You have to run over the devil before he runs over you. You are standing on a battlefield (perhaps a different one than you were last year at this time). You may be standing in the middle of an army or you may be standing all alone. Are you just going to stand there, waiting to see what will happen? Or are you going to do something that will allow you to get and keep the upper hand? King David gave us a psalm that we should graft onto ourselves so that we can be true overcomers: “I pursued my enemies and overtook them; I did not turn back till they were destroyed” (Psalm 18:37, NIV). Earlier in the same psalm, he expressed his utter dependency on God when his enemies proved to be too strong for him: “He rescued me from my powerful enemy, from my foes, who were too strong for me. They confronted me in the day of my disaster, but the Lord was my support” (Psalm 18:17–18, NIV). He was a true overcomer—determined to make an end of his enemies, but always aware that he needed help doing it.
Why Is Satan Picking on You?
Do you sometimes feel as if the enemy has painted a bull’s-eye on you? What did you do to attract his unwelcome attention? Well, for one thing, you are God’s friend. God created you for his pleasure and he takes pleasure in you (see Revelation 4:11). He takes so much pleasure in you that he sent his Son to redeem you from the hand of his enemy so that he could adopt you as his child. He takes so much pleasure in you that he is beautifying you and making you able to reflect his image the way you were created to do. 
What Are Satan’s Favorite Tactics?
Satan is not particularly creative. He exercises his malice in certain predictable (and, therefore, resistible) ways. With his limited repertoire, all he can do is to mix standard ingredients into variations on the same recipe. Here is a quick list of his favorite tactics against human beings:
- Delay. To weaken you and wear you out. To make you lose your way (see Daniel 10:2-14).
- Deceit. To derail God’s purposes by making spiritual principles into legalism. To move you from the stability of truth to the instability of error (see Revelation 12:9).
- Distraction. To break your focus. To make you concentrate on a side issue. A time of great intimacy with God can turn into a time of great battle. (See Proverbs 4:27.)
- Disappointment. To magnify the weaknesses of others; to offend you and to embitter you. (See Psalm 55:2)
Delay, deceit, distraction and disappointment—each one of these tactics is slow-acting. You may not recognize them at first. Sometimes it seems that Satan is more patient than you are as he encroaches on your peace, inch by inch. He cannot derail you instantly, although it may seem abrupt when it happens. To detect evil encroachment more quickly, assess your life experiences to become aware of your personal Achilles’s heel, your point of greatest vulnerability. Some people’s greatest weakness is unbelief. For others it is bitterness or revenge. For others it is checking out, backing off, quitting. Everyone is different. One person may be vulnerable because of a time of grief or fatigue. Others may be prone to volcanic anger. Ask the Lord to show you your greatest weakness, because that is where your enemy will concentrate his efforts. Realize, however, that once you shore up your defenses in your area of greatest weakness, some other area could become vulnerable, and the enemy will circle around again. He’s stalking you, just waiting for you to stumble.
When Does Satan Hit the Hardest?
The devil works in cycles. He attacks and pulls back. He hits you and then he shifts around to the other side. This could be disorienting (and he wants it to be) but you can anticipate his moves. You can predict the seasons of your attack. You will remember what happened to Jesus at the end of his time of temptation in the wilderness. After he had overcome every temptation, “Then the devil left him, and angels came and attended him” (Matthew 4:11, NIV). In other words, the forty-day attack was over. There would be more battles later, in another season. The enemy would regroup. Taking advantage of the breather, angels helped Jesus to regroup as well. We can observe this same pattern of attacking and regrouping in our own lives. The two reasons why Satan pulls back are: (1) Because you won, and he has to go off to lick his wounds, or (2) He wants to trick you and put you off your balance so you will let your guard down. Either way, you need to be ready for the next round. 
The Book of Wars
In the book of Numbers, I found this interesting phrase: “Therefore it is said in the Book of the Wars of the Lord. . .” (Numbers 21:14). What is this book? The Book of the Wars of the Lord is not part of the canon of Scripture, nor are several other books that are mentioned in the Bible, such as the Book of Remembrance (see Malachi 3:16) or the Book of Tears (see Psalm 56:8). Perhaps we can construe the Book of the Wars of the Lord to be a book that has not yet been finished—and that we ourselves can help to complete as we engage the enemy, one skirmish at a time. 
More than Conquerors in Christ Jesus!
James W. Goll



