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Section 8B ... Controversial Issues/ Spiritual Warfare

 

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Binding and Loosing

by Bob DeWaay

Please Note: Each coloured link within the article will lead you to a related topic on a different page of this site. However, while the text is part of the original article, the links are not. The author of this article may or may not agree with the views expressed on those pages, or anything else on this site..

    Part 1

    "I bind you, Satan!" is uttered in thousands of prayers every day in America. "Spiritual warfare" books that teach Christian how to "bind Satan" are hot sellers. Not only is Satan himself subject to continual verbal "binding," but a whole host of demons and "principalities and authorities" of the heavenly realm are also thus assaulted. Christians who practice this form of spiritual warfare hope to forestall calamities and sickness, convert loved ones, and turn cities, states and even the nation to righteousness. If binding Satan will do all this, we should put this new spiritual technology into practice.

    However, if this practice is not Biblical, it may be more harmful than helpful. Those who teach and practice "binding and loosing" as verbal warfare against evil have several Biblical passages that they claim support the practice. The two most prominent ones are found in the book of Matthew: Matthew 16:19 and Mat- thew 12:28,29. Matthew 16:19 states, "I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." By combining that thought with the Matthew 12 passage, which speaks of binding the "strong man," they draw the conclusion that we have the authority to bind Satan, thus making his "goods" exposed for plundering. According to many followers of this theory, the "goods" are money, political power, people, etc. The church supposedly, therefore, has the opportunity to take world power away from Satan and deliver it to ourselves.

    Binding and Loosing

    The crucial issue is whether this is what Jesus meant by these teachings. What did He mean by the terms "bind" and "loose?" These words were commonly used by Jewish rabbis. New Testament scholars agree that "binding and loosing," when used in this way, retain the basic meaning that they had in the Jewish culture of the first century.

    For example, the THEOLOGICAL DICTIONARY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT states under the entries for "deo" and "luo" (the Greek words for binding and loosing used in Matthew 16:19 and elsewhere), "Jesus does not give to Peter and the other disciples any power to enchant or to free by magic. The customary meaning of the Rabbinic expressions is equally incontestable, namely, to declare forbidden or permitted, and thus to impose or remove an obligation, by a doctrinal decision."1 TDNT draws the conclusion that this is the meaning of the words as used in Matthew 16:19 and 18:18.

    A. T. Robertson, one of this century's leading Greek scholars, also comments on Matthew 16:19: "To `bind' in rabbinical language is to forbid, to `loose' is to permit. Peter would be like a rabbi who passes on many points. Rabbis of the school of Hillel `loosed' many things that the school of Schammai `bound.' The teaching of Jesus is the standard for Peter and for all preachers of Christ. Note the future perfect indicative..., a state of completion. All this assumes, of course, that Peter's use of the keys will be in accord with the teaching and mind of Christ." 2 Dr. Robertson's comment about the use of the future perfect tense is important. If we were to translate the passage very literally (though awkwardly in English), it would read "...whatever you loose on earth shall having been loosed in heaven." This shows that the disciples were not unilaterally to decide a matter, thus binding "heaven" to their decision. It means that their decision, as Dr. Robertson suggests, will be in line with what already was God's mind on the issue.

    Passing on an issue of doctrine or ethics does not equal shooting a verbal barrage at Satan or another wicked spiritual entity. It is also quite different from "loosing" the money needed or the job wanted, as some are now prone to pray.

    We can see how Peter and the others understood Jesus' teaching on binding and loosing by examining their actions as recorded in the Book of Acts. Acts 15 records a dispute that arose about the behavior of Gentiles who were recently becoming part of the church. Their customs were far different from the Jews, who then made up most of the church. Should the new Gentile converts be required to be circumcised and to keep other requirements of the Law of Moses? After "much debate" (Acts 15:7), Peter stood up and asked, "...why do you put God to the test by placing upon the neck of the disciples a yoke which neither our fathers nor we have been able to bear?" (Verse 10). After James agrees with Peter, quoting Scripture as proof, they reached the decision that the Gentiles should abstain from idols, fornication, and what is strangled. No further burden was to be placed upon the Gentile Christians. The apostles herein exercised the power of binding and loosing, as given by Jesus.

    Did the apostles ever utter "I bind you, Satan?" Not once is such an utterance recorded in the New Testa- ment. It is not credible to assume that they understood Jesus' teaching as an instruction to "bind Satan" through prayers and verbal declarations and then never followed the instructions personally. The church of the twentieth century should not understand and practice the teachings of Jesus differently than the church of the 1st century. If it does, the authority of Scripture is depreciated.

    Other Bible commentators also believe that "binding and loosing" find their meaning in rabbinical usage. Concerning Matthew 16:19, William Hendriksen states, "The very wording - note `whatever,' not `whoever' - shows that the passage refers to things, in this case beliefs and actions, not directly to people. Binding and loosing are rabbinical terms, meaning forbidding and permitting."3 Thayer's Greek-English Lexicon Of The New Testament, under the entry "de " (to bind), states, "...by a Chaldean and rabbinic idiom to forbid, prohibit, declare illicit: Matthew 16:19; 18:18." Each source I have checked (including several not quoted here) agrees with this interpretation of these words. I have to wonder if those modern teachers who have popularized the "spiritual warfare" teachings that command the saints to "bind Satan," supposedly based on Matthew 16:19, have carefully researched the passage. They should at least offer some evidence that suggests that the scholars of Biblical Greek are uniformly wrong.

