You
can purchase this book internationally and locally here now and locally in Australia here as well, after December 1st.
My new book
is finally out, Like a Roaring Lion: How the Evil One Works to Destroy You,
published by Locke Press. As I say on Amazon,
“This
is not a theodicy. Many books on the issue of evil seek to try and harmonise
the issue of evil with the idea of a good God. But the thesis of this book is
that Christianity does not have an evil problem, but that evil has a
Christianity problem. That is to say Christianity exposes and explains evil,
and also provides the solution to evil. In fact, without the Scriptures, and
especially their culmination in the account of Jesus, we would not have the
understanding of evil that we do today.
This
book seeks to explore a broad understanding of how evil works in this world,
and even delves deeply into issues that the modern church has either forgotten,
downplayed or even been deceived on. The book is a thoroughly scriptural
examination of the strategies of evil, and is a vital handbook for those
wanting to understand how it works in this world, how it affects us, how it has
deceived us, how it wants to destroy you and how to fight against it with
spiritual weapons.”
I thought to
help promote the book I would publish the introduction, because it gives some
good insight into what the book is seeking to do. This book also has a special
guest chapter by author and teacher R. L. Watson on how the new age has snuck
into the church. This book is not meant to be a comprehensive theology of how
evil works, but really a starting effort on that topic, one that others can
build on. I have also made sure this book has practical application for everyone
reading, no matter where you are at in life. I hope you enjoy this and are encouraged
by this book.
God bless.
Introduction
Wherever you
look you can see the twin images of beauty and decay. In the most beautiful
forests in the world you can see the debris of the dead leaves and plant matter
everywhere. Throughout the oceans of the world the beauty of the reefs and
ocean floors is littered with the signs of dying sea life and the grime of
decay. We live in a beautiful world, but it is a world of marred beauty. This
speaks to us of an important reality: This world is broken in some way. It has
been corrupted.
This
corrupting power is what we Christians call sin. Sin is the force which has
subjected this world to decay. It is ever groaning under the pain of the
marring force of sin, and this decay affects us in multiple ways from diseases,
to storms and floods, to earthquakes and shifting climates throughout the
aeons. The Scriptures are clear that this force of sin is not simply a passive
force inflicted on humanity. It is an active force at work in our flesh and we
are subjected to it by our very own rebellion against our Lord and creator.
But there is
also another clear reality in this world; the presence of an evil malevolence
that goes beyond the decay we see in this world and the fallenness we see in
human nature. There is a consistency of this evil force observed throughout the
civilisations of humanity that is spreading from continent to continent. We can
see this with the human sacrificial rights of the ancient Amorites in the Land
of Canaan, amongst the Scandinavian people’s commonly called Vikings, and all
the way across lands and sea in the realms of the tribes of the Americas where
the Mexica peoples of the Aztecs sacrificed humans with such gusto that many
people did not believe such evil could be real until the piles of skulls were
uncovered. All throughout the world again and again, we see people offering up
the innocent flesh of infants and virgins, and the captured bodies of defeated
soldiers as slaves.
It had been
observed that there is a remarkable consistency in these kinds of sacrifices.
They are done to appease the wrath of the gods, or at least malevolent cosmic
forces, that these people live in fear of. The Canaanites offered their
children into the fires of Molech, the Israelites then followed suit taking on
this same evil practice, sacrificing their sons and daughters in the fire to
demons as the Bible phrases it. The Vikings sought to appease the gods of their
forests and the fearsome chief of the gods, Odin. The Anglo-Saxons, Wodin and
many more people from a wide range of countries and lands lived under other
gods, other demons. Across nation to nation and land to land, we see this same
desperate and, let’s face it, evil offering to turn away wrath, or bring
blessings for war, wealth and crops to a people with golden overlaid idols.
