🕊️🕊️🕊️Who the Enemy Is — And Who the Enemy Is Not

The Word has already spoken clearly: “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood” (Ephesians 6:12). The true enemy is not a person. The true enemy is not the neighbor. The true enemy is not the wounded soul, the confused soul, the immature soul, the ignorant soul, the broken soul, the backslider, the babe in Christ, or the person who needs prayer, deliverance, correction, mercy, wisdom, or truth. People may be deceived, oppressed, influenced, tempted, wounded, hardened, or used by darkness, but flesh and blood is not the true enemy. The believer must discern the spirit behind the work without turning the person into the enemy Jesus came to save.
The true enemy is Satan and the kingdom of darkness. Scripture identifies him as the devil, the serpent, the deceiver, the accuser, the tempter, the adversary, the thief, the father of lies, and the one who opposes the truth of God. He operates through deception, accusation, temptation, destruction, spiritual blindness, false doctrine, pride, rebellion, fear, bondage, and every work that exalts itself against the knowledge of God. Because the enemy is spiritual, the believer must war spiritually, lawfully, boldly, and under submission to God.
The Enemy Is Satan, the Devil, and the Old Serpent
Revelation 12:9 identifies the enemy plainly: “that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world.” This Scripture gives the believer several names and functions of the enemy. He is the old serpent. He is the devil. He is Satan. He is the deceiver. His work is not new. His methods began in Genesis and continue through deception, distortion, accusation, and opposition to the truth of God.
In Genesis 3, the serpent entered the garden with subtlety and attacked the Word of God. He asked, “Yea, hath God said…” (Genesis 3:1). This was not a random question. It was a strategy. The serpent questioned God’s Word, distorted God’s command, attacked God’s character, and tempted humanity into disobedience. From the beginning, the enemy’s strategy has involved deception against the mind, distortion of Scripture, and the attempt to move people out of agreement with God.
This is why the believer must be rooted in the Word. The enemy is a deceiver, and deception is defeated by truth. The enemy twists what God has spoken, but the believer answers with what is written. The enemy introduces confusion, but the Word brings light. The enemy suggests compromise, but the Spirit of God leads into obedience. The believer must know the Word, believe the Word, speak the Word, pray the Word, and obey the Word.
The old serpent still works through lies, but Jesus Christ is Truth. The deceiver still attempts to distort, but the Word of God stands forever. Darkness still tries to conceal, but the Light of Christ exposes. The believer does not fear the serpent. The believer stands in Christ and discerns the serpent’s works by the Word of God.
The Enemy Is the Father of Lies
Jesus identified the devil as a liar and the father of lies. He said, “When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it” (John 8:44). This tells the believer that lying is not only something the enemy does; it is part of his nature. He does not abide in truth because there is no truth in him.
The enemy lies about God. He lies about the Word. He lies about identity. He lies about sin. He lies about consequences. He lies about bondage. He lies about salvation. He lies about the blood of Jesus. He lies about the believer’s authority in Christ. He lies about the character of the Father. He lies about the work of the Holy Spirit. He lies in order to deceive, weaken, accuse, tempt, and destroy.
This is why spiritual warfare includes the battlefield of the mind. Second Corinthians 10:5 teaches the believer to cast down imaginations and every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God, bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ. Every thought does not deserve agreement. Every fear does not deserve obedience. Every accusation does not deserve meditation. Every imagination does not deserve a throne. Every lie must be confronted by truth.
The believer wars against lies with the Word of God. When the enemy says the believer is abandoned, the Word declares that God will never leave nor forsake His own. When the enemy says the believer is defeated, the Word declares that God causes His people to triumph in Christ. When the enemy says the blood is not enough, the Word declares that the believer overcomes by the blood of the Lamb and the word of testimony. When the enemy says darkness is stronger, the Word declares that the light shines in darkness, and the darkness cannot overcome it.
The enemy is a liar, but Jesus Christ is Truth. The believer does not build identity on the enemy’s accusations. The believer stands on the Word of the Living God.
The Enemy Is the Accuser
Revelation 12:10 identifies Satan as “the accuser of our brethren.” Accusation is one of the enemy’s chief operations. He accuses the people of God, attempts to bring condemnation, and seeks to burden the soul with shame, fear, guilt, and torment. The accuser works to make the believer forget the finished work of Christ and focus only on failure, weakness, past sin, or unworthiness.
