🕊️🕊️🕊️Why the Believer Should Not Be Afraid: Christ Has Already Won the Victory

“I will stand upon my watch, and set me upon the tower, and will watch to see what he will say unto me…” (Habakkuk 2:1). The Spiritual Warfare Chamber makes the vision plain, strengthens the people of God, and equips the believer to stand in the victory of Jesus Christ. The believer must understand that fear is not the inheritance of the redeemed. Fear is not the governing voice of the blood-bought child of God. Fear is not the banner under which the army of the Lord stands. The believer stands under the banner of Jesus Christ, the crucified Lamb, the risen Savior, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the King of kings, and the Lord of lords.
The believer should not be afraid because Jesus Christ has already won the victory. Spiritual warfare is real, but the victory of Christ is greater. The enemy is active, but he is already defeated. Darkness may oppose, accuse, tempt, deceive, and resist, but darkness cannot overthrow the throne of God. The believer does not stand in personal strength, natural confidence, emotional force, or human wisdom. The believer stands in Christ, covered by the blood of Jesus, sealed by the Holy Spirit, armed with the Word of God, clothed in the whole armor of God, and kept by the power of the Sovereign Lord.
The Word declares, “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind” (2 Timothy 1:7). This is a foundational truth for spiritual warfare. Fear does not come from God. God gives power. God gives love. God gives a sound mind. The believer must therefore learn to reject the voice of fear and receive the truth of God. The heart must be established in the Word. The mind must be guarded by salvation. Faith must be lifted as a shield. The sword of the Spirit must be taken up. Prayer must remain active. The believer must stand.
Christ Has Already Triumphed
The believer’s courage begins with the finished work of Jesus Christ. Colossians 2:15 declares that Christ spoiled principalities and powers, making a public triumph over them. This Scripture reveals that the victory does not begin with the believer’s effort. The victory begins with Christ. Jesus Christ has already triumphed over the powers of darkness. His death, burial, resurrection, and exaltation are the believer’s foundation of confidence.
The cross was not defeat. The cross was triumph. The blood of Jesus was not weakness. The blood of Jesus was victory. The grave was not the final word. The resurrection declared that Jesus Christ is Lord over sin, death, hell, and the grave. The enemy did not win at Calvary. The enemy was defeated through the atoning blood of the Lamb.
This is why the believer should not be afraid. We are not waiting to see whether Jesus will overcome. He has already overcome. We are not wondering whether the blood is enough. The blood is enough. We are not questioning whether the name of Jesus has authority. God has highly exalted Him and given Him a name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow (Philippians 2:9–10).
The believer stands in a victory already secured. We do not fight to create triumph; we stand in the triumph of Christ. We do not plead the blood as a weak religious phrase; we plead the blood as the testimony of redemption, covenant, cleansing, and victory. We do not speak the name of Jesus as mere language; we speak His name in reverence, faith, obedience, and holy authority.
The Blood of the Lamb Answers the Accuser
Revelation 12:11 declares, “And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony.” The blood of the Lamb is central to the believer’s victory. The accuser may accuse, but the blood of Jesus Christ answers. The enemy may attempt to bring condemnation, but the blood testifies that redemption has been purchased. The adversary may attempt to remind the believer of former sin, former bondage, former weakness, or former failure, but the blood declares that Jesus Christ has paid the price.
The believer should not be afraid of the accuser when the blood of Jesus Christ has already spoken. The blood speaks of atonement. The blood speaks of mercy. The blood speaks of forgiveness. The blood speaks of covenant. The blood speaks of cleansing. The blood speaks of victory. The blood speaks better things than accusation, shame, condemnation, or fear.
This does not lead the believer into pride. It leads the believer into worship. The one who understands the blood does not boast in self. The redeemed soul boasts in the Lamb. The believer knows that victory was not earned by human merit. Victory was purchased by Jesus Christ. The believer stands because the Lamb was slain. The believer overcomes because the Lamb has triumphed. The believer testifies because the blood has made a way.
The enemy cannot reverse the blood. The enemy cannot undo the cross. The enemy cannot erase the resurrection. The enemy cannot cancel the covenant of God. The believer belongs to Jesus Christ, and the blood of the Lamb is the answer to the accuser.
Perfect Love Casts Out Fear
The Word says, “There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear” (1 John 4:18). This Scripture is not soft. It is mighty. The perfect love of God drives fear out of the believer’s heart because the believer is no longer governed by torment. The love of God establishes the soul in truth. The love of God reminds the believer that he or she belongs to the Father. The love of God strengthens faith, purifies motives, and anchors the heart in the victory of Christ.
The believer should not be afraid because the Father has not abandoned His own. Jesus Christ did not redeem His people to leave them uncovered. The Holy Spirit did not seal the believer for the believer to walk as though darkness has greater authority than God. The Word says, “Ye are of God, little children, and have overcome them: because greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world” (1 John 4:4).
