
The enemy is not creative. Different faces, different seasons, different people, but the same patterns, the same traps, the same destruction. If you have ever looked back at a season of your life and thought, why does this keep happening to me, you were probably looking at a demonic assignment without knowing it had a name. The Bible says not to be ignorant of Satan’s schemes (2 Corinthians 2:11), and that word schemes is important. It means there are patterns. There are categories. Satan’s kingdom runs on military ranks, assignments, and a clear sense of mission. The sooner you can identify what you are actually dealing with, the better equipped you will be to fight it.
Before we get into the ten categories, I want to give credit where it is due. This framework is taught widely in deliverance ministry circles, and it is specifically emphasized in the work of Dr. Bob Larson, who has spent decades not just teaching on spiritual warfare but actively doing deliverance. His work through Bob Larson University has equipped many people to recognize these demonic assignments and respond to them biblically.
Three Things You Need to Settle First
There are three things you need to have settled before we go any further. If you misunderstand any of them, this topic will either frighten you or pull you off course.
First, our warfare is not against people. Ephesians 6:12 is clear: our battle is with spirits, and our warfare belongs in the spiritual realm. That means we do not demonize our ex, and we do not label everyone who disagrees with us as a demon. The flesh is real, trauma leaves wounds, the world constantly applies pressure, and in the middle of all of that, the devil looks for opportunities to exploit our weakness and build strongholds. Keeping these distinctions clear will save you from treating people as enemies when they are actually victims who need freedom.
Second, not everything is demonic. Demons don’t work alone. They have three allies: the flesh, the world, and the devil. There is a difference between a disorder and a demon, between a wound and a spirit, between a habit and a stronghold. The goal here is discernment. You do not need to cast a demon out of your bad day.
Third, you fight from victory, not for victory. Jesus has already won. Deliverance is enforcing the triumph He secured at the cross. When you cast out a demon, you are declaring that He already has.
The 10 Categories of Demonic Assignments
1. Infirmity and Affliction
This demonic assignment targets the physical body through chronic sickness, weakness, persistent pain, and physical oppression. Luke 13 literally names a “spirit of infirmity” that kept a woman bent and crippled for eighteen years. Notice that Jesus did not just pray for her healing. He cast out the spirit and she was immediately made straight. That does not mean every illness is demonic, but it does mean some physical afflictions have a spiritual root that medicine alone cannot reach. Sometimes you need healing prayer and deliverance prayer, and knowing which one you need is half the battle.
2. Death and Destruction
John 10:10 is plain: the thief comes only to steal, kill, and destroy. This assignment pushes people toward self-harm, suicide, reckless choices, violence, and premature death. Look at the Gadarene demoniac. He lived among tombs, drove himself toward destruction, and when those same demons entered the pigs, the animals ran straight off a cliff. Demons hate life because Jesus is the author of life. They are on a mission to oppose it wherever they find it, and they are relentless about it.
3. The Mind and Emotions
Fear. Torment. Obsessive thoughts. Panic. Confusion. Tormenting dreams. Heaviness. Accusation. Condemnation. This is one of the most common demonic assignments and one of the most misread, because most people label it as anxiety or depression before anyone considers there might be a spiritual root underneath. After the Gadarene demoniac was set free, Mark tells us he was in his right mind. That detail matters because it tells you that when the demons were present, his mind was not right. God has not given us a spirit of fear (2 Timothy 1:7). The devil targets the mind because he knows that thoughts drive actions. He is skilled at clothing his arrows as your own thoughts, so you own the accusation before you ever realize where it came from.
4. Behavioral Strongholds
Avoidance patterns. Rage cycles. Compulsive reactions. Isolation habits. People-pleasing. Control responses. Intimidation. These are behaviors that feel automatic, almost involuntary, like something else is running the show. The demonized man in the Gospels had violent outbursts, broke chains, and cut himself. Ephesians 4 tells us that unresolved anger gives the devil a foothold, and the Holy Spirit produces self-control as a fruit of His presence in us. When genuine self-control feels completely out of reach no matter what you try, it is worth asking whether something is feeding that from the inside.
5. Addiction and Bondage
Substance abuse. Alcoholism. Gambling. Pornography. Secret cycles of relapse. The loop you cannot seem to break no matter how many programs you start or how many times you try again. Jesus said in John 8 that whoever practices sin is a slave to sin, and if the Son sets you free, you are free indeed. Remember that phrase: free indeed. Jesus did not come to help you manage sin better. He came to break the power of it completely. The master of sin is Satan himself, and sometimes the chains that feel purely chemical or habitual carry a spiritual dimension underneath that still needs to be addressed directly.