Job 1 also reveals Satan operating as an accuser. He appeared before God and accused Job’s motives, suggesting that Job only served God because of blessing and protection. This shows the enemy’s accusing nature. He challenges faithfulness, questions motives, and seeks permission to sift, test, and attack. Yet even in the book of Job, Satan is not sovereign. He is limited. He cannot move beyond what God allows. God remains supreme.
Zechariah 3 gives another picture of accusation. Joshua the high priest stood before the angel of the Lord, and Satan stood at his right hand to resist him. But the Lord answered: “The LORD rebuke thee, O Satan” (Zechariah 3:2). This is a powerful truth for the believer. The accuser may stand to resist, but the Lord rebukes Satan. The believer’s confidence is not in self-defense. The believer’s confidence is in the Lord, in the blood of Jesus Christ, and in the righteousness of God.
Revelation 12:11 gives the victory over the accuser: “And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony.” The blood of Jesus answers accusation. The blood declares redemption. The blood declares atonement. The blood declares mercy. The blood declares cleansing. The blood declares covenant. The blood declares that the believer belongs to Jesus Christ.
The believer does not need to bow to the accuser. The believer repents where repentance is needed, receives cleansing through Christ, stands in the finished work of the cross, and refuses the torment of condemnation. The accuser is answered by the blood of the Lamb.
The Enemy Is the Thief
Jesus said, “The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy” (John 10:10). This Scripture reveals the destructive nature of the enemy. The thief comes to steal faith, peace, truth, identity, obedience, joy, purpose, family, spiritual fruitfulness, and agreement with God. He comes to kill what God has ordained for life and to destroy what God intends to build, heal, restore, and strengthen.
But Jesus did not end the verse with the thief. He declared, “I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly” (John 10:10). This is the believer’s hope and the chamber’s confidence. The thief comes to destroy, but Jesus came to give life. The thief comes to steal, but Jesus restores. The enemy wounds, but Jesus heals. The enemy accuses, but Jesus intercedes. The enemy deceives, but Jesus is the Truth. The enemy seeks destruction, but Jesus Christ brings salvation, deliverance, restoration, and life.
The believer must discern the thief’s works without becoming consumed by them. We identify what the thief does so that we can stand in what Christ has done. We expose darkness so the people of God can walk in the light. We name the enemy’s works so the believer can reject agreement with them. We proclaim the thief’s intent only to magnify the Shepherd’s victory.
Jesus Christ is the Good Shepherd. The believer follows His voice. The sheep do not belong to the thief. The redeemed belong to Christ.
The Enemy Is the Tempter
Matthew 4 reveals Satan as the tempter. Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness, and the tempter came to Him. Satan attempted to tempt Jesus through appetite, pride, presumption, and false worship. Yet Jesus answered every temptation with the Word of God. He said, “It is written” (Matthew 4:4).
This is a pattern for the believer. The enemy tempts by offering a false path, a shortcut, a counterfeit promise, a distorted use of Scripture, or a way to satisfy desire outside the will of God. Temptation seeks agreement. It seeks movement. It seeks surrender. It seeks to draw the believer away from obedience to the Father.
Jesus did not negotiate with the tempter. He did not receive Satan’s interpretation of Scripture. He did not bow to the offer of the kingdoms of the world. He answered with the Word and remained submitted to the Father. The believer must learn the same warfare. When temptation comes, the Word must answer. When the enemy offers compromise, obedience must stand. When the tempter presents a counterfeit, the believer must remain faithful to God.
The tempter is defeated by submission, truth, obedience, and the Word of God. The believer resists under the authority of Jesus Christ. “Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you” (James 4:7).
The Enemy Is the Adversary
First Peter 5:8 declares, “Your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour.” This Scripture identifies the enemy as the adversary. An adversary opposes. Satan opposes the truth of God, the will of God, the work of God, the people of God, and the purposes of God. He seeks to devour through deception, fear, temptation, distraction, accusation, division, pride, and spiritual compromise.
