Society of St. Michael

Society of St. Michael Advancing deliverance ministry. Championed by experts, academics, clergy, and lay people. Society of St. EPHESIANS 6:17

Michael is comprised of deliverance ministry experts, academics, boots-on-the-ground clergy, and lay people who are passionate about expanding spiritual liberation through Jesus Christ across the world, by the power of the Holy Spirit. Their mission is advancing the deliverance ministry through cultivating informed leadership, building effective teams, and providing spiritual intervention. Their v

ision is multiplying deliverance ministries that effectively respond to spiritual issues, thwart attacks of the enemy, and lead the Body of Christ to full freedom in Jesus. SSM responds to the growing need for effective deliverance ministries through the relentless pursuit of the following three objectives.
1. Advise: Offer consultation and resources to growing deliverance ministries.
2. Equip: Partner to provide training for ministers to meet deliverance needs.
3. Intervene: Engage when no local resources for deliverance are available. SSM's Initiatives
* Compassion: “Be like-minded, be sympathetic, love one another, be compassionate and humble." 1 PETER 3:8
* Faith: "In all circumstances take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming darts of the evil one." EPHESIANS 6:16
* Truth: "Equip the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God."

2 of our Board Members, Bishop Darryl Fitzwater and Father T. Craig Isaacs spent the week in Rome, Italy at the Pontific...
05/16/2026

2 of our Board Members, Bishop Darryl Fitzwater and Father T. Craig Isaacs spent the week in Rome, Italy at the Pontifical Atheneum’s annual Course on Deliverance and Exorcism.

Congratulations to Society of St Michael LEVEL III Cohort 2026-301! May they be ministers of Light to those who sit in d...
04/23/2026

Congratulations to Society of St Michael LEVEL III Cohort 2026-301! May they be ministers of Light to those who sit in darkness.

We bid your prayers for our 22 students from 7 Dioceses in the ACNA, 3 Continuing Anglican Jurisdictions, 1 Internationa...
04/20/2026

We bid your prayers for our 22 students from 7 Dioceses in the ACNA, 3 Continuing Anglican Jurisdictions, 1 International Anglican Communion Province, and the Catholic Church as they travel to Texas Monday-Wednesday of this week for LEVEL III training with the Society of St Michael.

Christus resurrexit, alleluia!They came in grief, carrying spices for the dead—hearts heavy, hopes buried with the stone...
04/05/2026

Christus resurrexit, alleluia!

They came in grief, carrying spices for the dead—hearts heavy, hopes buried with the stone. Yet the tomb stands open. The place of death is empty. What was sealed is broken; what was lost is found again in glory.

The silence of the grave has given way to the proclamation of life. The linen lies behind, but Christ goes before. He is not here—He is risen.

And in that empty tomb, all things are made new. Fear yields to wonder, sorrow to joy, death to life. The dawn breaks not only over the garden, but over all creation.

Alleluia—Christ is risen indeed.

The Third Day of the Holy Triduum.This is the night, when once you led our forebears, Israel’s children, from slavery in...
04/04/2026

The Third Day of the Holy Triduum.

This is the night, when once you led our forebears, Israel’s children, from slavery in Egypt and made them pass dry-shod through the Red Sea.

This is the night that with a pillar of fire banished the darkness of sin.

This is the night that even now, throughout the world, sets Christian believers apart from worldly vices and from the gloom of sin, leading them to grace and joining them to his holy ones.

This is the night, when Christ broke the prison-bars of death and rose victorious from the underworld—descending to the dead, freeing those held captive, and leading them into life.

This is the night of which it is written:
The night shall be as bright as day, dazzling is the night for me, and full of gladness.

Holy Saturday is the silence between promise and fulfillment. Christ lies in the tomb, and the world waits—without movem...
04/04/2026

Holy Saturday is the silence between promise and fulfillment. Christ lies in the tomb, and the world waits—without movement, without light. Yet in that silence, He descends to the dead, entering the depths of human loss and bo***ge, breaking the gates of death, and leading the captive into freedom. What appears as stillness is, in truth, the hidden victory of God. In this quiet, the Church learns to trust that even when nothing is seen, Christ is at work, bringing life out of death.

The 2nd day in the Holy Triduum. The hill is crowded, yet profoundly alone.Beneath a darkened sky, the weight of the wor...
04/03/2026

The 2nd day in the Holy Triduum.

The hill is crowded, yet profoundly alone.

Beneath a darkened sky, the weight of the world seems to gather around three crosses. Soldiers stand in disciplined formation, the machinery of empire steady and untroubled. Onlookers linger—some hardened, some grieving, some unsure of what they are witnessing. And at the center hangs Christ, suspended between heaven and earth, bearing not only the nails of Rome but the burden of human sin.

Good Friday confronts us with a truth we often resist: salvation is not abstract. It is costly. It is embodied. It is love stretched to its breaking point—and yet refusing to break.

In this moment, God does not remain distant from suffering. He enters into it fully. The cross stands as the great paradox: what appears as defeat is, in fact, victory; what looks like abandonment becomes the place of deepest communion. The silence of God is not absence, but the stillness of a love that endures all things.

As we gaze upon this scene, we are invited not merely to observe, but to stand there ourselves—to reckon honestly with sin, to grieve what has been broken, and to receive what we could never earn. For it is here, in the shadow of the cross, that mercy is revealed most clearly.

And from this darkness, though not yet visible, dawn is already beginning.

Now in Holy Week we enter into the Triduum, the three most Holy of days. On Maundy Thursday we observe the 2nd Dominical...
04/02/2026

Now in Holy Week we enter into the Triduum, the three most Holy of days. On Maundy Thursday we observe the 2nd Dominical Sacrament Jesus gave us in Holy Communion. We also observe the example of humble servanthood that Jesus calls us to as his washes the feet of the disciples. Not only has God humbled himself to take on human flesh, but now he kneels and washes the filth from our feet. Something not even the lowliest slave was required to do!

Why do we call Wednesday in Holy Week “Spy Wednesday”?“Then one of the Twelve—the one called Judas Iscariot—went to the ...
04/01/2026

Why do we call Wednesday in Holy Week “Spy Wednesday”?

“Then one of the Twelve—the one called Judas Iscariot—went to the chief priests and asked, “What are you willing to give me if I deliver him over to you?” So they counted out for him thirty pieces of silver. From then on Judas watched for an opportunity to hand him over.” - Matthew 26:14-16 (ESV)

We now begin Holy Week and our journey to the Cross with Jesus. Hosanna the Son of David, the King of Israel.
03/29/2026

We now begin Holy Week and our journey to the Cross with Jesus. Hosanna the Son of David, the King of Israel.

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Denton, TX
76208

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