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‘Friends, here we go. This one is written to hit like thunder. It opens with Scripture, then pulls no punches…
“In whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them.” (2 Corinthians 4:4 KJV).
The greatest deception of the Enemy has never been his horns or his pitchfork but his invisibility. He moves in the shadows, persuading mankind that the spirit world is superstition, a relic of old books, while he and his ministers weave unseen chains.
This blindness—the veil of the serpent—is the oldest magic on earth. In Eden, Satan did not appear as a roaring beast but as a whispering voice, twisting God’s words. That same twisting continues today, through governments, technologies, entertainment, and even pulpits.
For ages, mankind has built towers of knowledge, yet remains deaf and dumb to the reality of spirits. The masses, awash in screens, rhetoric, and noise, cannot see that their thoughts are being shaped. Sorceries of distraction have replaced the still small voice.
False altars and false prophets rise while the true God is mocked. Satan understands that ignorance is his strongest gate—when people do not even believe there is a war, they will never fight. Modern magics do not look like wizards in robes. They look like algorithms, pharmaceutical formulas, and corporate slogans.
They promise freedom but deliver addiction. They promise enlightenment but deliver emptiness. Like the veil over Pharaoh’s heart, the serpent wraps the mind, keeping the eyes closed while the soul slides toward destruction. Man’s weakness is not only moral but perceptual. Without the Spirit of God, no one can discern the spirits of darkness.
Without the armor of light, even the strongest man is a plaything for demons. And yet—this is not a message of despair but of awakening. Christ’s Soldiers are being called to pierce the veil, to stand like torchbearers in the night. The gospel of Christ is the only sword that cuts through the serpent’s coils.
Every age has its blindness: in Noah’s day, the blindness was to the coming flood. In our day, the blindness is to the invisible realm of power shaping laws, currencies, entertainment, and even our appetites. “We wrestle not against flesh and blood,” Paul warned, but against principalities and powers. This wrestling match is happening whether we acknowledge it or not.
The veil is cunning because it flatters human pride. It tells man he is evolved, rational, above “myths.” Meanwhile, the same man who scoffs at demons spends his nights mesmerized by glowing screens, repeating mantras fed by unseen powers. The serpent’s magic is working when we no longer recognize it as magic.
But the light of Christ cuts through blindness. The moment a soul turns to Him, the scales fall off. This essay is not merely information—it is a call to arms. Christ’s Soldiers must first see before they can fight. They must pray, discern, and stand in holiness. They must lift their eyes from the world’s spells and gaze at the cross, where the serpent’s head was crushed. Only then can the veil be torn.
Today’s war is subtle but deadly. It is in the food and drink laced with spiritual apathy. It is in the words of leaders who invite lawlessness and mock virtue. It is in media sorcery that recycles lies until they feel like truth.
And it is in the whisper that says, “You’re fine. There is no war. Go back to sleep.” ‘Friends, to the awakened, the night is over. The trumpet is sounding. Christ’s Soldiers are rising. The veil of the serpent is thin, and the light of Christ can break it if we will only shine it. Amen!
Author’s Note :
This essay, Veil of the Serpent: “How Ignorance Opens the Gates of Hell,” was written as both a warning and an invitation. It is a warning because the spiritual ignorance of our time is not a harmless mistake but a deliberate strategy of hell. As the KJV declares in (2 Corinthians 4:4), the “god of this world” blinds minds so that the gospel cannot be seen.
This blindness has taken new forms in our generation: technology that numbs discernment, media that spins lies, and a culture that mocks the unseen realm while being ruled by it. It is also an invitation—an invitation for every reader to lift the veil. We must recognize that our own strength and intellect are no match for demonic cunning.
Without the Spirit of God, we are blind. But with the Spirit of God, scales fall off our eyes, and we begin to see clearly. This is not superstition. This is war. And war requires warriors. Christ’s Soldiers are not elite mystics but ordinary believers who have been awakened. They refuse to drink from the poisoned wells of propaganda.
They pray. They fast. They fill their minds with the Word of God rather than the noise of the world. They call on the name of Jesus not as a slogan but as a sword. And when they do, the serpent’s coils loosen.
This essay’s purpose is to humble man and exalt God. Man’s weakness is real; God’s power is greater. The veil is real; the cross has torn it. The serpent is cunning; Christ is victorious.
My prayer is that every reader will leave this page with their eyes open, their spirit sober, and their heart ready to fight—not in rage but in righteousness, armed with truth and light. Love one another, and get into the right fight. “God Bless.”
Author and Servant;
Norman G. Roy III