There is even
an observation of the same kinds of sins and degraded practices that turn up
from culture to culture. Things like homosexuality, bestiality, child abuse and
more. These kinds of sins transgress peoples and cultures and are found to
infect even widely varying cultures. But what makes them even more evil is that
in many cultures they are either accepted, or at least not actively frowned
upon as they should be. Remarkably, it has been observed throughout history
that wherever people worship a female deity, this is followed by the
emasculation of men, literally, in the practice of castration. We see this with
eunuchs across nations, and also ritual eunuchs like those who worshipped the
goddess Cybele in Rome. It is as if the same spirit were whispering the same
kinds of messages into the ears of people from disparate places, all to achieve
the same kinds of evil and oppression.
The
consistency of this evil across millennia and continents points to a force
which transcends the lifespan not only of human individuals, but even human
societies. It is clearly a malevolent force because it consistently demands
religious policies, practice and rites that harm the flourishing of individuals
and societies. Communities which execute their infants in the fires to appease
a terrifying divinity are neither capable of long-term survival, nor deserving
of it. It is a dyscivilisational policy. As is making eunuchs of some of your
best and brightest young men or to protect the king’s harem. It does not take a
person with a genius level of understanding of human descent to predict what
will happen to the gene pool of a society which practices such polices; an
ever-declining gene pool, inbreeding and genetic decline. Encouraging things
like homosexuality and transgenderism have the same effect on a society. When
joined with war and the violence and death that this propagates, you can see
how these consistently malevolent forces steer humanity towards destruction
again and again.
That is not
to say that human sinfulness does not play a part, it clearly does, and it is a
significant part. Perhaps the best exploration of this theme outside the Bible
is found in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, and to a lesser degree the Hobbit.
Tolkien was versed enough in the scriptures, theology, philosophy and history
to understand the difference between the fallen nature of man and the extreme
wickedness of evil.
The world
Tolkien built consists of a vast array of mythical creatures such as elves,
orcs, goblins and more, alongside the more mundane human races of Middle Earth.
There is an evil force, a corrupted and corrupting force, that emanates from
the dark lands of Mordor, from an evil being not unlike one of the devil’s more
powerful servants. This being is called Sauron, a remnant of a once more
powerful dark lord. He is pure evil and is opposed to all that is good,
beautiful, and true. He hates life, and when he does not outright destroy it,
he corrupts it, twists it and reshapes it for twisted purposes. Sauron’s evil
is an irredeemable evil, it is demonic in every true sense of the word.
There are
also great beings of light in the lands of Middle Earth; the elves, Tom
Bombadil, the Maiar, of which Gandalf is the greatest and wisest, and other
beings and creatures. They are mythical, otherworldly beings who stand above
the dross of middle earth. Not always perfect, and not completely
incorruptible, but their ways of life and their philosophies are far above that
of mankind.
Mankind,
represented by the races of men and the pigmies, the hobbits, are very
different to the higher creatures of Middle Earth. They are much more base
creatures. Mankind had once stood with similar dignity alongside that of the
elves in the great lands of the West. But after rejecting their one true lord,
their creator, they began to diminish. The men of Middle Earth are far more
easily corrupted than the elves and the Maiar.
They have in
themselves an inherent flaw, an inherent corruption, as a result of their
wilful rejection of their creator. They are far more easily tempted, and many
of their kind are lacking in all dignity and nobility. There are exceptions to
this of course, a note of eminent nobility still exists among some, but it is a
diminishing and fragile nobility in comparison to that of the elves. This
fragility places mankind in far more danger from the manipulations and
temptations of the dark Lord Sauron, and the temptation of the Ring of Power.
Man is capable of evil in his own right, but he is capable of a far more
insidious and powerful evil when under the sway of the evil one. However, he is
not irredeemable in his fallenness. Even men once under the sway of evil, or
temporarily under the sway of evil, can cast off the influence of evil and
redeem themselves in their last acts, such as the last acts of Boromir the
nobleman of Gondor.
