
Fight the Powers
What the Bible Says About the Relationship Between Spiritual Forces and Human Governments
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
3 months free
Buy for $6.95
No default payment method selected.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
-
Narrated by:
-
Brian P. Craig
-
By:
-
Cody Cook
When Satan claimed to have authority over the kingdoms of the world and said he could give them to whomever he chose, why did Jesus not contradict him? Why instead did Jesus go on to describe Satan as the "god of this world?" If Satan is the spiritual head over the world's governments, can there be such a thing as a Christian nation?
In Fight the Powers, Cody Cook compiles the relevant biblical data which draws connections between political power and spiritual forces, seeking to answer the question of how Christians ought to relate to the state in light of these connections.
©2018 Cody Cook (P)2022 Cody CookListeners also enjoyed...




















Listener received this title free
Good primer on Divine Council Worldview
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
Consice Consolidation
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
Pros:
One star for the great reading and performance of the voice actor. There were no audio issues. Top notch.
Two stars for the research done. Statements were mostly cited from varied sources. It was also balanced in treatment of many things. However, not all things, as I will explain in the Cons.
Three stars for the amount of information and content. It was short enough to digest, but applicable.
Cons:
One star off for some missing yet important comparisons and imbalance by neglecting some sources that contradict the idea. For example, the Romans 13 section did not refer to I Peter 2 parallel passage about the same subject where at least the surface reading disproves and sheds light more on the chapter.
There is also an obvious bias against the idea of a "Christian nation" from the beginning, without actually defining what that is, often conflating contradictory ideas about kingdoms and nations. The reader (or listener of the audio book) seems to be expected to know what a "Christian nation" is by instinct. And the working assumption seems to be that a Christian nation is any combination of the church and state, and presumes that is America's idea of what a Christian nation is. Time spent on actually defining this idea of what the book is fighting against would be good, because not everyone defines "Christian nation" as the author defines it, definitely not the so-called founding founders, who postulated that "Christian nation" simply meant a nation made up incidentally of moral people and individuals that derived their values from the Bible, not church and state together in an organized institution in a theonomic manner. This bias is heavy on the imbalance.
Another star off is the disconnect with the disconnect between the main thrust of the view, the Divine Council, and the application, which is inherent from all Divine Council literature trying to make a practical application. The application is not so different from what you hear from other Christian works decrying the idea of union of church and state with no Divine Council view. There is no specifically Divine Council informed application apart from the generic "the devil/demons controls governments even while God is ultimately over them", which others already postulate.
As a comparison, Divine Council works that identify, say, Resheph as the god of plagues, and show history of exorcist prayers such as Psalms 91 against said demon turn around and say not to use Psalms 91 as an exorcism poem, as Michael Heiser himself says this is an abuse of the view and advocates that the Psalm 91 is just showing victory over the supernatural darkness. But... that is what was already advocated by non-Divine Council interpretations of the passage. That's the type of disconnect that is present here.
If you already have a bias against a generic, vague idea plus you follow the Divine Council methodology, then this is for you.
As a disclaimer, just because I go in detail about something, does not mean I explicitly endorse said something. I only went through the audio book once, and thus if I have missed something that the review says wasn't there, that is entirely my fault.
Divine Council versus Christian nations
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
Interesting Discussion
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
Listener received this title free
For those who believe in the Divine Council
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.