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Know Your Enemy: The Soldier's Guide to the Serpent Thread
Spiritual conflict rarely begins where it is recognized.
It does not start with outward action, but with subtle shifts in perception-how something is seen, how it is interpreted, and what is believed to be offered.
Know Your Enemy is written as a field-oriented briefing, tracing a recurring pattern throughout the biblical text-what can be described as the "serpent thread." Not a single event, but a consistent method of engagement that precedes decision and shapes it.
This pattern:
• reframes perception before behavior is engaged
• redirects desire rather than creating it
• presents what appears good while concealing its cost
It does not announce itself as conflict.
It does not compel.
It adjusts understanding until action follows.
This is not a system to apply or a set of techniques to master.
It is a guide for recognition.
To observe where engagement actually begins.
To understand how it progresses.
And to identify the point at which it can still be interrupted.
Not at the level of behavior.
But at the level of thought.
Spiritual conflict rarely begins where it is recognized.
It does not start with outward action, but with subtle shifts in perception-how something is seen, how it is interpreted, and what is believed to be offered.
Know Your Enemy is written as a field-oriented briefing, tracing a recurring pattern throughout the biblical text-what can be described as the "serpent thread." Not a single event, but a consistent method of engagement that precedes decision and shapes it.
This pattern:
• reframes perception before behavior is engaged
• redirects desire rather than creating it
• presents what appears good while concealing its cost
It does not announce itself as conflict.
It does not compel.
It adjusts understanding until action follows.
This is not a system to apply or a set of techniques to master.
It is a guide for recognition.
To observe where engagement actually begins.
To understand how it progresses.
And to identify the point at which it can still be interrupted.
Not at the level of behavior.
But at the level of thought.