Why is this?
There are a few reasons.
Some of it is personal history. Among disenchanted and progressive Christian audiences many are ex-evangelicals, and ex-Pentecostals in particular. And among these persons the language of "spiritual warfare" is associated with a lot of bad and hurtful experiences. Consequently, trying to rehabilitate or reconstruct the language of "spiritual warfare" is like revisiting an old wound. And beyond being a haunting memory, there is a legitimate concern about perpetrating harm. Isn't the language of spiritual warfare, along with all this "devil talk," dangerous and prone to abuse?
A related worry here is how many associate the language of spiritual warfare with Frank Peretti's novel This Present Darkness, published in 1986, which has sold over two million copies. The plot of the book concerns a small town that is being taken over by demonic powers. Here's a bit of the plot summary—Spoiler alert!—from Wikipedia:
As the investigation continues, Marshall and Bernice begin to realize that they are onto something much bigger than they thought. They slowly uncover a plot to take over the town by buying the college, which is being carried out by the Universal Consciousness Society, a powerful New Age group and "worldwide front organization for Satan." The college's psychology professor, Juleen Langstrat, is part of the Society. She teaches meditation, which brings practitioners in contact with spirit guides (demons), as well as witchcraft and New Age beliefs. Members of the community are thus influenced by Satan, including Brummel and the pastor of the liberal United Christian Church.
You can see the culture war tropes. A liberal college and a psychology professor. New Age beliefs and witchcraft. Meditation as communion with demons. A liberal mainline church. Peretti fuses the culture war with a florid vision of spiritual warfare where angels walk alongside the evangelical protagonists and demons sit on the shoulders of the secularists and liberals.
Such associations with the phrase "spiritual warfare" make it a damaged brand in progressive Christian spaces. If by "spiritual warfare" you mean something like Frank Peretti's This Present Darkness, well, we'll take a hard pass.
Beyond this connection between "spiritual warfare" and evangelicalism, there are many progressive Christians who just get hung up on the metaphor of "warfare." To describe the loving way of Jesus as "warfare" is theologically problematic. And, again, there is a concern that such a metaphor is prone to abuse. So, while many audiences are happy to talk about Satan, they are less enthused about using the phrase "spiritual warfare" to describe this struggle.
I sympathize. There are many metaphors we might use to describe our relation to evil. If you don't want to describe that relation as "fighting," "doing battle," or "going to war," softer metaphors like "resist" might be better. I think the metaphors of gardening, repairing, and healing can do good work. For example, there are forces that stand in a satanic—adversarial—relation to your garden. Poor soil. Lack of water. Weeds. Pests. Etc. If you do nothing, the garden will suffer. So, you have to act. You have to attend, invest, care, work, and sweat. This garden can be your soul, your home, your relationships, your workplace, your neighborhood, your nation, and the world writ large. Call all your work to bring flourishing your version and vision of what others call "spiritual warfare."
I don't mind anyone doing good story work here. I love deploying a diversity of metaphors for the spiritual life. All I really care about is that the metaphors call you to watchfulness and action.
That said, I don't have a problem with the metaphor of "warfare." It's richly Biblical. As I pointed out in Part 2 of this series, the key is keeping the Christological framework firmly in view. Jesus wins his military victory by dying on the cross. And the enemies Jesus defeats are spiritual powers. Sin, death, and the Devil. Here's how Paul describes it in Colossians 2:
When you were dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made you alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins, having canceled the charge of our legal indebtedness, which stood against us and condemned us; he has taken it away, nailing it to the cross. And having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross.
The vision here is of a Roman military victory, how the Caesars would parade the spoils of war and their defeated enemies through the city. Jesus is portrayed as leading that victory parade. But notice Christ's weapon. Not guns, cannons, or bombs. The weapon is the cross. And notice who the defeated enemies are: Death, sin, and the spiritual powers holding us captive.
The most famous military metaphor is Paul's description of the armor of God in Ephesians. Recall the "weapons" in that list: Truth, righteousness, the gospel of peace, faith, salvation, and the word of God.
We could also work through Revelation and how it describes the "War of the Lamb."
All that to say, whenever I run into skepticism of "spiritual warfare" as a metaphor, my knee-jerk reaction tends to be:
"People, it's a metaphor."





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