Are You a Warrior for Christ or Seeking Healing?

Pastor Bill Brannan shows how Christians can be both healed patients and spiritual warriors—drawing on Acts 14 to call the church to honest discipleship, healing, and cultural transformation.

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 I’m Pastor [Speaker’s Name] from Life Springs Christian Church, and in this message I want to wrestle with a question that keeps coming up in our conversations and in the life of the church: who are you in Christ? Are you primarily a warrior storming the gates of hell, or are you someone the church exists to heal—a patient in a hospital for the broken? The honest answer is both, and how we hold those identities matters for our souls and for the world.

Why this question matters

Our culture is full of people who are hurt, searching for hope, acceptance, dignity, and purpose. Those longings are exactly the fruit of walking with Jesus. But when the church organizes itself only as a hospital for the hurting, people can get stuck in a perpetual identity of need. Conversely, if the church only promotes an identity of a conquering warrior, we risk pride, self-righteousness, and a cold hardness that chokes out grace.

“I want to build a church that’s not just a hospital for the hurt and broken, but is a mighty force of life and light, storming the gates of hell, setting at liberty the captives.”

Two identities: wounds and warfare

Think about the two pictures: on one hand, people who come to church because they’re wounded and need healing. On the other hand, people who see themselves as agents of cultural transformation—warriors for Christ bringing light into darkness. Both are biblical and both are necessary. The danger comes when either identity becomes absolute or is lived out in an unhealthy way.

  • When the wounded identity becomes the only story: people define themselves by pain and remain inward-focused.
  • When the warrior identity becomes the only story: people can become arrogant, judgmental, or oppressive in the name of righteousness.

We need to be honest: Christians live in a fallen world and experience real suffering. But we are also empowered to act—seeking to prevent suffering, transform culture, and bring liberty to the captives. The goal is to hold both realities and let the Spirit shape us into people who are healed and who heal others.

Paul’s example: Acts 14 and the life of the early church

Look at Acts 14:21–23. Paul and Barnabas preached, made many disciples, and then went back to strengthen believers—exhorting them to continue in the faith. Their counsel? “We must through many tribulations enter the kingdom of God.”

“We must through many tribulations enter the kingdom of God.”

That statement wasn’t abstract. Right before that, the text tells us Paul was stoned and left for dead. The churches there were birthed amid persecution, spiritual opposition, and cultural powers that profited from the status quo. So Paul’s encouragement prepared new believers for the reality that following Jesus often brings trouble—but that trouble does not negate the kingdom; it is the soil in which discipleship grows.

Why Paul didn’t sugarcoat the call

We live in a culture that wants to pacify and pamper. If someone comes to faith today we often say, “Your life will get better.” That can be true in some ways, but Paul knew the full picture. He strengthened people for the fight—not to make suffering an idol, but to prevent disillusionment when hardship came. That kind of honest exhortation keeps the life and the mission of the church alive.

The kingdom: present reality and future hope

One of Jesus’ central claims was that “the kingdom of God is at hand.” That means the kingdom is not just a distant future reward; it is a present reality we can enter today. Yet Paul’s words remind us that we often enter that reality “through many tribulations.” What chokes the kingdom life out of us? Grief, bitterness, anxiety, fear of loss, and persecution can all stop the rivers of living water God wants to flow through us.

  • The kingdom is a present experience of God’s rule and restoration.
  • It grows as people yield to Christ, even in suffering.
  • We must evaluate everything by a simple question: does this bring life or death? Light or darkness?

Cultural transformation, not complacent comfort

When Paul preached the gospel in Asia Minor, whole industries were threatened—the idol trade, the systems that profited from oppression. When people begin to think differently, act differently, and stop buying the idols of a broken society, the economic and social consequences are real. That’s not something to celebrate in a selfish way; it’s evidence that the kingdom of God breaks the power of exploitative systems.

History shows the tension between empire and the gospel. The Roman Empire knew the gospel threatened its control. Early persecutions were often reactions to a world being liberated from fear and false religion. Our calling today includes preparing communities to live differently in ways that will unsettle the unjust and set captives free.

Stories that teach—Naomi, Ruth, and the beauty of a redeemed life

Consider the story of Naomi and Ruth. Naomi returns to Israel as Mara—bitter and hopeless. Ruth follows her and sees a light she did not expect. Even in the darkest place, the witness of a family’s faith and God’s social provisions (like gleaning for the poor) created a pattern by which lives could turn. Ruth’s eventual place in the genealogy of Jesus is a reminder that God redeems despair into participation in his kingdom purposes.

Practical steps: holding both identities well

How do we live this out without falling into the traps of self-pity or pride? Here are practical ways we can steward both the healer and the warrior callings:

  1. Value honest pastoral care. Meet people’s needs with compassion—healing is essential.
  2. Equip believers for cultural engagement. Teach how to stand with integrity in workplaces, institutions, and public life.
  3. Encourage resilience. Prepare people for trials without making suffering into a badge of honor or a theology of defeat.
  4. Measure fruit by life. Constantly ask: does this promote human flourishing, liberty, and the character of Christ?
  5. Model humility. Fight for justice without elevating ourselves or despising those still wounded.

Encouragement for those on the front lines

To the teacher, the soldier in a principled position, the leader who refuses to compromise, the parent standing for truth in a confusing culture: your faithfulness matters. Holding the line—doing what’s right “unto the Lord”—is not insignificant. It may feel small, but it is part of the advance of the kingdom.

And to the one walking through grief, trauma, or the slow work of healing: your wounds do not disqualify you from being a part of God’s work. Your story of restoration becomes one of the most powerful testimonies of Christ’s grace.

Conclusion: the church that both heals and conquers

I long for a church that is both a hospital for the hurting and a mighty force of life and light. We should minister with the tenderness that heals and with the courage that transforms culture. The kingdom of God is beautiful, and it is both present and promised. We will enter it through many tribulations—but those tribulations are not the end of the story. They are the context in which God’s power is displayed and where Jesus’ life is lived out through us.

So ask yourself: how are you living your identity in Christ today? Are you sinking into an identity of need, or rising into a life that gives away what you’ve been given? Both may be true—and both are redeemed by grace. Let’s press forward together to bring healing, freedom, and light to a world that desperately needs Jesus.

Next steps

  • Reflect on the areas where you feel wounded—and bring them to God and to community for healing.
  • Identify one place in your life or work where you can stand for truth with integrity this week.
  • Gather with others to pray for the kingdom to advance in your neighborhood, workplace, and city.

Final blessing

May the rivers of living water flow through you—healing, restoring, and empowering you to be both a healed child of God and a fearless ambassador of his kingdom.

 

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