    The authority to bind and loose is the authority to declare what is God's mind on a matter of doctrine or practice. This is what the early church did in Acts 15. To "bind" is to obligate, to "loose" is to remove obligation. The future perfect tense ("shall having been bound") shows that this authority is only valid when used in submission to Christ's word or teaching. It does not give the church the authority to make up new teachings later in church history. Binding in this context has nothing to do with speaking words to Satan or demons.

    Satan's House Plundered

    Let us turn to Matthew 12:28,29, which at least is addressing the issue of Satan and demons. The verses read, "But if I cast out demons by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God has come upon you. Or how can anyone enter the strong man's house and carry off his property, unless he first binds the strong man? And then he will plunder his house." Upon hearing about Jesus casting out demons, the Pharisees, those perpetual critics of Jesus, said that He "...cast out demons only by Beelzebul the ruler of the demons" (verse 24). The Lord first shows the illogic of their accusations by saying that if Satan was casting out Satan, his kingdom would not stand. He then asks about their own misguided deliverance attempts (the Jewish historian Josephus wrote about some Jewish exorcism practices which were quite strange).

    The verses we are studying describe Jesus' own interpretation of the powerful deliverances He had accomplished. These were done by the Spirit of God and showed the power of the kingdom of God in the person of Christ. In Christ, there is a confrontation with the powers of darkness, and Christ is victor! The Pharisees should have recognized this and committed themselves to Christ, but they were unwilling. Jesus goes on to warn them about blaspheming the Holy Spirit (verse 31) by accusing Christ of being of the Devil.

    The key verse, which some claim as support for "binding" Satan through direct verbal assault, is verse 29. In this passage, Jesus uses a metaphor to illustrate His own mission. A strong man controls his own house until a stronger man comes, binds him, and plunders the house. Luke 11:21,22 record the same illustration. Luke does not use the term "bind," but says the stronger man "...attacks him and overpowers him, he takes away from him all his armor on which he had relied..." (Luke 11:22).

    New Testament scholar George E. Ladd gives the following interpretation of Jesus' words:

      "Satan is a strong man. His palace or house is `this present evil age' (Gal. 1:4), and his `goods' are men and women under his evil influence. However, he has not been left in peace to manage his affairs. A stronger, Jesus, has assailed and overcome him." 4

    The deliverances in the ministry of Jesus demonstrated Jesus' power to deliver people from the power of Satan. The spoiling of the kingdom of darkness will go on throughout church history, though the final victory is not complete until Christ returns in glory.

    "Bind," as used here in Matthew 12, is metaphorical terminology, not a magic word, the utterance of which will stop the activity of evil spirits. That the Luke account does not even use the word "bind" shows this. "Bind" is incidental to the picture of a strong man's house being plundered. Whether victory is accomplished by binding, overpowering, disarming, etc., is not as consequential as the fact that it is a stronger man who must do it.

    The meaning is that Jesus is stronger than Satan and that the casting out of evil spirits in His ministry proves that fact. The "goods" that are "plundered" are people, previously held in bondage. This plundering has been going on since the Day of Pentecost. The coming of Jesus and the "binding" of Satan liberates the souls of people who were all of their lifetime subject to slavery (Hebrews 2:15). How is this accomplished? The Bible does not leave us in the dark. It is not accomplished by people continually shouting "I bind you Satan" into the heavenlies!

      Hebrews 2:14,15 declares "Since then the children share in flesh and blood, He Himself likewise also partook of the same, that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is the devil; and might deliver those who through fear of death were subject to slavery all their lives."
       

    Victory Through The Cross

    The Bible consistently ties the conquest of Satan's kingdom of darkness and the liberation of its subjects to the Incarnation, which leads ultimately to the cross. The stronger man is Jesus, not us. When the author of Hebrews says that it was "through death" that Jesus would render the devil powerless to hold his captives, he can only be referring to the cross where Christ paid for our sins. Colossians 2:13-15 sheds further light on this: "And when you were dead in your transgressions and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He made you alive together with Him, having forgiven us all our transgressions, having canceled out the certificate of debt consisting of decrees against us and which was hostile to us; and He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross. When He had disarmed the rulers and authorities, He made a public display of them, having triumphed over them through Him." The margin of the NASB, as quoted here, has a note indicating that the last "Him" could be "it, i.e., the cross." This agrees with the original Greek. Christ triumphed over the forces of darkness through the cross. If the "goods" of Matthew 12:29 are people held in bondage, then the "binding" of the strong man that accomplished their release was through the cross.

    We can better understand this by contemplating how it was that humanity first came into this bondage. The book of Hebrews describes human bondage as the "fear of death." We know that death is the penalty for sin. Satan's first lie, as recorded in Genesis 3, was that Eve could sin and not die as God said she would. When Adam and Eve rebelled against God, sin entered human experience for them and all of their descendants. As Paul declares in Romans, the wages of sin is death. Romans 5:12 explicitly says that sin and death spread to all because of the original sin. We were born sinners by nature, children of wrath (Ephesians 2:3), in bondage to the "strong man." Spiritual death was our present reality, and ultimate death our certain destiny, unless God did something to rescue us! It is no wonder that the passage in Hebrews 2 calls human bondage, "The fear of death."

