Fear has become one of the most powerful forces shaping modern Christian life. It influences how evil is understood, how authority is exercised, and how faith is practiced. Under Authority is a careful, investigative examination of what happens when fear begins to govern theology, leadership, and spiritual imagination-and why Scripture insists that it must not.
Rather than offering techniques for spiritual warfare or sensational accounts of the demonic, this book asks a deeper question: What kind of authority can bear fear without being reshaped by it? Tracing patterns across Christian traditions-including Catholic, Reformed, and Charismatic approaches-as well as non-Christian and anti-Christian supernatural frameworks, Markel examines how authority shifts when fear becomes central and what those shifts produce in real lives.
Drawing on Scripture, theology, lived experience, and pastoral insight, Under Authority shows that when authority drifts from Christ’s rule, fear inevitably expands-whether through control, silence, performance, vigilance, or denial. Yet the book is not a polemic against traditions or people. It is a diagnostic work, written with restraint, aimed at clarity rather than controversy.
At its center is a simple but demanding claim: Christ alone exercises authority without fear, escalation, or retreat. Because his reign is present, accomplished, and unthreatened, evil can be named without obsession, suffering can be endured without despair, and obedience can exist without anxiety.
This book is for readers who take evil seriously but are weary of fear-driven faith; for pastors and leaders carrying weight Scripture never placed on them; and for believers seeking rest without denial of reality. Under Authority does not call readers to do more, but to trust where authority already rests.
It is an invitation to step out from under fear-and live, at last, under Christ.