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Spiritual Warfare

The battle you can't see but definitely feel

by Luke

Acts is the sequel to Luke's Gospel — it picks up right where Jesus ascended and follows the early church as it explodes across the Roman Empire. The Holy Spirit shows up at Pentecost and everything changes. It's part history, part adventure story, and 100% wild.

28 chapters

by Paul

Ephesians is Paul going cosmic. He zooms all the way out to God's big-picture plan for the universe — chosen before creation, redeemed through Christ, united as one body. Then he zooms back in to everyday life: marriage, parenting, work, and spiritual warfare. The armor of God passage (chapter 6) is one of the most famous in the Bible.

6 chapters

by Jude

Jude is short, intense, and pulls no punches. False teachers have crept into the church, twisting God's Grace into a license to do whatever they want. Jude fires off Old Testament examples of God's judgment — fallen Angels, Sodom and Gomorrah, Cain, Balaam, Korah — to show these people are playing a dangerous game. Then he ends with one of the most beautiful Benedictions in the Bible.

1 chapter

by John of Patmos

Revelation is the Bible's grand finale — and it's wild. Written in Apocalyptic style full of symbols, beasts, seals, trumpets, and bowls of judgment. But the core message is simple: evil will not have the last word. Jesus returns, defeats every enemy, and makes all things new. It was written to comfort persecuted Christians, not to scare them. The ending — a new Heaven and new earth where God lives with His people — is the most hopeful vision in all of Scripture.

22 chapters