    The way Christ was ultimately to "bind" the strong man and plunder his goods was to die a substitutionary death on the cross, paying the penalty for us. Now liberated by faith from spiritual and eternal death, we walk in victory because of the power of God. Christ's victorious encounters with demons before the cross were demonstrations of His Messianic mission and His power over evil. However, they were not an end in themselves. Had Jesus not gone on to die for our sins, the "houses" (Matthew 12:43-45) that had been "swept" clean would have remained empty, inviting places for evil spirits to return. Those delivered from particular spirits during the public ministry of Jesus were still spiritually dead sinners like everyone else. They were still needing to have the penalty for their sins to be paid, so that if they responded in faith to the gospel, they would be born of the Spirit and their "houses" thus filled. These were delivered from certain demons, but still needed to be transferred as individuals from the house of Satan into the Kingdom of God (Colossians 1:13).

    John 12:31,32 also show importance of the cross in the defeat of Satan and the deliverance of people from his domination. These words of Jesus came during the week immediately preceding His crucifixion. He said "Now judgment is upon this world; now the ruler of this world shall be cast out. And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to Myself." The next verse tells us explicitly that Jesus was speaking of His death on the cross. The casting out of Satan, and the drawing of men (previously "bound" by the Evil One) to Christ is accomplished through the cross! This confirms our interpretation of Matthew 12:28,29.

    The deliverences recorded in the Gospels were demonstrations of the power of the kingdom of God and the Messianic mission of Christ. The liberated people were freed from certain temporal bondage. Yet, clearly more was necessary. John 7:39 says, "But this He spoke of the Spirit, whom those who believed in Him were to receive; for the Spirit was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified." The reception of the Holy Spirit is the end of spiritual death, which was the universal human bondage. Thus the cross (through which Christ was "glorified") is the key to the "spoiling" of Satan's power and kingdom. The Devil has no power to hold in his house anyone who believes the gospel, because any legal authority to do so is removed.

    Notice that the previously quoted Colossians 2 passage speaks of nailing the "certificate of debt" to the cross (verse 14). Satan's ability to keep humans in bondage was not based on his great spiritual power, but on the legal debt we had before God. God cannot lie, and God said that the penalty of sin is death. The "decrees against us" of Colossians 2:14 are the things contained in the Law. The Law of God dictated that we are cursed (Galatians 3:10) and must die. We were spiritually dead (lacking the Holy Spirit) for this very reason. By canceling the certificate of debt through the cross, Christ delivered us from the power of Satan. God is proved true, and Satan a liar. The soul that sins must die; but Christ died for us, that we might be liberated. This was how Christ "bound" the strong man and plundered his house.

    This teaching lays the basis for understanding the methods and teachings of the apostles. The New Testament apostles did not teach or practice the binding and loosing theories now taught in many churches. Peter, John, Paul, and the others knew the basis and authority they had to see people liberated from the power of Satan and translated into the household of faith. Paul describes it in 1Corinthians: "For the word of the cross is to those who are perishing foolishness, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. For it is written, "I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and the cleverness of the clever I will set aside." ...has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? ...God was well-pleased through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe. For indeed Jews ask for signs, and Greeks search for wisdom; but we preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block, and to Gentiles foolishness, but to those who are the called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God." (1:18,-20b,21b,22-24).

    Paul was confident that a message that might seem foolish to some, the preaching of the cross, was the means God would use to save those who would believe. This message shows the "power" of God. There is a popular alternative now being taught by many.

    The "binding and loosing" theory contends that people will not be saved as long as the "strong man" is still active. Because the Bible does teach that there are "principalities and powers" in the heavenlies, some theorize that certain evil powers rule over certain geographical territories. This may be true, though it is not clearly taught in the Bible. No New Testament passage of Scripture teaches us to identify or seek to manipulate "territorial spirits."

    There is the incident in Daniel about "the prince of Persia," but this was only revealed to Daniel after the angel Michael had already fought the battle (see Daniel 10:12- 13). Daniel did not personally "bind" any principalities in this passage. Daniel was humbling himself and praying to God, not consciously doing "spiritual warfare." Even if there are evil "principalities" over geographical areas, this does not prove that it is our God-given task to bind them verbally. We are now being taught that we must do what God never instructed us to do, and what Christ and His apostles never did. This is unacceptable no matter how many "pop" spiritual warfare books are being sold.

    God Reigns Now!

    Psalm 47 declares that "God is King over all the Earth" and that "God reigns over the nations" (verses 7,8). Psalm 103:19 says, "The Lord has established His throne in the heavens; And His sovereignty rules over all." The book of Job reveals that Satan needed permission from God to bring calamity upon Job. The principalities and powers (both the good and the bad ones) in the heavenlies are under God's authority. Rebellion and evil spiritual power are real and dangerous, but not outside God's ultimate and final control. If Christians are concerned about these principalities they should appeal to God who is in final authority over them.

