How Satan Seeks to Harm Christians
What the enemy is allowed to do and why it should lead us to deeper trust, not fear.

Many believers today live with an unspoken assumption that because Jesus has defeated Satan, the devil can no longer affect their lives. While it’s gloriously true that Christ has disarmed Satan’s ultimate power over the Christian soul (Colossians 2:15), Scripture also makes clear that Satan remains an active and hostile enemy one who prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour (1 Peter 5:8).
But what does it mean to be “devoured” by the enemy? What can Satan actually do to a believer who is safe in Christ?
The apostle Peter’s words help us understand. He is not warning us about hypothetical dangers. He is calling us to active resistance because Satan’s attacks are real not merely metaphorical, and certainly not harmless.
Suffering Is Satan’s Strategy
When Peter says the devil seeks to devour us, he ties that warning directly to Christian suffering: “Resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same kinds of suffering are being experienced by your brotherhood throughout the world” (1 Peter 5:9). Suffering is not incidental here it is central. The lion’s roar is not merely temptation but the agony, grief, and fear that can erupt in times of trial.
The danger isn’t just the pain itself, but what Satan aims to do through it. He wants to erode our confidence in God’s goodness, whispering lies like, “If God really loved you, this wouldn’t be happening.” He stirs doubt, resentment, and bitterness. In short, he seeks to use suffering to convince us that trusting God is a mistake.
But suffering, for the Christian, can also be the furnace in which faith is refined. Peter already laid this groundwork earlier in his letter: “Now for a little while… you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith… may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 1:6–7).
Satan uses suffering to destroy faith. God uses it to display and deepen it.
Satan’s Tools of Harm
So how does Satan bring about suffering in a believer’s life? Scripture reveals at least four specific strategies.
1. Sickness
In Luke 13:16, Jesus speaks of a woman bent over for eighteen years as someone “whom Satan bound.” Her condition was more than a medical anomaly it was spiritual warfare. Similarly, in 2 Corinthians 12:7, Paul describes a “thorn in the flesh” as a “messenger of Satan” sent to torment him. Yet this same suffering was used by God to keep Paul humble and reliant on grace.
Here we see a critical truth: Satan may strike, but only under God's sovereign allowance. What Satan means for harm, God can use for holiness.
2. Betrayal and Persecution
Revelation 2:10 gives another example: “The devil is about to throw some of you into prison, that you may be tested.” How does Satan do this? Often through the hearts of men, just as he influenced Judas to betray Jesus (John 13:2, 27). Through betrayal, injustice, or false accusation, Satan engineers suffering yet God remains in control.
3. Fear
The lion roars not just to wound but to frighten. Fear, when allowed to fester, becomes a gateway for doubt. Satan wants Christians to panic, to question, to turn inward instead of upward. Fear isolates and paralyzes. But the Bible repeatedly calls us to be “sober-minded” and “watchful” not passive, not panicked, but alert and anchored in truth.
4. Pleasure
While Peter highlights suffering, it’s worth noting that Satan’s most effective attacks often come through pleasure. He knows how to bait the trap. For every believer devoured by hardship, many more are lulled into spiritual apathy through comfort, success, or indulgence. Satan devours not only through roars, but through whispers.
God’s Sovereignty Over Satan
Lest we fear Satan too much, Scripture reassures us that he operates on a leash. In Job 1, Satan could only touch Job’s life with God’s explicit permission. Jesus commanded demons and they obeyed without hesitation. Paul’s “thorn in the flesh” was not removed, not because God was powerless, but because God’s power was made perfect in Paul’s weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9).
Even when Satan strikes, he is never sovereign. God is.
That means Satan’s schemes can never outmaneuver God’s providence. The very thing Satan intends to destroy us may be the tool God uses to sanctify us. As with Joseph’s words to his brothers, so with the enemy of our souls: “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good” (Genesis 50:20).
Fight the Good Fight
Peter doesn’t say, “Don’t worry about Satan.” He says, “Be sober-minded; be watchful. Resist him, firm in your faith.” We are to take up the sword of the Spirit God’s Word and stand against his lies. We are not to cower, but to fight with truth. We don’t need mystical formulas or spiritual theatrics. We need God’s promises, spoken aloud and believed deeply.
