Belief overview

Spiritual warfare and deliverance

Many Pentecostal currents emphasize spiritual conflict, deliverance prayer, and resistance to evil.

73%
Confidence
3
Supportive
0
Contrary
0
Neutral

What it is: The belief begins from the idea that Christian life involves confrontation with evil spiritual forces and the need for prayer, resistance, and deliverance in the name of Christ.

How the tradition understands it: In many Pentecostal settings, spiritual warfare is associated with intercession, fasting, expulsion of demons, and discernment of spiritual oppression. In general, victory is attributed to the authority of Christ and not to autonomous human capacity.

Textual or traditional basis: Ephesians 6, exorcism narratives in the Gospels, Mark 16, and Acts 16 are frequently used.

Historical context: The theme intensified in various missionary and urban contexts, especially in settings where healing, deliverance, and spiritual battle took on a strong pastoral role.

Common objections: Critics warn against excessive spiritual diagnoses, neglect of psychological or social causes, and pastorally abusive practices.

Internal variations: Classical, independent, and neo-Pentecostal churches treat the theme with very different intensities and vocabularies.

Supportive

Acts 16:16-18

bible,deliverance,acts,spirituality,pentecostalism

Deliverance from a spirit of divination.

Reference: Acts 16:16-18.

Content: Paul casts a spirit of divination out of a young slave woman.

Use in debate: It is cited in practices of deliverance and spiritual confrontation.

Ephesians 6:10-18

bible,spiritual-warfare,intercession,pentecostalism

The armor of God in spiritual warfare.

Reference: Ephesians 6:10-18.

Content: Paul describes the armor of God in the struggle against evil spiritual powers.

Use in debate: It is one of the most frequently used texts for spiritual warfare and intercession.

Mark 16:17-18

bible,divine-healing,tongues,exorcism,pentecostalism

Signs accompanying believers, including healings and tongues.

Reference: Mark 16:17-18.

Content: The longer ending of Mark mentions signs such as casting out demons, new tongues, and laying hands on the sick.

Use in debate: It is often cited in Pentecostal contexts regarding healing and gifts, although the textual status of the longer ending is debated by scholars.