Faithfully Appropriating God’s Armor for Believers

What does it practically mean for a believer to “put on the whole armor of God” without turning the command into a daily works-based anxiety?

In Ephesians 6, Paul uses the language of “put on,” but the goal is not to make Christians feel exposed until they perform a morning checklist. The emphasis is that believers must appropriate what God has already placed upon them in Christ. As Burrell puts it, “as a believer, you are already clothed in the armor of God,” and therefore “the onus isn’t on you to don your armor every morning. It’s to appropriate the armor you’re already in” (Burrell, “Hedges, Helmets, and the Gila Woodpecker”).

Appropriation is an act of faith-filled attention. It is stopping long enough to recognize the realities named in the passage: truth that steadies the mind, righteousness that guards the heart, faith that quenches fiery darts, salvation that secures identity, and the Word of God that equips resistance (Ephesians 6:14–17).

The believer fights, but fights as one already clothed, already held, already supplied.

This is not passivity. It is active reliance. A Christian takes up what God has provided by rehearsing the gospel, confessing sin, resisting lies, and speaking Scripture into fear.

To “put on” the armor is to live out, by faith, the covering Christ has already given.

Related Material


Source: Hedges, Helmets, and the Gila Woodpecker

Disclaimer: Information in my “slip-box” doesn’t necessarily reflect my agreement with the source or all its content. Recording diverse perspectives helps strengthen one’s position beyond the echo chamber of like-minded thinkers. By documenting alternative viewpoints, we engage in the intellectual wrestling match that ultimately deepens our understanding.

I aspire to post one note from my “slip-box” every weekday. If you want to learn more about how to work with knowledge, click this link: What is knowledge management?

Pastor Dan Patrick Avatar

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *