CHAPTER VIII OR THE SAINTS’ VICTORY OVER THEIR SUBTLE ENEMY, AND WHENCE IT IS THAT CREATURES SO OVERMATCHED, SHOULD BE ABLE TO STAND AGAINST SATAN’S WILES THE second branch of the apostle’s argument follows, to excite them the more vigorously to their arms, and that is from the possibility, yea, certainty of standing against this subtle enemy, if thus armed, ‘That ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.’ So that this gives the apostle’s argument its due temperament; for he meant not