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Sunday Morning Service - The War

Sunday Morning Service - The War

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Theme: The War for Souls — Understanding the Battle Between God and Satan Pastor Matthew preached from Isaiah 53, Ephesians 6, and Romans 8, unfolding the reality of the spiritual war between God and Satan that began in heaven and now continues on earth for the souls of men. The sermon traced the war’s origin, its impact on humanity, and the believer’s call to stand and fight through Christ’s victory. The Origin of the War Pastor began by explaining from Hebrew tradition that Lucifer’s rebellion may have occurred after Adam was created, not before.When God gave Adam dominion over the earth, Lucifer resented being subject to a being made in God’s image and likeness. “Lucifer didn’t like that he had to come under Adam’s authority if he came to earth. That’s why he rebelled.” The war began in heaven and extended to humanity when Satan deceived Adam and Eve in the garden.Humanity retained God’s image but lost His likeness — becoming earthly instead of heavenly.The goal of the Christian life, Pastor said, is to regain the likeness of God through Christ. “Your goal isn’t to be the best preacher, singer, or worker — your goal is to be like Him.” Jesus: The Warrior Who Fought for Us (Isaiah 53) Reading from Isaiah 53, Pastor described the suffering of Christ as the battle for our redemption. “He went to war — and He was wounded, bruised, and pierced for us.” Every wound Jesus took was a war wound, proof of victory through sacrifice.“By His stripes we are healed” means that the war Jesus fought reconciled us to God — our peace (shalom) restored.Pastor explained shalom as “the cessation of againstness” — the end of hostility between God and man. “When I say ‘Shalom,’ I’m saying everything’s right between me and you, and between me and God.” The war Jesus fought was not symbolic — it was a real, violent confrontation for our souls. “He went to war for us, and He won. Now He’s enlisted us in that same war.” The Nature of Our Battle (Ephesians 6:10–18) Pastor reminded the congregation that we are still in the middle of the war — a spiritual one.We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, powers, and rulers of darkness.Satan’s primary weapon is deception — “He caused me to forget” (the Hebrew meaning of beguiled). “Temptation works when we forget — just for a moment — the consequences, our love for God, and who we are.” The solution: Put on the full armor of God — truth, righteousness, peace, faith, salvation, and the Word.Pastor emphasized the danger of modern distractions: “We’ve got a league for everything, a device for everything, but few remember the war we’re in. Don’t get lulled to sleep.” Key call: “You belong to God before you belong to anybody. Drop what you’re doing when He calls. You owe Him that.” The Mind — The Battlefield (2 Corinthians 10:3–5) The war begins in the mind. “That’s where Satan got Eve — he distorted her thinking before she took the fruit.” The enemy still works through arguments, imaginations, and lies that exalt themselves against God’s truth.Pastor warned that many people are angry at God because Satan deceived them into believing God failed or took something from them. “The devil’s best work is making people mad at God — blaming Him for what sin caused.” Believers must bring every thought into captivity to Christ and refuse carnal conflicts with others. “The war isn’t in here (the church) — it’s out there. Don’t fight one another. Prefer one another.” The Call to Spiritual Endurance (2 Timothy 2:3–4) “You therefore must endure hardship as a good soldier of Jesus Christ.” Pastor explained that soldiers suffer wounds, hunger, frostbite, and exhaustion — yet stay committed to the mission.Likewise, Christians must endure hardship without getting entangled in worldly distractions. “If you’ve got too much going on to spend time with God, you’ve got too much going on.” Our goal is not comfort, but to please Him who enlisted us. Victory Assured (Romans 8:18–39) The war may be fierce, but the outcome is already settled.Jesus’ death and resurrection guarantee victory for those who remain faithful. “The game’s fixed. If we die, we go straight to be with the Lord.” Creation itself is groaning for redemption, waiting for the full restoration of God’s sons.The Holy Spirit helps us in battle — interceding when we don’t know how to pray. “When you pray ‘Thy will be done,’ you’re asking God to realign lives, rescue souls, and tear down sin. That’s warfare prayer.” Nothing can separate believers from God’s love:Not tribulation, distress, persecution, famine, or death.“In all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.” The War’s End — The Crushing of the Serpent Pastor closed with the prophetic image of David placing Goliath’s head on Golgotha, “the...
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