    The false teachers described in 2 Peter 2 and Jude took it upon themselves to rail against these and the Word of God rebukes them for it: "...those who indulge the flesh in its corrupt desires and despise authority. Daring, self-willed, they do not tremble when they revile angelic majesties, whereas angels who are greater in might and power do not bring a reviling judgment against them before the Lord" (2Peter 2:10,11). This warning is repeated in Jude 8,9 where it says that Michael the archangel "... did not dare pronounce against him [the devil] a railing judgment, but said, `The Lord rebuke you.'"

    Today many Christians fearlessly overstep their bounds and go "where angels fear to tread." Emboldened by their over-stated power and authority, they daily do what even Michael dared not do. Satan is not disturbed by these verbal barrages; but God is displeased with such behavior. Those who would use extra-biblical spiritual warfare techniques to place themselves in rulership over principalites and powers in the heavenlies are usurping God's rightful place of authority.

    Spiritual warfare teachers have been told about this problem with their practice. The response of some has been, "Yes, but we are higher than the angels. The angels cannot do this but we can." Besides the questionable assertion that now we are higher than the angels (see Hebrews 2:6-9), this response ignores the clear teachings of the 2Peter and Jude passages. Jude clearly states that those who "revile angelic majesties" are wrong for doing so and cites Michael as an example. "If Michael did not dare do this, even more should you refrain from such behavior" is the logic of Jude 8-10. It is amazing what modern teachers will do to get away from obeying the Scripture. They are rebelling against God in their zeal to fight Satan.

    Victory over Satan and his hosts is achieved through submission to God and His Messiah, Jesus Christ. The terms of Christ's Lordship are clear in the Bible. Only through the obedient embracing of the cross are we His disciples. Those who enter through the door of the sheep (John 10) are true. Those who come to Him, He delivers from the powers of darkness. The Good Shepherd always protects His sheep from those who would rob, kill and destroy (see the Shepherd and sheep allegory of John 10). Nevertheless, we are told by some that evangelism will not go on successfully in certain areas until "binding and loosing" is performed by numerous Christians. They teach that spiritual principalities must be identified and bound for even Christians to be delivered from Satan and his evil emissaries. Some teach that if we can get revelations about the names of the particular evil spirits ruling the realm with which we are concerned, this is even better (some deem it essential).

    The "binding" is accomplished verbally. Preferably, large groups of Christians are to gather frequently and, in unison, shout into the air "I bind you spirit of (whatever) over Minneapolis," etc. There are other nuances to the teachings and practices; but they share the common assumption that Satan must be verbally bound for any progress to be made by the Christian church.
     

    "Star Wars" Theology

    There are many problems with these theories, not the least of which is the obvious fact that the New Testament knows nothing of them. I call this "Star Wars theology." Popular spiritual warfare teachers urge us to fly by "revelation" into the heavenly realm and "duke it out" with the forces of darkness there resident. Attempts to do this sometimes become so prevalent that Christians unwittingly are spending more time speaking (although negatively) to Satan and his hosts than to God. The apostles prayed to God when they got into trouble. Please consider Acts 4:21-33. The passage is too long to quote in entirety, but it concerns the first major persecution that broke out against the early church.

    Peter and John were "threatened" and told they could no longer teach in the name of Jesus. When the saints heard of this, they "immediately bound the spirit of unbelief ruling over the city." NO! They "lifted their voices to God with one accord and said, `O Lord, it is Thou who didst make the heaven and the earth and the sea, and all that is in them." (Acts 4:24). They quoted Scripture about the sovereignty of God and said a prayer to God! They went on and quoted more Scripture, "Why did the Gentiles rage, and the peoples devise futile things? The kings of the earth took their stand and the rulers were gathered together against the Lord, and against His Christ." (4:25,26).

    They further prayed about the sovereignty of God in verse 28, concerning what was done by wicked men against Jesus, "...to do whatever Thy hand and Thy purpose predestined to occur." Those who uttered this prayer had a different theology than do many today. They saw the providence of God in the situation they faced, not merely the work of principalities and powers of darkness. They did not utter one word against any power of darkness in the heavenlies. Evidently they had not been to the latest spiritual warfare seminar! What they ask next in their prayer is crucial to understanding the apostolic view of spiritual warfare. They prayed, "And now Lord, take note of their threats, and grant that Thy bond-servants may speak Thy word with all confidence, while Thou dost extent Thy hand to heal, and signs and wonders take place through the name of Thy holy servant Jesus." (Acts 4:29,30).

    They prayed to God for the boldness to speak His word! Preaching the gospel authoritatively is exactly what they did, as recorded in the rest of the Book of Acts. God would do signs and wonders as He willed (see Hebrews 2:4). As Paul said, "the Jews ask for signs...but we preach Christ crucified" (1Corinthians 1:22,23). Acts 4:33 tells the results of their prayer, "And with great power the apostles were giving witness to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and abundant grace was upon them all." God's power changes lives morally.

    1Corinthians 1:18 - "For the word of the cross is to those who are perishing foolishness, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God." This truth needs no embellishment with extra-Biblical theories of the "Star Wars" sort. Modern binding and loosing theories are binding and "losing" because they mislead the saints. The time spent verbally "binding" Satan could have been spent praying to God and preaching the gospel.

    Next month we will look at Paul's ministry in Ephesus to see how he brought the message of the gospel into this pagan, demonized city. The Holy Spirit has placed much of the historical record of Ephesus and the church founded there in the New Testament. This will allow us to understand spiritual warfare as practiced by the first century apostles.

