I didn't realize how strong is the spirit of python's
chokehold on my region until I started to personally experience the
effects of its presence. One of the only named spirits in the Bible, the
python spirit is a coiling spirit that works to squeeze out the breathe
of life (the Holy Spirit) and cut off your lifeline to God (prayer).
To
accomplish its deadly agenda, this spirit will remind you of wounds
from your past, surround you with ungodly influences that tempt you to
compromise the Word of God—or just barrage you with circumstances that
knock the wind out of you.
Symptoms of a python attack
may include weariness, a loss of passion to worship and pray, feeling
pressured, overwhelmed, helpless and even hopeless. The severity of
those symptoms depends on how long this enemy has been coiling itself
around you and how much pressure it has applied.
Let me
show you this spirit in the Bible. You'll find it in Acts 16:16 when
Paul encounters a girl possessed with a spirit of divination. The word
divination in this verse comes from the Greek word for puthon, which
translates in English as "python." Vine's Dictionary explains
how Greek mythology believed the Pythian serpent guarded the oracle of
Delphi until Apollo slew it (and then took on the name Pythian). The
word was later applied to diviners or soothsayers, inspired by Apollo.
Attacking Your Prayer Life
Python
can attack anyone. You don't have to be in sin to find python trying to
slide under your door. Paul was a man of prayer. The Bible says he
spoke in tongues more than anybody else in the Corinthian church (1 Cor.
14:18)—and probably more than anybody else in the early church.
Despite
Paul's relationship with Christ and a strong prayer life, he still had
to wrestle against principalities and powers and rulers of the darkness
of this age and spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places
(see Eph. 6:12). Paul had to wrestle against python—and so may we. Let's
look at Paul's encounter with the python spirit.
"Now
it happened, as we went to prayer, that a certain slave girl possessed
with a spirit of divination met us, who brought her masters much profit
by fortune-telling. This girl followed Paul and us, and cried out,
saying, 'These men are the servants of the Most High God, who proclaim
to us the way of salvation.' And this she did for many days" (Acts
16:16-17).
The python spirit had a stronghold in
Philippi. When the man of prayer started heading for the house of
prayer, this spirit launched its first attack against him—a distraction
followed by a full-blown trial that aimed to take him out of his
purpose. Python knows it has no authority in a city that prays in the
presence of God, so it works to distract people from praying so they
can't fulfill their purpose.
Python would rather watch you lick your wounds than pray to
a healing God. Python would rather hear you complain or gossip than
take your problems to a miracle-working God. Python would rather
distract you with attacks, trials and persecutions than see you press
into a gracious God for deliverance. Again, python's ultimate goal is to
put you in bondage and thwart your purpose. You may be going through
the motions but you feel dead on the inside because python has squeezed
the life out of you.
Loosed From Python's Grip
When
you rise up in your Christ-given authority against python, the battle
ensues. Paul cast the demon out of the girl, which meant her masters
could no longer profit from her false prophecies. "They seized Paul and
Silas and dragged them into the marketplace to the authorities" (Acts
16:19). From there, they were falsely accused, had their clothes torn
off, were beaten with rods and thrown into prison with stocks on their
feet.
Paul and Silas were in physical pain. They had
been publicly humiliated. They were slandered and maligned. And they
were in the grip of the python spirit. At this point, they had several
options: They could lie there and lick their wounds. They could complain
to one another about their situation. They could meditate on the
persecution and decide to abandon their purpose in exchange for being
set free. But they didn't do any of that. Thank God, they left us a
model for how to break free from the python spirit.
"But
at midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and
the prisoners were listening to them. Suddenly there was a great
earthquake, so that the foundations of the prison were shaken; and
immediately all the doors were opened and everyone's chains were loosed"
(Acts 16:25-26). Prayer and praise are what python is trying to stop,
but prayer and praise will set you free.
In next week's
article, we'll take a closer look at the python spirit and what it takes
to combat it in a region. Florida has 43 houses of prayer across the
state—more per capita than any other state—but the python spirit is so
active that the Everglades are overflowing with these dangerous snakes.
In a state known for prayer, why is python so dominant? More on that
next week.
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