The same passage gives the believer instruction: “Whom resist stedfast in the faith” (1 Peter 5:9). The believer is called to resist steadfastly. Resistance requires faith. Resistance requires watchfulness. Resistance requires sobriety. Resistance requires the Word. Resistance requires submission to God. The believer does not run from the adversary in fear; the believer resists in faith.
The adversary may roar, but he is not the Lion of Judah. The enemy may imitate power, but he does not possess the authority of Christ. The devil may seek to devour, but Jesus Christ is the Shepherd and Bishop of our souls. The believer must discern the roar without bowing to intimidation.
The adversary is real, but he is defeated. Jesus Christ has already triumphed over principalities and powers. The believer stands in that triumph and resists steadfastly in the faith.
The Enemy Can Appear as an Angel of Light
Second Corinthians 11:14 warns that “Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light.” This Scripture teaches the believer that not all darkness appears dark. Deception can come dressed in beauty, intelligence, spirituality, compassion, success, power, or religious language. This is why discernment is necessary.
The believer must not judge spiritual things by appearance alone. Every teaching must be tested by the Word. Every spirit must be tried to see whether it is of God. Every voice must be weighed. Every doctrine must be examined. Every manifestation must be brought under the truth of Scripture. The Holy Spirit will never lead the believer into agreement with what contradicts the Word of God.
This does not make the believer fearful. It makes the believer watchful. Discernment is not fear. Discernment is obedience. The Word commands, “Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God” (1 John 4:1). The believer tests by Scripture, by the character of Christ, by the fruit of the Spirit, by the confession of truth, and by the leading of the Holy Spirit.
The enemy’s ability to disguise himself does not make him greater than God. It simply reminds the believer to stay close to the Word, filled with the Spirit, submitted to God, and anchored in truth.
Who the Enemy Is Not
The enemy is not flesh and blood. This must remain written on the doorway of the Spiritual Warfare Chamber. The enemy is not the person who needs prayer. The enemy is not the person struggling under bondage. The enemy is not the person who is wounded, confused, immature, ignorant, angry, broken, grieving, or deceived. The enemy is not the one who needs the mercy of God, the truth of Christ, and the leading of the Holy Spirit.
This matters because Jesus Christ came to save souls. He came to call sinners to repentance. He came to heal the brokenhearted. He came to set captives free. He came to restore the lost, strengthen the weak, correct the wandering, and redeem the broken. The believer must never allow spiritual warfare to become an excuse to throw stones at people Jesus is calling to Himself.
We confront darkness, but we pray for people. We expose evil, but we intercede for souls. We reject the works of the devil, but we remember that the captive needs deliverance. We speak truth boldly, but we carry the heart of Christ. We discern the spirit at work, but we do not forget the person before us may need salvation, healing, correction, mercy, and prayer.
This does not weaken warfare. It purifies warfare. It keeps the believer from fighting the wrong enemy. It keeps the chamber Christ-centered. It keeps the work aligned with the heart of the Shepherd.
Satan Is Defeated, Not Divine
The enemy is spiritual, but he is not divine. Satan is not equal to God. He is not all-powerful. He is not all-knowing. He is not everywhere at once. He is not eternal in the way God is eternal. He is created, fallen, limited, judged, and defeated. God alone is sovereign. God alone is holy. God alone reigns over heaven and earth. God alone holds all power.
This truth keeps the believer from fear. The believer does not magnify the enemy above the Lord. The believer acknowledges the reality of the enemy while exalting the supremacy of Jesus Christ. The enemy may oppose, but God reigns. The enemy may accuse, but the blood speaks. The enemy may deceive, but the Spirit of Truth leads. The enemy may tempt, but the Word stands. The enemy may roar, but the Lion of Judah reigns.
Revelation 20:10 reveals the final end of the devil. He will be cast into the lake of fire. His future is not victory. His future is judgment. The believer must remember that spiritual warfare is not a battle between equal powers. It is the resistance of a defeated enemy against the Kingdom of the victorious Christ.
Jesus Christ is Lord. The enemy is defeated. The believer stands in the victory already won.
Jesus Christ Destroyed the Works of the Devil
First John 3:8 declares, “For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy the works of the devil.” This Scripture reveals the mission and victory of Christ. Jesus did not come to negotiate with darkness. He came to destroy the works of the devil.
