Spiritual Warfare Through Silence, Truth, and Trust
2 Corinthians 10:3-6
"For though we walk in the flesh, we are not waging war according to the flesh. For the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but have divine power to destroy strongholds. We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ, being ready to punish every disobedience, when your obedience is complete."
Paul is framing his apostolic work, and by extension, the Christian life, as a form of spiritual warfare, not an earthly or fleshly conflict. Paul begins by acknowledging the reality of human limitations. "For though we walk in the flesh, we are not waging war according to the flesh." He and his ministry team are ordinary humans ("in the flesh" ), subject to weakness, fatigue, and physical constraints.
The battle he’s engaged in isn’t fought on human terms, with worldly tactics like manipulation, intimidation, eloquent rhetoric, personal charisma, or by force. His critics in Corinth accused him of being unimpressive or timid in person. And some entrenched liars there were using worldly philosophies opposed to the truth of the gospel, whether in the minds of unbelievers or even within the church. There factions were trying to use patterns of thinking, false ideologies, prideful arguments, and anything else that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, to bolster their own cause by tearing down Paul's ministry.
Some say it's an old saying of Confucius, others insist that the line is most reliably credited to Adlai E. Stevenson; but there is this proverb that speaks to this spiritual warfare going on with Paul and even now.
"He who slings mud generally loses ground."
When you attack or slander someone (throwing "mud" ), you don’t just dirty them; you undermine your own position, your credibility, and any moral high ground you might have had in the process. The aggressor often ends up looking petty, unreliable, or hypocritical, while the ground they stood on erodes beneath them.
The principle resembles Jesus' teaching in the Sermon on the Mount, about not judging others lest you be judged. And following Jesus' example Paul refuses to fight "according to the flesh"with carnal weapons (manipulation, slander, intimidation, the very kind of "mud-slinging" that tears people down but erodes the slinger’s own integrity). Instead, he uses divine power through speaking truth to power. To demolish false arguments and bring thoughts captive to Christ.
Throwing mud might feel like a quick win in the moment, but it loses ground in the eternal battle for hearts and minds.
This also resembles biblical principles like Proverbs 26:20-22:
"Without wood a fire goes out; without a gossip a quarrel dies down…The words of a gossip are like choice morsels…"
In today’s world, whether in churches, online debates, politics, or personal relationships, this principle remains powerfully relevant. Mud-slinging might gain a momentary advantage, it might get you clicks and impressions, but it loses eternal ground. The gospel’s way, though it may seem weak or slow, is the one that truly conquers strongholds. It's the power of God's word. And that word comes with a divine guarantee, God warrants that His word will not return to Him void.
Paul’s confidence in 2 Corinthians 10:3-6 stems precisely from this divine assurance. These Biblical weapons aren’t ours to manufacture or amplify through fleshly means; through traditions or charismatic programs. They’re God’s weapons, and they come backed up by His unbreakable promise.
Isaiah 55:11
"So shall my word be that goes out from my mouth; it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it."
It accomplishes God’s purpose, even when the results aren’t immediately visible or dramatic. God’s spoken word, whether through prophets of old, the gospel proclaimed by Paul, or the truth we share today, all of it carries inherent, divine effectiveness. In the face of his critics who relied on human charisma, slander, and worldly wisdom, Paul leaned on the Word as his primary weapon. The same Word that brings life to the thirsty (Isaiah 55:1) also penetrates minds, exposes lies, and brings every thought captive to Christ.
In churches divided by gossip, online spaces fueled by division, political arenas where character assassination is the strategy, or even in our strained personal relationships; choosing the gospel’s way means trusting that slow, steady obedience to God’s Word will bear the kind of fruit God intends.
It’s a call to patience and faith:
Proclaim, pray, live the truth, and leave the results to the One who guarantees success. His Word doesn’t fail, He doesn’t fail. The gospel way, though it appears "weak or slow", conquers strongholds through truth, love, and divine power. Jesus' way and power.
Jesus was slandered, called glutinous, lazy, demon possessed, and an insurrectionist; yet he taught blessing in slander, he prayed for His accusers, and he often remained silent. Jesus’ approach was never fleshly retaliation (no gossip, no slander in return, no manipulation).
In our world of online pile-ons, endless sensationalized debates, church conflicts, or personal attacks, Jesus’ example calls us to examine our hearts, speak truth gently when needed, stay silent when words would only fuel fleshly war, and trust that God’s Word accomplishes what He purposes. He didn’t wage war "according to the flesh" against His slanderers. Instead, He used truth.
The gospel doesn’t need our frantic defense; it needs our faithful obedience. Proclaim, pray, live the truth, and leave the results to Him who never fails.
In a world quick to sling mud, to answer slander with more slander, and to fight fleshly battles with fleshly weapons, the word of God teaches us the deeper strength of Christ's way. It equips us with the divine weapons that destroy strongholds. The truth of His Word that never returns void, the love that covers a multitude of sins, and the faith that takes every thought captive to obey Christ.
Lord, grant us grace to follow in Jesus’ steps:
to speak truth gently when it redeems,
to remain silent when words would only fuel the fire,
to pray blessing over those who curse us,
and above all, to entrust our reputations, our hurts, and our battles fully to You, the One who judges righteously and whose justice never fails.
May we not seek quick, momentary ground through retaliation, but the eternal ground that only Your gospel can claim.
We rest in Your promise, Father, Amen.