    End Notes

      Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Eerdmans, Vol. II, page 60.

      Word Pictures in the New Testament, A. T. Robertson, Baker, Vol. 1, page 134.

      The Gospel of Matthew, William Hendriksen, Baker, page 651.

      The Presence of the Future, George E. Ladd, Eerdmans, 1974 (1984 edition), page 151.

     

    Part 2

    Last month we discussed the Biblical meaning of "binding and loosing" as used in the gospels. To bind is to forbid by doctrinal decision, to loose is to permit. Examination of the teachings and practice of the New Testament apostles reveals that modern binding and loosing theories are unbiblical. The new theory is that by verbally "binding" principalities and powers in the heavenly realm the church can "loose" people from spiritual bondage.

    This is not what Christ meant in Matthew 16:19 nor is it the way His apostles practiced their God-given authority. This month we will closely examine Paul's practice and teaching regarding spiritual warfare.

    A major issue in spiritual warfare is "power." Power of ability and power of authority are at issue. Of particular importance is God's power and how is it released to defeat Satan and liberate those who have been held captive by him. There are several key New Testament passages about the power of God in the ministry of God's word.

    Paul uses the phrase "power of God" in 1Corinthians 1:24 to describe the message of "Christ crucified." The message of the cross is the power of God, because it is the means by which God has spoiled the principalities and powers and set us free (Colossians 2:13-15). Changed lives evidence this "power," not the degree of spectacular signs and wonders! The power of God is the power to take spiritually dead, physically dying people, facing eternal death in hell, and make them alive forever! Satan can produce "lying signs and wonders" (Matthew 24:24, 2Thessalonians 2:9), but he does not have the power to deliver us from death.

    Romans 1:16 uses the term "power" similarly, "For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek." 1Thessalonians 1:5-9 also show Paul's use of the term power for the ability of the gospel to change lives: "For our gospel did not come to you in word only, but also in power and in the Holy Spirit and with full conviction; just as you know what kind of men we proved to be among you for your sake. You also became imitators of us and of the Lord, having received the word in much tribulation with the joy of the Holy Spirit, so that you became an example to all the believers in Macedonia and in Achaia."

    In 1Corinthians 1:24, Romans 1:16, and 1Thessalonians 1:5, "power" concerns the ability of God to change lives through the gospel message of Christ crucified. The term "power" in these passages denotes God's work of changing lives morally, not amazing crowds through peculiar signs. Faith in Christ, embracing the "scandal" of the cross, and obedience through the enable- ment of the indwelling Holy Spirit transforms lives so that recipients of God's power become living demonstrations of the truthfulness of the Gospel.

    The purveyors of what I am describing as "Star Wars theology" misunderstand or misinterpret these passages where Paul defines what he means by "power." They quote 1Corinthians 4:20 which says, "For the kingdom of God does not consist in words, but in power." They claim that this shows the relative unimportance of preaching and the importance of producing signs and won- ders or other spiritual power displays. This ignores the context and puts Paul at odds with himself in this very epistle. The "power" of the kingdom of God in 1Corinthians 4:20 is the same "power" of God in 1Corinthians 1:24! This is the power of God, through the cross, to change lives. Morally changed lives coupled with eternal salvation is one sign Satan can not duplicate. In the last days, signs will be done by those who like Pharaoh's magicians (see 2Timothy 3:8) oppose the truth. However, the determinative sign is God's power over life and death, and His deliverance of His people from their spiritual bondage.

    The false teachers described in 1Corinthians 4 had "words," but not power. Why? Because their words were "arrogant" (verse 19), and pride is the very antithesis of the cross that expresses the true power of God. According to 2Corinthians 10, pride is at the very heart of Biblical spiritual warfare. It was pride (see Isaiah 14:12-15) that caused Satan's fall from heaven. We have "divinely powerful" weapons to destroy "speculations and every lofty thing raised up against the knowledge of God" (2Corin. 10:5). These lofty things are prideful thoughts of self-exaltation. A careful reading of the entirety of 2Corin. 10 makes this clear. Those who are exalting them- selves through claimed "secret, spiritual knowledge" know nothing of the true power of God. They are still slaves of their fleshly motivations. I believe that the new "binding and loosing" doctrine feeds these fleshly motivations. It places man at the center rather than God. It is pagan in that a person's destiny is supposedly determined by his ability, or that of others, to gain sufficient "spiritual knowledge" to manipulate cosmic forces for his own benefit. Biblical Christianity teaches that one's destiny is determined by the work of God and one's response to the gospel of Jesus Christ.

    Paganism in the Church

    The pagan Greeks and Romans thought that various "gods" ruled the world. These gods were often at war with one another. Ancient polytheists thought that the destinies of humans were determined by their relationship to these deities. They designed many religious activities hoping to influence the gods or incur their favor. If someone allied himself with a particular god, he hoped that god would prevail and he would share in his destiny. In the mystery religions of the first century, secret, spiritual knowledge was the key to partaking in the destiny of the gods.1

    There are disturbing similarities in some modern spiritual warfare teachings. Influencing and manipulating cosmic spiritual rulers supposedly determines the salvation and well-being of those involved. The way one is to influence these evil forces is through extra-biblical revelations and new spiritual technologies unknown to Christ and His apostles. The New Testament does not support this approach to spiritual warfare.

