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The Battle Rages On: A Panoramic Look at Spiritual Realities and Spiritual Warfare from Before Time Began

  • 18 hours ago
  • 2 min read

5 Star Review


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Editorial Book Review:

By Matthews Noka


Most books about spiritual warfare start in the middle of the story. Gerald Robison starts before the beginning, before creation, before time itself, and that choice changes everything about how the battle he describes is ultimately understood. The Battle Rages On is panoramic in exactly the way its subtitle promises, and the ambition of that scope is what makes it stand apart from the crowded shelf of Christian books on spiritual conflict.


The structural choice Robison made here is genuinely inspired. Framing the entire theological exploration as an imagined exchange of letters between a modern Adam and Jesus gives difficult and contested material a warmth and accessibility that pure doctrinal exposition rarely achieves. You are not being lectured at. You are invited into a conversation, and the conversational format makes it possible to follow Robison through some genuinely challenging territory without losing the thread or the heart of what he's saying.


The territory he covers is vast. Creation, rebellion, the divine council, demons, magic, miracles, the armor of God, Judas, and the battles still to come are all woven together into a coherent vision of a spiritual reality that most Christians sense but few have seen mapped this clearly. Robison is at his best when he lets wonder carry the argument, particularly in his opening meditations on why God created at all. His insistence that creation was born not from divine lack but from abundance gives the book an emotional center that the more speculative sections are anchored to throughout.


After forty-four years teaching with Walk Thru the Bible Ministries across twenty-four countries, Robison knows how to make complex biblical ideas feel clear and livable. That gift is fully present here. The treatment of Judas alone, with its unflinching attention to money, betrayal, and the danger of entertained thoughts, is worth the price of the whole book.


For Christian readers hungry to understand the deeper architecture beneath familiar passages, this is the kind of book that stays with you and reshapes how you read everything else.

 
 
 

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