“Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high [places].” (Eph 6:11-12 AV)
We forget that our warfare is real and often unseen. The things that are seen tend to get far more attention. The spiritual realm around us is often ignored. When someone makes it a major concern, we tend to think it an exaggeration. But the spiritual warfare around us is far more real than we realize. Paul suggests that if we do not acknowledge this war nor defend against it, this war will have the better of us. A study on the armor of God is warranted. But unless the warfare on that which is not seen is ignored, the armor of God is meaningless. Life gets so busy that we forget there are demons and devils that wish to do the child of God harm. We cannot see them. So, we think they are less than real. But they are not. They are no less real than the air we breathe.
There is a saying that describes an early warning against something deadly. It is called a canary in the coal mine. In other words, if there is a sound coming from the engine of your car but no lights are warning of pending faults, the sound would be a canary in the coal mine. Or, perhaps a scan shows a small spot, but all the blood work and other labs show no problem. That spot might be a canary in the coal mine. If prices continue to climb and our wages stay the same, the rising grocery bill is a canary in the coal mine. The phrase comes from the practice of using caged canaries in coal mines to warn of dangerous levels of gases rising before it affected the miners. “Proposed by John Scott Haldane in 1895, canaries were used because their rapid breathing rate and small size made them more sensitive to carbon monoxide and methane than humans…Miners carried the birds into shafts; if the canary became distressed or died, it signaled the presence of invisible, odorless toxins, giving workers time to evacuate…The practice began in the early 1900s and continued until 1996 in Britain, when electronic sensors officially replaced the birds.” (AI generated information) The point is, there are hazards all around us of which we are unaware until it is too late.
This doesn’t mean we are without indicators. A sour disposition. A hopeless mind. A relentless struggle with persistent sin. A heart of frightful doubt that debilitates and paralyzes. These could all be indicators of a spiritual war. The indicators are subtle at first. Gone unchecked, they can become spiritually disastrous. Spiritual warfare should never be taken lightly. That is why the beloved Apostle gave us the means to overcome. The armor of God is our defense. It begins with a relentless commitment to the word of God and prayer. It all starts there. Although our entry today is not the cure, but rather, being made aware that the battle exists in the first place. The canaries nor the miners could see the methane or carbon dioxide. They could not smell them. To light a match would explode the mine. Working with flames for light, this was important. The canary was a life-or-death tool. But there would be no canary unless the mining company acknowledged the existence of deadly gas. It started with admitting that a potential danger existed. That is where we are today. We have to admit there is a battle that rages all around us, and we are the chattel. We are the object of this battle. As the forces of evil and righteousness battle it out for our souls, we are in the middle. We have to open our eyes to the reality of that which we cannot see so that it cannot end in disaster.