Silas
Servant of All
What you are describing is not crazy at all. It is a real, targeted assault because the enemy hates what the church is when it functions as God intended. The moment you commit yourself to a local body of believers, you become a threat to the kingdom of darkness. You are experiencing exactly what Scripture warns: the devil is opposed to the church, and he will attack those who seek fellowship and take their place within it. Those intrusive, foul moods that make you want to run and isolate are not random emotions; they are flaming arrows meant to cut you off from the very people who love and care for you.
You have already seen the pattern. The attack comes, it clouds your thinking, and then it lifts and you come back to your senses. That recognition is a vital gift. The enemy’s strategy is to isolate you by lying to you about the church. He will magnify flaws, stir up suspicion, or simply drape a heavy blanket of distaste over your heart so that you withdraw. Isolation makes you vulnerable. When you are alone in that foul mood, you are trying to fight a battle that was designed to be fought with reinforcements. The church is the body of Christ, and a severed limb has no strength.
Please lean into the very thing the attack opposes. When you feel that repulsion rising, do not wait for it to lift on its own. Choose to act against it. Reach out to one of those members you know cares for you before the feeling passes. Ask them to pray with you right then. Ask the older, seasoned saints, the widows and the spiritually mature men who have walked with the Lord for years, to stand with you in intercessory prayer. There is a profound power when the church sustains its members through prayer, and you are not meant to carry this alone. The body has a responsibility to care for the needy within it, and that includes spiritual neediness and oppression.
The church is not a museum for perfected people; it is a hospital for the wounded and a fortress for the attacked. The history of the church includes many failures, but the biblical pattern is a community where love is active and the power of God purifies. You are caught in a skirmish that tests your faith, and the goal is your endurance and your deepening reliance on the family of God. The enemy knows that if he cannot destroy your faith, he will try to destroy your fellowship. Do not let him. The love your fellow believers have for you is real, and it is a weapon against the schemes of hell. You are sealed by God, and that mark of ownership enrages the locusts that can only hurt those without that seal. Stand firm, not in your own strength, but in the strength of the body where Jesus dwells.
You have already seen the pattern. The attack comes, it clouds your thinking, and then it lifts and you come back to your senses. That recognition is a vital gift. The enemy’s strategy is to isolate you by lying to you about the church. He will magnify flaws, stir up suspicion, or simply drape a heavy blanket of distaste over your heart so that you withdraw. Isolation makes you vulnerable. When you are alone in that foul mood, you are trying to fight a battle that was designed to be fought with reinforcements. The church is the body of Christ, and a severed limb has no strength.
Please lean into the very thing the attack opposes. When you feel that repulsion rising, do not wait for it to lift on its own. Choose to act against it. Reach out to one of those members you know cares for you before the feeling passes. Ask them to pray with you right then. Ask the older, seasoned saints, the widows and the spiritually mature men who have walked with the Lord for years, to stand with you in intercessory prayer. There is a profound power when the church sustains its members through prayer, and you are not meant to carry this alone. The body has a responsibility to care for the needy within it, and that includes spiritual neediness and oppression.
The church is not a museum for perfected people; it is a hospital for the wounded and a fortress for the attacked. The history of the church includes many failures, but the biblical pattern is a community where love is active and the power of God purifies. You are caught in a skirmish that tests your faith, and the goal is your endurance and your deepening reliance on the family of God. The enemy knows that if he cannot destroy your faith, he will try to destroy your fellowship. Do not let him. The love your fellow believers have for you is real, and it is a weapon against the schemes of hell. You are sealed by God, and that mark of ownership enrages the locusts that can only hurt those without that seal. Stand firm, not in your own strength, but in the strength of the body where Jesus dwells.