These twin
dangers, these twin evils, the corruption of mankind and the irredeemable
poison of the evil of the fallen angel, Sauron, both present the heroes of
Middle Earth with all their challenges and trials. They must face the enemy
from without, the evil influence and power of the evil one, and they must also
face the enemy from within, their own corrupted and fallen nature which
remembers and resembles its former glory, but in a diminished way. The realm of
Middle Earth is a decaying world, a world where evil can still be opposed, but
it is also a world that many within it are cognizant that it cannot last
forever. Men live in the midst of the ruins of greater kingdoms, greater times
and greater achievements. The energy of mankind is not yet spent, but it does
face many challenges.
Tolkien
presented us a world at the same time like ours, but also unlike ours. It is
populated by majestic and mythical beasts, beasts like those recounted in the
ancient tales of man. But at the same time, the way that man responds to those
beasts is precisely how we would expect. Indeed, Tolkien presents us with a
world not unlike the world of the Scriptures. A world of Leviathans, and
Behemoths, Rahabs, and Tiamats. A world of giants and fell beasts under the
sway of evil spiritual forces, well beyond the abilities of even the most
capable warrior. But also, a world where humanity is not left to fend for
themselves against such beasts, as we are reinforced by angelic messengers and
arch angels. Beings, who like the Maiar, tip the battle against evil back into
man’s favour as long as men take advantage of these supernatural powers.
And this is
what is incumbent on us today. To recognize the reality of the twin evils that
humanity must face in this world, how they interact, and how we are trained by
the Scriptures to oppose them. Tolkien’s world, as marvellous as it is, is a
mythologized version of the real world we are in and which the Scriptures give
us a behind the curtain view of.
There is a
remarkable example of this in the book of 2 Kings in the Scriptures when Elisha
and his servants are trapped in a city surrounded by the army of the King of
Syria. When Elisha’s servant becomes worried, this is what we read,
“15
When the servant of the man of God rose early in the morning and went out,
behold, an army with horses and chariots was all around the city. And the
servant said, “Alas, my master! What shall we do?” 16 He said, “Do not be
afraid, for those who are with us are more than those who are with them.” 17
Then Elisha prayed and said, “O Lord, please open his eyes that he may see.” So
the Lord opened the eyes of the young man, and he saw, and behold, the mountain
was full of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha.”[1]
The Lord
opened the man’s eyes, and he instantly became aware of the army of the Lord
that was surrounding the Syrians. It was not Elisha and his servant who was
outnumbered, it was their enemies.
But we should
not scoff at the danger of being opposed by a pagan king and his armies. Evil
has done great harm in our world, and it did in ancient Israel as well. Not
just because of their foreign enemies, but because the leaders and people of
Israel were besieged by the same twin evils that faced the heroes in the Lord
of the Rings, the twin forces of the power of the evil one, Satan, and the
indwelling corruption of sin in the heart of man. We face the precise same kind
of evil that Aragorn and Frodo faced, only our enemies are not mythological.
This is why
we need a good understanding of how evil works in this world. It is becoming
more and more clear that most Christians are defenceless against the evil that
exists around them and in them precisely because many Christians do not know,
or even reject, the means with which God says to fight evil. The decline of the
church, the decline of the Christian home, the decline of Christian education,
denominations and more in the modern West, show us that the Dark Lord has been
running amok and the opposition to him has been rather ineffective.
Churches across the West have increasingly
become platforms for anti-Christian and even outright Satanic propaganda.
Instead of crosses hanging central in many churches, rainbow and transgender
flags are starting to fly. The patriarchal leadership taught in Scripture and
handed down from generation to generation is now being replaced by a feminist
leadership that has further hastened the acceptance of “alternative” (aka
rebellious) lifestyles. Men are leading the church and the home less and less,
and people are looking to men less and less for such leadership, because they
have been trained to do everything their own way and scorn the leadership of
men.
The West sits
besieged and declining and is in a not much better place than Gondor in the
Fellowship of the Ring. We need an effective understanding of how the evil one
works. This is what this work is going to set out to do.
This is an
except from the book Like a Roaring Lion.
You can purchase
this book internationally and locally here
now and locally in Australia here as
well, after December 1st.
List of
References
[1] 2
Kings 6:15-17.
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