    Biblical Christianity believes in the one true God, the triune God of the Bible. He rules over the entire universe, including all spiritual beings, good or bad. People who know Him through the second person of the trinity, Jesus Christ, have obtained salvation as a gift from God. Through the cross we are in Christ. To be in Christ involves both legal justification and relationship with God. Principalities and powers do not determine our blessedness, spiritual and physical well-being, or eternal destiny.

    Consider what Paul says about Jesus Christ in Ephesians 1:18-22: "I pray that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened, so that you may know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints, and what is the surpassing greatness of His power toward us who believe. These are in accordance with the working of the strength of His might which He brought about in Christ, when He raised Him from the dead, and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly places, far above all rule and authority and power and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this age, but also in the one to come. And He put all things in subjection under His feet, and gave Him as head over all things to the church."

    The key to victory over the forces of darkness is to be "seated... with Him in the heavenly places, in Christ Jesus" (Ephesians 2:6). This is what God has done for us through the cross. We are saved by faith, not works. The Bible is clear about the dominion of Christ over any so-called "gods." We do not obtain the blessing of Christ in our lives through "binding," rebuking, manipulating, or seeking to otherwise directly influence the "prince of the power of the air" (Eph. 2:2) and his emissaries. We obtain it by being in Christ through faith. Paganism leaves us seeking to solve our own problems through rearranging the cosmic terrain.

    Let us examine the practice of Paul as recorded in the Book of Acts to confirm that the preaching of the unadulterated gospel has the power to deliver all who are willing to repent and believe. The account concerns Paul's ministry in Ephesus, the city given over to paganism and the worship of demonic "gods." Acts 18:19 through Acts 19:41 give us the history of this ministry. Acts 20:17-35 is Paul's message to the Ephesian elders, which shows the nature of his ministry in Eph- esus. The Bible reveals how God turned a pagan city "up side down" and established a mature church in the midst of demonic idol worship.

    The city of Ephesus was given over to the worship of Diana, the pagan goddess. These pagans considered fornication an act of worship. Idols were everywhere. If binding and loosing as now taught is valid, this was the place to use it. Yet, according to the Biblical record, Paul never "bound the spirit of Diana" before or during his ministry in Ephesus. Paul's custom, upon coming to a new city, was to go into the synagogue and reason with the Jews from the Scripture, showing that Jesus was the Messiah (see Acts 17:1-3; 10,11; 18:3-5, etc.). Ephesus was no different. He went first to the synagogue and "reasoned with the Jews" (Acts 18:19). Paul left Ephesus shortly, to return later.

    When Paul returned to Ephesus, after correcting some "disciples" who had not heard of the Holy Spirit, he "entered the synagogue and continued speaking out boldly for three months, reasoning and persuading them about the kingdom of God" (Acts 19:8). Some would not listen, so he "took away the disciples, reasoning daily in the school of Tyrannus. And this took place for two years, so that all who lived in Asia heard the word of the Lord, both Jews and Greeks" (Acts 19:9,10). God performed miracles of healing and deliverance. Those who came to the Lord repented of their occult involvement, burning their paraphernalia (Acts 19:18,19).

    So many people repented that the idol makers were outraged. They said, "And not only is there danger that this trade of ours fall into disrepute, but also that the temple of the great goddess Artemis [Latin "Diana"] be regarded as worthless and that she whom all of Asia and the world worship should even be dethroned from her magnificence" (Acts 19:27).

    The powerful, persistent preaching and teaching of the gospel and the changed lives of those who heard and repented caused even Diana's closest followers to fear that she would be "dethroned." Paul cast demons out of individuals, but there is no record of him speaking directly to any "territorial spirits" or spiritual principalities in the heavenly realm.

    To Serve Christ or Satan?

    The issue in spiritual warfare is the allegiance of individuals either to Christ through the gospel or to Satan through their sin and alienation from God. The following verses from Paul's letter to the Ephesian church demonstrate this truth: "To me, the very least of all saints, this grace was given, to preach to the Gentiles the unfathomable riches of Christ, and to bring to light what is the administration of the mystery which for ages has been hidden in God, who created all things; in order that the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known through the church to the rulers and the authorities in the heavenly places" (Ephesians 3:8-10). Verse 6 of this chapter shows that "mystery" as used by Paul means, "That the Gentiles are fellow heirs and fellow members of the body, and fellow partakers of the promise of Christ Jesus through the gospel."

    God's wisdom (see 1Corin. 1:24 for definition) confronts the rulers and authorities in the heavenly realm through the saving of their previous subjects and bringing them into the church. The Spirit-filled, powerful, preaching of the gospel and the response of faith in the hearers plunders Satan's kingdom. Ephesians 3 is confirmed by the historical record of the Book of Acts. The wisdom and power of God are demonstrated through the Gospel, not through direct verbal assault on unseen spiritual beings in the heavenly realm.

