuck Pierce.
    Media: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10232167920327903&set=p.10232167920327903&type=3

  • Reply May 21, 2023

    Anonymous

  • Reply January 20, 2024

    Anonymous

    Link Hudson William DeArteaga Isara Mo our own J.D. King authored this study and I dont see anything wrong with it Peter Vandever J.D. King https://www.pentecostaltheology.com/spiritual-mapping-and-strategic-level-spiritual-warfare-slsw/

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