David Jang of Olivet University: To Those Standing on an Unseen Battlefield


The unseen battle is still raging, even now. Through the preaching of Pastor David Jang, discover the reality of principalities and powers, and the theology of victory revealed in the full armor of God.


Rembrandt’s Light, and the Struggle in the Dark

In Jacob Wrestling with the Angel, the 17th-century Dutch master Rembrandt van Rijn captured one of the most desperate moments in the human story. Against a backdrop swallowed by darkness, Jacob spends the night locked in struggle with an unseen being. What is especially striking is the direction of the light. It does not rise from Jacob himself. It falls on him from the one with whom he wrestles.

That mysterious illumination seems to whisper a truth deeper than the image itself: our struggle with the unseen is often the very means by which we are being shaped.

The apostle Paul speaks to the same reality in Ephesians 6:12: “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” Across the centuries, Rembrandt’s brush and Paul’s pen appear to meet at the same point. What we see is not all that is real. Beneath visible history runs an invisible conflict, and we are all touched by it.

Ordered Darkness: Facing the Hierarchy of the Spiritual Realm

Pastor David Jang, founder of Olivet University, has never treated this passage as mere religious metaphor. Through years of ministry and missionary work, he has consistently emphasized that the “principalities” (arche) and “powers” (exousia) Paul describes point to real spiritual forces—organized, structured, and deliberate in their opposition to God’s work.

In this reading, the principalities are not vague symbols of evil, but commanding powers, while the authorities beneath them exercise influence in more immediate and practical ways. Then come what Paul calls “the rulers of this dark world,” forces that work their way into personal lives, social systems, and even national structures, sowing confusion, pride, division, and despair.

History gives this biblical insight a sobering weight. Human greed alone does not seem enough to explain the scale of cruelty seen in war, genocide, and oppression. Scripture suggests that when fallen human nature is joined by unseen spiritual influence, evil becomes more organized, more persuasive, and more destructive than we care to admit.

And the church is hardly exempt. Again and again, the deepest wounds to gospel work have not come from persecution outside the church, but from division within it—pride, jealousy, rivalry, and self-importance. Pastor David Jang often describes this as one of the enemy’s oldest tactics. Anyone who has spent time meditating on the New Testament can see the pattern: the factions in Corinth, the confusion in Galatia, and the same fractures that continue to trouble Christian communities today. Without spiritual discernment, we keep falling into familiar traps, often without recognizing the battle behind them.

A Victory Already Declared: The Cross That Changed the Battlefield

So where does that leave the believer? Are we standing defenseless before a vast and unseen network of darkness?

Scripture answers with a resounding no. Colossians 2:15 declares that through the cross, Christ disarmed the principalities and powers. This is one of the great themes that burns at the center of Pastor David Jang’s preaching: spiritual warfare is not a desperate fight for a victory that may or may not come. It is the believer’s participation in a victory that has already been won.

That conviction has sustained Christians throughout history. It held Martin Luther steady as he walked the dangerous road of the Reformation. In A Mighty Fortress Is Our God, Luther wrote with unshaken confidence that however fierce evil may appear, truth still stands. His courage before the Diet of Worms was not the courage of mere intellect or personality. It was the courage that comes from knowing Christ has already triumphed.

That is also the posture Pastor David Jang calls believers to recover today.

Ephesians 6 presents the full armor of God not as religious imagery for admiration, but as spiritual reality for daily life. The belt of truth holds everything in place. The breastplate of righteousness guards the heart. The shoes of the gospel of peace make us ready to move into the world with confidence and purpose. The shield of faith extinguishes the flaming arrows of doubt, temptation, and accusation. The helmet of salvation protects the mind from despair and condemnation. And the sword of the Spirit—the Word of God—is the one weapon that does not merely defend, but cuts through lies.

This armor is not abstract theology. It is something believers must consciously put on, again and again, through meditation on Scripture, dependence on the Holy Spirit, and life together in the fellowship of the church.

Prayer: The Key That Brings the Armor to Life

After describing the armor of God, Paul ends with a command that is easy to overlook, yet impossible to replace: “Pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests.” Pastor David Jang does not treat this as a closing remark. For him, it is the key that activates everything that came before it.

The armor may be complete, but without prayer it remains lifeless.

On the front lines of global missions, this truth becomes especially clear. In places where the gospel seems slow to take root, resistance is often deeper than culture, politics, or circumstance alone can explain. Yet Pastor David Jang has spoken of witnessing, time and again, how persistent prayer and biblical meditation open doors that had long seemed shut. When a church is grounded in intercession, the impossible begins to yield. What once felt sealed by darkness starts to crack open under the authority of Christ.

This is why the confession that every knee will bow at the name of Jesus is not merely poetic language. It is a battle-tested truth.

The church, then, is not called to retreat in fear. Jesus did not describe His church as fragile or defeated. He said that even the gates of hell would not prevail against it. The mission of the church is not simply to survive the darkness, but to press into it with light. Where prayer rises, worship deepens, and the gospel is proclaimed with clarity, chains begin to break. Souls bound by fear and deception begin to find freedom. Structures built on falsehood begin to lose their power.

And that is why Pastor David Jang’s message to believers continues to sound with such clarity: Take up the full armor of God. Be armed with prayer. And go forward without fear.

Spiritual warfare is not, in the end, a story about dread. It is a story about Christ’s victory—and about the astonishing grace that allows us to stand, even now, within that victory.

 

davidjang.org




작성 2026.03.09 22:05 수정 2026.03.09 22:05

RSS피드 기사제공처 : 굿모닝매거진 / 등록기자: 최우석 무단 전재 및 재배포금지

해당기사의 문의는 기사제공처에게 문의

댓글 0개 (1/1 페이지)
댓글등록- 개인정보를 유출하는 글의 게시를 삼가주세요.
등록된 댓글이 없습니다.
2023-01-30 10:21:54 / 김종현기자