Satan cannot snatch us from the hand of Christ (John 10:28). He cannot condemn those for whom Christ died (Romans 8:33–34). But he can lie, he can accuse, and he can tempt us to believe that God is not enough.
Resist him. Stand firm. Let suffering purify your faith, not poison it. And remember: the lion may roar, but the Lamb reigns.
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Reply
Rita Rainwater • 13 hours ago
Thank you it was very reassuring.
Suzanne Duffy • 13 hours ago
I want to share an experience I had on “GOOD FRIDAY “.my daughter and I were cleaning out a drawer from an End table that was my mother’s. in the very back engraved in the wood was a picture of Jesus carrying his cross. I was actually delighted and dismayed at the same time wondering what this could be? Around the same time on YouTube there were some different videos about how we need to carry our cross. Perhaps this is what it meant. Jesus did not promise us a world without pain or suffering. I was recently diagnosed with spinal stenosis and it is extremely painful at times. But guess what Jesus is right beside me when I got a physical therapy and when I’m sitting with the heating pad on so only time will tell if I actually can live a normal life again. But I’m honored to suffer for Christ. Amen.
Donna Martin • 18 hours ago
Thank you for this article. It was very encouraging to me as my husband and I have been going through a trial for almost 2 years now. We are constantly fighting against satan's lies telling us that God must not be listening or that God is angry with us. We know that God is in control. That he knew this medical disaster would happen before it every occurred. We have both learned much about our faith and our relationship with God. We know that God has a reason for allowing this to happen and we will trust Him to see us through.
Ben Not now • 19 hours ago
Extremely good information.
Having knowledge in what Satan can and not do, it’s so very important at least for me.
BM
Joan W • 19 hours ago
That was a wonderful article. You presented it with scriptures related to temptations.
It is a shame your article was mocked. It shows how Satan can twist scriptures. You never stated fighting Satan is the path to God.
Thank you for reminding us that the enemy of our souls is alive and working to deceive many.
His time is short, praise Jesus for the cross, for the shedding of his blood for our sins, that we may have eternal life for those that believe in Him.
Shalom
Joe Gunnet • 20 hours ago
So, if Satan is so active in your life, you can’t be blamed for anything. Poor little you. You think Christ will save and protect you without you having to do anything. Poor little you. You are terribly mistaken if you believe that fighting Satan is the path to God. Christ did not ask you to fight more but to love more.
Grant Lattanzi • 20 hours ago
AMEN !!! Satan is defeated we KNOW the ending so do not fear, but look up for YOUR REDEMTION DRAWS NEAR !!! Accepting and believing in Jesus as your savior is hands down the smartest thing you as a human being can ever do for yourself !!!! don't worry about Satan God is in control !!!
Kelly Kelly • 18 hours ago
Why so offended? Is it possible that the way you perceive this article is not how the author intends it?
While Jesus Christ HAS defeated the powers of darkness, one would be ignorant not to acknowledge that the enemy of our souls will do everything "in his power" while we are on Earth, causing one not to live their life as a walking example of our Lord.
Influencing a person to be judgmental, accusatory or sarcastic might be a few ways he could accomplish this.
Teresa Marie • 3 hours ago
Everyone is responsible for their choices, and you have no idea what Christ has asked anyone to do. All of us are at a different place on the road, in our own walk with God, so judging other believers is irrelevant, Joe. Christ DOES protect the believers, and none of us has done anything to deserve that. My belief is that when we die, it will be like in Exodus. God will see Christ's blood on our soul, signifying our belief in him as Savior, and we move on to heaven, or not, just like the lambs blood over the doors, when death moved through Egypt. Jesus became that lamb! Christ DID die for mankind, without our having to do anything, YES! There is nothing we can do to repay that, other than believe! So, you say 'Poor little you,' but I don't feel poor at all. I feel so rich! Belief in Christ's sacrifice has caused me to love more, forgive more and try to be more patient and tolerant, and I'm so thankful to God!