This post presents a theological essay focused on the concept of spiritual unconsciousness, using the metaphor of sleep to describe a lack of spiritual perception or awareness. The author, Peter Hasert, argues that this spiritual sleep causes believers to live defeated lives, because they cannot perceive the invisible warfare or access the wealth of their identity in Christ. The text frequently uses and interprets Biblical scripture and Hebrew/Greek terminology, like phronēma pneumatikos (the mind of the spirit) and gregoreō (to watch), to emphasize that true spiritual life requires constant wakefulness through practices like stillness, meditation, and remembrance (anamnēsis). Ultimately, the author calls readers to move beyond body consciousness into spirit consciousness, asserting that true freedom from fear and conflict (the nightmare) is achieved not by fighting circumstances but by simply waking up to God's constant, present reality.