His Bark is Worse Than His Bite
I popped in my Air Pods, laced up my sneakers, and hit the pavement. I was training for my first marathon on a quiet country road until my rendition of “Believer” was rudely interrupted by a blood-curdling scream.
As I jerked my head to see what the fuss was about, I came face-to-face with the jaws of a dog who was lunging toward my thigh. Blood streamed down my leg as I hobbled to the side of the road.
That dog was a monster.
I still have nightmares.
I still mistaken mailboxes for ravenous beasts ready to pounce when I’m out on a run.
Mind you, it was a Chihuahua.
But that’s beside the point.
Yet some of us view the devil like this vicious mutt—lurking around in the darkness—just waiting for the opportune time to attack.
As a teen, my youth pastor preached a message on the devil and it freaked me out. He quoted John 10:10 where Jesus teaches, “The devil comes to steal, kill, and destroy. But I have come that you may have life and have it abundantly.”
I never focused much on the abundant life part.
I was more petrified by the steal, kill, and destroy part.
I spent the next ten years of my life living in fear that the enemy was going to break into my house, strike me down with cancer, or have some random drunk guy in an alley kidnap me.
But over the years, I realized something…
Pain isn’t Satan’s primary goal.
Separation is.
Pain often leads to separation—from God, from others, and from the calling on our life—and that my friend, is the enemy’s primary objective.
The enemy hires trained mercenaries to attack each of us and I’m here to reveal their secret identities and expose their tactics:
Shame
The Lie: You’re not good enough.
Shame has been around since Day One. In the Garden, the enemy convinced Adam and Eve to disobey God by eating from the one tree that was forbidden. When they did, the serpent of shame slithered onto the scene.
Shame whispers, “You’re too messed up to be loved”.
So, what did Adam and Eve do? They ran and hid in the bushes. Adam and Eve went from being friends with God to being afraid of him.
Shame separates us from God, causing us to underestimate our worth.
Stop hiding. Don’t believe the lie shame is peddling
God’s not mad.
You’re his kid and you’re worthy of love.
Fear
The Lie: God’s not good.
Fear comes in all shapes and forms. We fear other’s opinions. We fear failure. We fear the future. We fear God. Fear’s superpower is its ability to freeze people. When fear is operating in full force—you can’t move forward in all God has called you to do.
Fear whispers, “God can’t be trusted”.
Israel had been tormented by the Midianites for seven years. Picture the scene from the Pixar movie “A Bug’s Life” when the grasshoppers swoop in and steal the harvest the ants had collected and you’ll get the idea.
The Israelites never fought back.
They hid—in caves, in dens, even in winepresses.
Yet God chose Gideon to save the Israelites. While Gideon was still hiding, he declared, “The Lord is with you, you mighty man of courage”.
Shaking and afraid, Gideon was sure God had the wrong guy.
Fear causes us to underestimate our calling.
God is good.
He can be trusted.
Climb out from the winepress and step into your calling.
Judgment
The Lie: People aren’t good enough.
The Apostle Paul wasn’t always a saint. He spent the first half of his life persecuting the early church. He believed he was “on mission” to judge Christians.
It wasn’t until he was struck down by God himself and the scales fell of his eyes that he realized this important truth:
We aren’t called to JUDGE people. We’re called to LOVE people.
Pride kicks God off the throne. We determine what is right and wrong. And judgment causes us naturally to separate ourselves from others.
We know more.
They know less.
We are right.
They are wrong.
Pride shouts, “People can’t be trusted”.
And if people can’t be trusted, we better not plug into a local church, connect with family, or form meaningful relationships.
Judgement separates us from others, causing us to underestimate their value.
You need people.
You need a church family.
God is the head.
We are his body.
And may we fight together, hand-in-hand, laughing at the yippie Chihuahua chained to the fence, realizing he has no power over us.