The works of the devil include deception, accusation, temptation, destruction, bondage, false worship, spiritual blindness, corruption, and rebellion against God. Jesus Christ confronts these works with truth, light, authority, holiness, mercy, deliverance, and the power of His finished work. At the cross, the blood was shed. In the grave, death could not hold Him. In the resurrection, victory was declared. In His exaltation, His name was placed above every name.
Colossians 2:15 declares that Christ spoiled principalities and powers, making a public triumph over them. This is not symbolic weakness. This is Kingdom victory. The believer stands because Christ has triumphed. The believer resists because Christ has authority. The believer overcomes because the Lamb has overcome.
This is why the enemy must be identified correctly. We do not identify him to fear him. We identify him so we can resist him. We expose his works so we can reject agreement with them. We teach his names and strategies so the believer can discern and stand. We proclaim his defeat so the people of God remain anchored in the victory of Jesus Christ.
How the Believer Responds to the True Enemy
The believer responds to the true enemy by submitting to God and resisting the devil. James 4:7 gives the order clearly: “Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” Submission is the believer’s safety. Resistance is the believer’s assignment. The submitted believer stands under divine authority and refuses agreement with darkness.
The believer responds by putting on the whole armor of God. Ephesians 6 commands the believer to stand with truth, righteousness, the gospel of peace, faith, salvation, the Word of God, and prayer. The shield of faith quenches fiery darts. The helmet of salvation guards the mind. The sword of the Spirit is the Word of God. Prayer keeps the believer watchful and aligned with Heaven.
The believer responds by pleading the blood of Jesus Christ. Revelation 12:11 declares that they overcame by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimony. The blood answers the accuser. The blood declares redemption. The blood testifies of covenant victory. The believer responds to accusation with the finished work of Christ.
The believer responds by speaking the Word. Jesus answered the tempter with, “It is written.” The believer must do the same. The Word must answer fear, temptation, deception, accusation, confusion, and every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God.
The believer responds by praying for people while resisting darkness. We do not treat souls as the enemy. We intercede. We speak truth in love. We call people to Christ. We stand against the spirit behind bondage while praying for the person who needs freedom.
Who the Enemy Is — And Who the Enemy Is Not
The enemy is Satan, the devil, the old serpent, the deceiver, the accuser, the tempter, the adversary, the thief, and the father of lies. He operates through the kingdom of darkness, through principalities, powers, rulers of darkness, and spiritual wickedness in high places. He works through lies, accusation, temptation, deception, false doctrine, fear, bondage, pride, rebellion, destruction, and opposition to the truth of God.
The enemy is not flesh and blood. The enemy is not the neighbor. The enemy is not the wounded soul. The enemy is not the ignorant soul. The enemy is not the person who needs prayer, mercy, correction, deliverance, healing, wisdom, or salvation. People may be affected by darkness, but people are not the true enemy. The believer must discern rightly, pray deeply, speak truth boldly, and stand in Christ faithfully.
The enemy is spiritual, but he is defeated. The enemy is real, but he is not sovereign. The enemy accuses, but the blood answers. The enemy deceives, but the Word exposes. The enemy tempts, but the Spirit strengthens. The enemy steals, but Christ restores. The enemy roars, but the Lion of Judah reigns.
Therefore, let the vision be made plain. We do not war against flesh and blood. We stand against the kingdom of darkness. We submit to God. We resist the devil. We put on the whole armor of God. We plead the blood of Jesus Christ. We speak the Word of God. We pray in the Spirit. We test the spirits. We expose darkness. We love souls. We intercede for captives. We stand as ambassadors of Jesus Christ.
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 thief is confronted by the Shepherd. The tempter is answered by the Word. The adversary is resisted by the submitted believer. 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; Ephesians 6:12; Revelation 12:9–11; John 8:44; John 10:10; Genesis 3:1–5; 1 Peter 5:8–9; 2 Corinthians 11:14; Job 1:6–12; Matthew 4:1–11; Zechariah 3:1–2; Jude 1:9; James 4:7; 1 John 3:8; Colossians 2:15; Luke 10:19; Revelation 20:10.

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