6. Sexual Impurity and Perversion
Lust. Pornography addiction. Adultery cycles. Sexual shame. The secret double life. The flesh is the traitor within; it wants to open the door, and the enemy is ready on the other side. These two work together. The flesh provides the foothold, and the demonic moves in on whatever opening the flesh gives it. Many people fight sexual sin as if it is only a flesh problem, and while the flesh absolutely must be crucified, sometimes there is a demonic assignment feeding the compulsion that no amount of willpower or accountability alone will fully break.
7. Relationship Breakdown
Constant rejection. Abandonment wounds. Isolation. A pattern of offense. Betrayal cycles. Divorce. The inability to trust. Sabotaging love right when it gets close. The demonized man in Mark 5 was alone, separated from community and living among the dead. That was not a coincidence. Satan works to gain advantage through relational offense and unforgiveness, using those wounds as a foothold to keep people cut off. Before you even notice it happening, the same pattern has played out in three different relationships, and you have convinced yourself everyone else is the problem.
8. Bitterness and Unforgiveness
Replaying old wounds. Hatred. Inner vows like I will never trust again or I will never let anyone in. Resentment that has hardened into something that now controls you. Jesus told the parable of the unforgiving servant who was handed to the tormentors, and that word in Matthew 18:34 is deliberate. Hebrews 12:15 warns that a root of bitterness defiles many. The enemy loves unforgiveness because he knows it opens a legal door for torment in your life. He did not start the offense that wounded you, but he will absolutely finish the work if you hold onto it.
9. Pride, Unbelief, and Spiritual Deception
False doctrine. Spiritual pride. Unbelief. Blasphemy. The antichrist spirit that denies Jesus came in the flesh. First Timothy 4:1 warns that in the last days there will be doctrines of demons, deceptive spirits pulling people away from truth. Second Corinthians 4:4 says the god of this age blinds the minds of unbelievers. Remember this: Satan became Satan because of pride. When you fall into arrogance, whether that is religious pride, intellectual pride, or the posture of someone who has decided they do not need the church, you are partnering with the same spirit behind Lucifer’s fall. Pride invites a level of deception that is almost impossible to break free from, because you cannot see what you are too proud to look for.
10. Marriage, Family, and Destiny
Strife. Discord. Adultery. Contention. Generational cycles. Sabotage of your calling. That specific feeling of almost breakthrough, where you get right to the edge of what God promised and something derails it every single time. The enemy loves delay. He loves to fracture families because the family is the foundation of God’s covenant purposes on the earth. Not every struggle in your marriage is a demon, but some patterns are too consistent, too targeted, and too tied to generational history to be written off as a personality clash.
What to Do When You Recognize These Patterns
Naming the pattern is where you start. So what do you actually do?
1. Submit to God. James 4:7 says submit to God, then resist the devil. You cannot skip the first step and expect the second one to work.
2. Repent for any open door. Where sin gave the enemy an entry point, close it through genuine repentance. Not just feeling bad about it. Repentance means turning.
3. Deal with forgiveness. Search your heart honestly. Unforgiveness is one of the most common reasons people do not stay free after deliverance. If there is offense sitting in you, release it, not because the person deserves it, but because you need the door closed.
4. Renounce lies, vows, and agreements. Inner vows and old agreements with fear or shame need to be spoken against out loud, in the name of Jesus. The enemy uses words to bind people. Words of renunciation help break that.
5. Resist the devil and replace the pattern with truth. Spiritual warfare includes renewing the mind. You take every thought captive. You fill the ground the enemy vacated with the Word of God.
For many people, these five steps will weaken the stronghold significantly but not fully uproot it. God designed the body of Christ so that we need Him and we need each other. There is a reason Jesus sent the disciples out in pairs. There is a reason the gifts of the Holy Spirit function through community. Sometimes you need a brother or sister to stand with you in prayer. God built the church because He knew we would need it.
You Cannot Just Sweep the Web
When you mow the lawn, you see the grass, but the roots are still there underneath. When you sweep a spider web, you know there is a spider that built it. Sweeping the web every week does nothing if you never deal with the spider. Address the symptoms and go after the source. Renew the mind and cast out what needs to be cast out. Get counseling and get prayer. Both have their place, and you may need both.
The New Testament is too full of deliverances, the pattern too consistent across every gospel, for us to read it carefully and then conclude that demonic assignments are not still active today. There is more going on beneath the surface of your life than what you can see with your natural eyes, and Jesus has already given you authority over it.
Stop fighting symptoms. Start addressing the root.
To go deeper into this topic, get my book Make the Devil Homeless, a biblical guide to understanding deliverance and walking in lasting freedom.