    The often quoted reference in Ephesians 6:12 to our "struggle" against the "spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places" does not prove modern spiritual warfare theories. The armor of God (Eph. 6:11-19) has nothing to do with secret knowledge of territorial spirits, utterances, or other popular, modern procedures. It is about the truth, righteousness, the Gospel, the faith, salvation, the Word of God, and prayer. These are the very weapons Paul used in Ephesus. They are just as effective today. [See Article The Armour of God]

    Paul left Ephesus, but returned later and addressed the elders. The Biblical account of this event gives us an even clearer view of Paul's procedure, heart, and message. Paul told, "how I did not shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable, and teaching you publicly and from house to house, solemnly testifying to both Jews and Greeks of repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ"(Acts 20:20,21). He also said, "I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole purpose of God" (verse 27). The New Testament contains the truths God inspired Paul to teach patiently in Ephesus during his years of ministry there. Nothing profitable has been with- held from us.

    Magical Techniques?

    Are we to imagine that today, the preaching and teaching of the gospel will no longer have the same effect that it did in Ephesus? Can it be true that people cannot be delivered now except through a new revelation or spiritual technology, unknown to Paul and the other apostles? The church in Ephesus was established without one principality or power ruling over the city being "bound" by loud, verbal assaults. The healings and exorcisms that occurred in Ephesus were evidences of the power of God at work through the preaching of the gospel.

    Acts 19:12 tells that, "Handkerchiefs or aprons were even carried from his body to the sick, and the diseases left them and the evil spirits went out." Amazingly, some modern teachers have read the account of Paul in Ephesus and seen the "handkerchiefs" as the most prominent point, the key to Paul's method. Over the TV, they ask Christians to send money, so that they can receive their special "prayer cloth," which will catalyze "their" miracle.

    Some have suggested putting these under the pillow of an unsaved loved one, in hope that this would cause he or she to become saved. Paul did not save people with cloths; God saved people through the message of the gospel. The text in Acts says that "God was performing extraordinary miracles by the hands of Paul" (Acts 19:11). If these could be reproduced by anyone with a pile of handkerchiefs, they would not be "extraordinary." Paul's method was teaching the Scripture. God performed signs according to His sovereign will, though Paul was the vessel God used. The text does not say that the handkerchiefs were Paul's message, his fund-raising technique, or even that he explicitly approved of the practice. It simply says that people carried these from Paul's body and that miracles occurred.

    Some Jewish exorcists tried to duplicate Paul's success. They said "I adjure you by Jesus whom Paul preaches," hoping to persuade demons to leave the oppressed. The results were: "And the evil spirit answered and said to them, `I recognize Jesus, and I know about Paul, but who are you?' And the man, in whom was the evil spirit, leaped on them and subdued all of them and overpowered them, so that they fled out of that house naked and wounded" (Acts 19:15,16).

    They evidently supposed that there was some innate, magical power in the utterance of Jesus' name that would force evil spirits to obey them. They even had the right "Jesus," i.e., the "one whom Paul preaches." Why did they fail? Because they had no authority. They had no authority because they had no relationship with Jesus. They had no relationship because they had not em- braced the cross. They were in bondage to the very Evil One whose evil emissaries they were trying to remove.

    Secret Knowledge?

    This illustrates a very important principle about spiritual warfare and deliverance: it is based on relationship rather than knowledge. God delivers us because He is Almighty God and He loves us. Our victory is based on our knowledge of God not our knowledge of demons, their names, their bosses (i.e., "controlling spirits"), or secret utterances and formulas. "Occult" means "secret knowledge;" and these exorcists thought that Paul had discovered the secret. Greek mystery reli- gions had "gods" with secret names that would empower those who learned them.

    Much teaching in the church on this is as confused as these misguided deliverers. For example, Hosea 4:6 states "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge..." This verse is often quoted to prove that without revelation knowledge about principalities and powers, names of demons, or other occult phenomena, God's people will be destroyed. As is commonly the practice, the meaning of the passage has been twisted by refusal to read it in its context. Hosea 4:1 states "...the Lord has a case against the inhabitants of the land, because there is no faithfulness or kind- ness or knowledge of God in the land." The knowledge they were lacking was the knowledge of God, not the secret names of evil forces! The last part of verse 6 laments "... you have forgotten the law of your God." The error could have been avoided by reading the entire verse. They did not know God or His word.

    People are subject to Satan because they do not know God, not because of ignorance of the various spiritual "secrets" of Satan's kingdom. Paul does say that he was "not ignorant of Satan's schemes" (2Corinthians 2:11). In context he was speaking of the need for Christians to forgive one another in obedience to Christ. The scheme of Satan was to get them not to obey Christ. Paul's knowledge was of Christ and His will and Satan's purpose to get us to disobey God. Again, knowledge concerning details of the Satanic kingdom which God has not chosen to reveal to us is not the issue.

    Christians have victory over Satan because of their relationship with God, not because of having secret knowledge about Satan's kingdom of darkness. By taking the focus of our faith off our relationship with God and on to Satan and evil forces of darkness, modern spiritual warfare teachers are making the same mistake as the seven sons of Sceva. They will get similar results.

    When Paul later wrote to Timothy at Ephesus, false teachers had arisen from their own midst just as he predicted in Acts 20. Some were so bad as to be described as "having been held captive by him [Satan] to do his will" (2Timothy 2:26). Surely now Paul will let Timothy know about "bin- ding and loosing" and more advanced exorcism techniques! No, but he gives some seemingly mundane (though exceedingly wise) advice. He says "...the Lord's bond-servant must not be quarrelsome, but be kind to all, able to teach, patient when wronged, with gentleness correcting those who are in opposition, if perhaps God may grant them repentance leading to the knowledge of the truth" (2Timothy 2:24,25).