Greater is He who is in the believer. Greater is the Holy Spirit than the spirit of the age. Greater is Christ than the accuser. Greater is truth than deception. Greater is light than darkness. Greater is the Shepherd than the thief. Greater is the King than the adversary. The believer does not stand alone. The believer stands indwelt by the Spirit of God, covered by the blood of Jesus Christ, and kept by the Father.
This is holy assurance. This is not arrogance. This is the settled confidence of the redeemed. The believer goes low before God in humility, but stands firm against darkness in holy boldness. We bow before the Sovereign Lord, and then we resist the devil under the authority of Jesus Christ.
The Lord Is Our Light and Salvation
Psalm 27:1 declares, “The LORD is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?” This question is not asked from denial. It is asked from revelation. When the Lord is the believer’s light, darkness does not have final authority. When the Lord is the believer’s salvation, fear cannot sit on the throne of the heart. When the Lord is the strength of the believer’s life, the enemy cannot become greater than God in the believer’s imagination.
The believer should not be afraid because the Lord is light. The Lord exposes darkness. The Lord guides the path. The Lord reveals truth. The Lord strengthens the soul. The Lord guards His people. The believer does not have to walk in spiritual blindness when the Word is a lamp unto the feet and a light unto the path (Psalm 119:105). The believer does not have to bow to fear when the Lord is salvation.
Psalm 91 also speaks to the believer’s confidence in God. “He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty” (Psalm 91:1). The safest place for the believer is not self-confidence. The safest place is dwelling in God. The secret place teaches dependence, trust, worship, prayer, obedience, and covering. The one who abides under the shadow of the Almighty does not need to be ruled by terror, because the Almighty is the refuge and fortress of His people.
This does not mean the believer lives carelessly. It means the believer lives covered. It means the believer walks wisely, prays watchfully, discerns soberly, obeys faithfully, and trusts God fully. The believer’s confidence is not in ignorance of the battle, but in revelation of the Lord.
Jesus Has Given Authority to His People
Luke 10:19 records the words of Jesus: “Behold, I give unto you power…over all the power of the enemy.” The authority of the believer is not self-made. It is given by Jesus Christ. This authority must be handled with reverence, humility, obedience, and alignment with the Word of God, but it must also be believed. The believer is not powerless against darkness. Jesus Christ has given authority to stand.
The believer should not be afraid because the authority of Christ is greater than the power of the enemy. The enemy has power, but he does not have all power. All power belongs to God. Jesus declared, “All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth” (Matthew 28:18). Therefore, the believer does not measure the battle by the enemy’s activity. The believer measures the battle by the authority of Jesus Christ.
This authority is exercised under submission. James 4:7 gives the order clearly: “Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” The submitted believer resists. The surrendered believer stands. The obedient believer confronts darkness by the Word of God. Submission to God is not weakness; it is Kingdom order. The believer goes low before God, and from that place of surrender, stands boldly against the enemy.
The believer resists the devil by refusing agreement with his lies, temptations, accusations, and works. The believer resists by speaking the Word, pleading the blood, praying in faith, walking in obedience, rejecting fear, casting down imaginations, bringing thoughts captive, testing the spirits, and standing in the name of Jesus Christ.
The Armor of God Strengthens the Believer to Stand
Ephesians 6:10–18 gives the believer God’s provision for the battle. The command is clear: “Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil” (Ephesians 6:11). The armor is a gift of divine provision. God does not command His people to stand without equipping them to stand.
The belt of truth guards the believer against deception. The breastplate of righteousness guards the heart. The preparation of the gospel of peace steadies the walk. The shield of faith quenches all the fiery darts of the wicked. The helmet of salvation guards the mind. The sword of the Spirit is the Word of God. Prayer keeps the believer watchful, aligned, and strengthened in the Spirit.
This is why the believer should not be afraid. God has provided armor. God has provided truth. God has provided righteousness. God has provided peace. God has provided faith. God has provided salvation. God has provided the Word. God has provided prayer. God has provided His Spirit.
The fiery darts of the wicked are real, but the shield of faith is able to quench them. The attacks against the mind are real, but the helmet of salvation guards the believer in the truth of redemption. The lies of darkness are real, but the sword of the Spirit cuts with the power of the Word of God. The pressure of the battle is real, but prayer keeps the believer connected to Heaven.
The believer does not stand unarmed. The believer stands fully supplied by God.
The Weapons Are Mighty Through God
Second Corinthians 10:3–6 teaches that the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strongholds. This is another reason the believer should not be afraid. God has given weapons that are mighty through Him. The power is not in the flesh. The power is not in human rage. The power is not in natural strength. The weapons are mighty through God.
Through these weapons, strongholds come down. Imaginations are cast down. Every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God is confronted. Thoughts are brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ. The believer is not helpless before lies, deception, accusation, fear, or spiritual opposition. The believer has mighty weapons through God.
The Word of God is mighty. Prayer is mighty. Faith is mighty. The blood of Jesus is mighty. The name of Jesus is mighty. The armor of God is mighty. Worship is mighty. Testimony is mighty. Obedience is mighty. Truth is mighty. The Holy Spirit working in and through the believer is mighty.
