A Practical Guide to Modern Spiritual Warfare
When you find yourself alone in the storm; When you're soaked, shivering and weighted down, He will guide you home if you let Him.
Wet Wool is a true story, a modern memoir of an ancient battle still playing out today. The author walks you through her struggle to discern good from evil and then her path to overcome that evil. It seems ridiculous to think He would leave the 99 to chase just one, but only until you are that one. That’s when everything changes. That’s when you understand He guides and even disciplines those He loves and it’s all a part of His master plan. He understands temptation. He faced evil alone in the wilderness and was tempted just like we are. There's nothing that will shock Him. Nothing that’s too much for Him. It’s His armor that will protect us from the evils we face. But what does that really mean? Your Bible is full of thee and thou but doesn’t actually say how in a way most modern readers understand.
The Bible talks about evil forces that are present still today, but modern people treat it like ancient history or science fiction. It’s not fiction and just because it’s history, doesn’t mean it’s over. EulaBelle writes about her own battles with spiritual warfare, and she leaves breadcrumbs along the way as a sort of study guide for others who may need a map through a similar storm.
Excerpt from Wet Wool © Copyright 2026 Jessie EulaBelle
The First Seven
God created the heavens and earth in six days and then, over four thousand years later, after Jesus visited His Father’s creation, 2 Peter 3:8 explained, that one day to God can be one thousand years to His creation. I’ve heard more teachings than I can count over the years about one of His days being equal to one thousand of our years. A lot of it makes sense to me but there’s something missing from those lessons.
The concept is often likened to ripples on a pond and how they expand. But when I see those ripples, there are a lot of them, at a variety of distances from the center. A single vertical event at the center of the circle causes ripples to move outward from that point and expand all the way to the water’s edge. I don’t see just the splash event and then the largest ripples at the outer edge. I see countless ripples in between. Why is that not in any of the teachings I’ve heard? What happens in between? It’s easier to see the thousand-year ripples, so I’ll start there but then I’ll show you what my ripple looked like in between.
Genesis 1:3 teaches that on the first day of creation, God simply said, “Let there be light” and light separated from the darkness. God deemed the light good and the dark bad. That’s a cool first day but how does it expand into the millennium?
In the first thousand years of humanity, Adam and Eve committed mankind’s first sin. They chose to ignore the rules their Father spelled out for them, and as a result, God separated them from Himself. He parted the darkness of their sin from His glorious light. They lost more than anyone else ever even had to lose. They went from living in paradise and walking with God, to working and struggling and trying to survive on their own. He created them in light but, because of their behavior, He had to separate them out into the darkness. I can imagine how horrible it was for Adam and Eve to lose so much, but as a parent, I know it hurt Him more. The logical next step for any parent, would have been to make them understand how badly their behavior hurt Him so what came next shouldn’t surprise anyone. Sin grows, multiplies, and takes on a life of its own. It’s less than half-way through the first prophetic thousand year day, when Genesis 4 highlights the distinction between dark and light again with the story of Cain and Abel. But this time, it wasn’t God pushing someone out of His light and into the dark. It was the dark, who attacked the light.
Day two of creation is described in Genesis 1:6-8. That’s the day He parted the waters and created a sky to separate the waters of the earth from the water in the atmosphere that forms rain. The second prophetic thousand year day was all about water too. Humanity was going through its terrible twos, and people were completely out of control. This time, our Father chose to use water to correct the situation we created. Genesis 6-9 explains the story of Noah and how God used water from above and below to cleanse His creation.
The third day of creation was when the sea was divided to expose dry land and allow vegetation to spring up. Genesis 1:9-13 tells the story or at least the first one. It’s said again when we stand back and look through a wider lens at the third prophetic thousand year day. That’s when Abraham’s seed began to spread and God helped Moses part the Red Sea.
The pattern continues and possibly even becomes more obvious. The fourth day was recorded in Genesis 1:14 where God said He wanted lights in the sky and He wanted them used as signs and seasons, for days and nights and years. On the fourth day of creation, He gave us the sun and during the fourth prophetic day, He gave us His Son.
There are so many great examples. I could write for ages just on the single days of creation and how they represent prophetic thousand-year periods. But a lot of people have already written about that, so I’ll just round out the next couple of days and move along.
On the fifth day God created creatures to fill the seas and skies He had prepared for them. And the fifth prophetic day, the first thousand years after Christ, was the church age. That’s the book of Acts. That’s when Jesus sent his disciples to every corner of the earth to make sure everyone knows He’s preparing a place for us too.
The sixth day is mentioned in the overview in Genesis 1 but explained more fully in Genesis 2:24-31. That’s the day God created all the animals that live on land. Then He created man and He instructed Adam and Eve to be fruitful and multiply.

My profession is online marketing and development (10+ years experience), check my latest mobile app called Upcoming or my Chrome extensions for ChatGPT. But my real passion is reading books both fiction and non-fiction. I have several favorite authors like James Redfield or Daniel Keyes. If I read a book I always want to find the best part of it, every book has its unique value.




















English (US) ·