    Rather than advanced spiritual technology, Paul sees teaching, the sovereign action of God, and repentance as the keys to deliverance from Satan. The teaching that Timothy is to give is Bible teaching, as shown in the next chapter of Second Timothy.

    The Lie Versus the Truth

    There is a pattern emerging as we examine these New Testament texts. The pattern is that the truth indeed does set us free (John 8:32). The devil is a liar (John 8:44). From the first incident of human deception (with Adam and Eve) until he is finally banished from the face of the earth, he uses lies to hold mankind in bondage. The battle is a battle of truth and error. Specifically, it is the lie versus the truth. The lie is the lie that man (hoping to be self-ruling like God) can rebel against God and not die (Genesis 3:4,5). The truth is the gospel of Jesus Christ.

    2Thess. 2:9-12, which describes the activity of Antichrist, shows these two concepts at work: "...that is the one whose coming is in accord with the activity of Satan, with all power and signs and false wonders, and with all the deception of wickedness for those who perish, because they did not receive the love of the truth so as to be saved. And for this reason God will send upon them a deluding influence so that they might believe what is false, in order that they all may be judged who did not believe the truth, but took pleasure in wickedness."

    "What is false" in verse 11 is literally in the Greek, "the lie." In John 8:44, Jesus called Satan the father of "the lie." Paul gives two reasons why people believe the lie. They do not "receive the love of the truth," and they "took pleasure in wickedness." The gospel of Jesus Christ is the truth that leads to our salvation. Since it confronts our sin, convicts us, and calls us to repentance, many prefer the lie! The lie says the same thing that it has always said: "You can sin and not die, you can be as God" (i.e., autonomous). The cross says otherwise! The essence of spiritual warfare is God's truth revealed in the person of Jesus Christ through the cross confronting and defeating Satan's lie.

    The "casting down of ruling principalities and powers" through naming them, determining their geographical sphere of influence, and "binding" them is absent from the New Testament! Magical utterances or incantations have no power to set captives free. The Holy Spirit working through the preaching of the gospel does.

    Even "the name of Jesus," spoken boldly in prayer, is not a magical epithet. It is a declaration of whose authority it is by which we speak and act. If we depart from the teachings of Scripture, we depart from the true authority of Christ. Saying "in the name of Jesus" does not give any real authority to a false teaching. Those who try to operate thus shall be like those in Matthew 7, who in Jesus' name cast out demons. He never knew them.

    It strikes me that if those who are caught up in these fanciful deliverance and spiritual warfare theories would just stand back a bit and look at things from a broader, Biblical perspective, they could see their error. Could it be true that a person, upon responding to the gospel in faith, repentance, and obedience, would be left by God in spiritual bondage because of ignorance of elaborate theories about Satan and demons? If we call upon the Lord according to the promises and terms of Romans chapter 10, will God fail to deliver us because we did not yet discover the name of a "control spirit" ruling over our neighborhood? If so, Christians for nearly two thousand years have lived out their lives in demonic bondage because the historical church did not know about these new theories and technologies.

      "We know that no one who is born of God sins; but He who was born of God keeps him and the evil one does not touch him. We know that we are of God, and the whole world lies in the power of the evil one." - 1John 5:18,19

    Are truths and promises of this passage dependent on our knowledge about demons, principalities, special utterances, extra-biblical spiritual formulas, etc.? OR - Are they dependent on our rela tionship with God? Clearly the later is true. John differentiates Christians and the world. Christians do not practice (the continuous present tense "keep on practicing sin" is used in verse 18) sin. Jesus keeps us so that the Evil One cannot touch us. In contrast, the world lies in the power of Satan. This is true because of God's love for us and what He has done through the cross for our deliverance. We too once lived in bondage (see Ephesians 2:1-9) to sin and Satan, but now we are free! No amount of shouting or "binding" will change either one of these facts: our victory or the world's bondage to Satan. Only the work of God in Christ will set the captives free.

    The truth is so much more profound (although simple) than the complicated spiritual theories that are offered to take its place. The teaching and preaching of the word of God is the commission of the church. Inventing new spiritual technologies and theories is not. Binding and "loosing" as taught in these new theories is actually binding and "losing." The time and attention of God's people are being taken off preaching the gospel and being witnesses for Christ as commanded in the Bible. In the place of our true responsibilities, we are being told that we must "take dominion" over geopolitical entities by "binding" the Satanic hosts that control them. This does not disturb Satan one bit. With this false teaching, we "lose" and he "wins." We lose in the sense of failing to fulfill God's purpose for us. Saying "I bind you Satan" will not stop his activity. If we preach the gospel to one person and that person repents and believes, Satan's kingdom is thereby plun- dered. The angels in heaven rejoice when one sinner repents. If we obey the true commission given us by Christ and His apostles, we shall have victory.

    End Notes

      See Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Eerdmans, Vol. 4; pages 802-808 on Greek mystery religions

    Unless otherwise noted, all Scriptures taken from the New American Standard Bible, © Copyright 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1988, 1995 The Lockman Foundation.

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