Therefore, fear must not be allowed to interpret the battle. The Word of God must interpret the battle. The victory of Jesus Christ must interpret the battle. The finished work of the cross must interpret the battle. The believer must not magnify the enemy above the Lord. The believer must magnify the Lord above every work of darkness.
Be of Good Cheer: Jesus Has Overcome the World
Jesus said, “In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). Jesus did not hide the reality of tribulation, but He commanded courage because He has overcome. The believer’s peace is not based on the absence of warfare. The believer’s peace is based on the victory of Christ.
This is important for the Spiritual Warfare Chamber. Courage does not mean the believer never faces opposition. Courage means the believer stands in Christ while opposition is present. Faith does not mean the believer never hears the roar of the enemy. Faith means the believer knows the voice of the Shepherd is greater. Boldness does not mean the believer ignores the battle. Boldness means the believer faces the battle under the authority of Jesus Christ.
Jesus has overcome the world. Therefore, the believer can stand in peace. Jesus has overcome the world. Therefore, the believer can resist without fear. Jesus has overcome the world. Therefore, the believer can confront darkness without surrendering to intimidation. Jesus has overcome the world. Therefore, the believer can walk as a child of light.
Romans 8 declares that in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us (Romans 8:37). The believer’s conquering identity is connected to the love of Christ. The love of God in Christ Jesus holds the believer securely. Neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come can separate the believer from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans 8:38–39).
This is the believer’s confidence. The love of God holds. The blood of Jesus speaks. The Spirit of God seals. The Word of God stands. The victory of Christ remains.
Boldness Without Fear
Spiritual warfare calls for boldness without fear. The believer does not bow to the forces of darkness. The believer does not come into agreement with the accuser. The believer does not surrender the mind to the deceiver. The believer does not hand over territory to the thief. The believer does not retreat from truth because darkness resists it.
The Lord has already rebuked and defeated the enemy. The Word records, “The LORD rebuke thee, O Satan” (Zechariah 3:2), and Jude also bears witness to this holy order: “The Lord rebuke thee” (Jude 1:9). The believer’s confidence is in the Lord, not in self. The Lord rebukes the devil. The Lord has defeated the devil. The Lord has spoiled principalities and powers. The Lord has given His people authority to stand.
This is holy boldness. We do not come to play with darkness. We come to stand in Christ. We come to plead the blood. We come to speak the Word. We come to lift the shield of faith. We come to take the helmet of salvation. We come to wield the sword of the Spirit. We come to pray always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit. We come to watch with perseverance and supplication for all saints.
We go humbly before the Sovereign God, and we stand boldly against darkness in the authority of Jesus Christ. The believer’s heart must remain surrendered to God while the believer’s feet remain planted in truth. Fear does not lead this battle. The Holy Spirit leads. The Word governs. The blood covers. Christ reigns.
The Believer Should Not Be Afraid
The believer should not be afraid because God has not given the spirit of fear. The believer should not be afraid because Jesus Christ has already triumphed. The believer should not be afraid because the blood of the Lamb has overcome the accuser. The believer should not be afraid because greater is He that is in the believer than he that is in the world. The believer should not be afraid because God causes His people to triumph in Christ.
The believer should not be afraid because the Lord is light and salvation. The believer should not be afraid because the armor of God has been provided. The believer should not be afraid because the weapons of warfare are mighty through God. The believer should not be afraid because Jesus has given authority over all the power of the enemy. The believer should not be afraid because nothing can separate the redeemed from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Therefore, let the vision be made plain. The war is spiritual, but Christ is victorious. The enemy is real, but the enemy is defeated. The darkness may resist, but the Light has already overcome. The accuser may speak, but the blood has already answered. The fiery darts may fly, but the shield of faith is able to quench them. The battle may press, but the armor of God enables the believer to stand.
Stand in Christ.
Stand in the victory already won.
Stand under the blood of Jesus.
Stand in the authority of His name.
Stand with the shield of faith lifted.
Stand with the helmet of salvation secure.
Stand with the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God.
Stand praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit.
Stand watchful with perseverance and supplication for all saints.
Stand in holy boldness.
Stand without fear.
Jesus Christ is Lord. The Lamb has overcome. The Lion of Judah reigns. The deceiver is defeated. The accuser is answered by the blood. The darkness is exposed by the light. The Lord rebuke the devil, and God causes His people to triumph in Christ.
Amen.

Foundational Scriptures:
Habakkuk 2:1–3; Ephesians 6:10–18; 2 Corinthians 10:3–6; James 4:7; 1 Peter 5:8–9; 1 John 3:8; Romans 13:12; John 10:10; John 8:44; Colossians 2:15; Luke 10:19; Revelation 12:11; 1 John 4:18; 2 Corinthians 2:14; Zechariah 3:2; Jude 1:9; Philippians 2:9–11.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *