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Seven Ways God Reigns
over Evil
.
from
cover to cover, the Bible presents God as governing Satan in all he does — no
exceptions - God holds sway over the wills of His angels – God commands evil
spirits, and they obey him - if they disobey, He ordained that they disobey — He
permitted them to disobey - if God permits Satan’s fall, it isn’t because He’s
helpless; it’s because He’s got a purpose for it
by John
Piper
What does the Bible present to us, through the whole range of
redemptive history — from beginning to end — as the way God relates to Satan’s
will?
I don’t want to speculate. I want Bible verses.
I want Bible statements about how God relates to Satan, and then
maybe seeing enough ways that God relates to Satan, I could project back and
say, Well, if he relates to him that way here, he related to him that way
there.
That’s my approach, and you can assess whether you think that’s
wise.
What I want to do is just give you seven glimpses of how God
relates to Satan in the Bible.
1. Satan is just God’s lackey.
Satan is called “the ruler of this world” in John 12:31.
However, other texts say things like this:
“The Most High rules the kingdom of men and
gives it to whom he will.” (Daniel
4:17)
“The Lord brings the counsel of the nations to
nothing; he frustrates the plans of the peoples. The counsel of the Lord
stands forever, the plans of his heart to all generations.” (Psalm 33:10–11)
From which I infer: Yes, Satan is the god of this world and the
ruler of this age, but not ultimately.
He is a lackey with a leash underneath this great God who
decides who kings are and when they’re done.
2. Unclean spirits obey Jesus.
Although unclean spirits are everywhere in the world, doing
deceptive and murderous things, Jesus Christ is described as having all
authority in heaven and on earth.
And then you get an amazing statement like this, clearly spoken
as the truth about Jesus in Mark 1:27:
“He commands even the unclean spirits, and
they obey him.”
You should think a long time about that.
When Jesus speaks with absolute authority, the Devil does what
he is told. Period. Right? That’s what it
says.
There aren’t seasons when Jesus is not authoritative and seasons
when he is authoritative.
If it says in the Bible, “Jesus commands the unclean spirits,
and they obey,” they obey whenever he speaks that way.
3. God determines our suffering.
Satan is described as a roaring lion, prowling and seeking to
devour people.
And Peter says in 1 Peter 5:9,
“Resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same kinds of suffering
are being experienced by your brotherhood throughout the world.”
In other words, the jaws of the lion are suffering.
Resist him, firm in your faith, because you know that the same
experience of suffering is being experienced by your brethren around the world.
Therefore, the suffering of Christians is the jaws of the lion
coming down on them.
Satan is real. Don’t mess with him. But then you read these
words in the same book (1 Peter 3:17):
“It is better to suffer for doing good, if
that should be God’s will, than for doing evil.”
If God should will, the jaws will close and
not before. God will decide whether they get out — not the devil, ultimately.
4. Only God gives and takes life.
Satan is a murderer from beginning to end. He’s a murderer.
Has the Devil, since his fall, taken out of the hand of the
Almighty the gift of life and death? He has not.
Deuteronomy 32:39: “See now that I, even I, am he, and
there is no god beside me; I kill and I make alive; I wound and I heal; and
there is none that can deliver out of my hand.”
Do you remember James 4:13–15?
“Come now, you who say, ‘Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a
town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit’ — yet you do not know
what tomorrow will bring. What is your life?
“For you are a mist that appears for a little
time and then vanishes. Instead you ought to say, ‘If the Lord wills, we will
live and do this or that.’”
And if he doesn’t will, I won’t. If I make it home tonight, God
got me home.
If I have a heart attack on the way home, God took me home.
So yes, Satan is a murderer, but he does not have ultimate say
on whom he murders — God does.
5. Satan cannot harm
anyone without God’s permission.
When Satan wants to destroy a saint, he must get permission
before he touches him.
So, he comes to God and says, “Job only worships you because
he’s rich. If I take his camels, donkeys, servants, he’ll curse you” (see Job 1:9–11).
And God gives him permission, but he puts a limit. “Don’t you
touch his body” (see Job 1:12).
So, he kills them all. Job falls on his face: “The Lord gave,
and the Lord has taken away” (Job
1:21).
Satan has to get permission to go after his body, and he gets
it.
But God says, “Don’t you kill him” (see Job
2:6).
Isn’t that remarkable? So, Satan does harm to us, but not
without God’s say.
6. Jesus is sovereign over Satan’s schemes.
Satan is a great tempter in your life. He’ll tempt you before
you go to bed tonight.
He wants you to sin more than he wants anything. He wants to get
you sinning and sinning and sinning so you make shipwreck of your life.
He was behind the three denials of Peter. The Bible says this
clearly.
However, somebody else was also there behind them. Let me read
you these amazing words from Luke 22:31.
Jesus says, “Simon, Simon, behold, Satan demanded to have
you, that he might sift you like wheat.”
It’s like Satan coming to God in the case of Job.
He came to God in the case of Peter.
What that means is he wants to take Peter and, through some kind
of fear or sin, squish him through the grate so that Peter comes out here, and
faith stays there.
Then you have a faithless Peter, with faith sifted out. That’s
what was going on that night.
Satan wanted to make him really afraid — take all faith out of
his life. That’s what Satan designed to do.
Jesus continues in Luke 22:32, “But
I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail. And when you have turned again, strengthen your brothers.”
He did not say, “If you turn again,
I hope you’ll be a strengthener.”
He was sovereign over Satan’s designs right there. “I’m
praying for you, Peter. I have interceded with the almighty God, and we have
decided: you will deny me three times. You will cry, and when you cry, you will
repent. And when you repent, you will become a rock. And on this rock, I will
build my church.”
7. Satan can blind,
but God causes us to see again.
Second Corinthians 4:4: “The god of this world has blinded
the minds of the unbelievers.”
Satan is a great blinder. Some of you in this room right now are
spiritually blind, meaning that you’re listening to me, and this message right
now means nothing to you.
You just want to get out of here because Satan has blinded your
mind. You have no spiritual taste buds.
Truth, like what I’m speaking here, doesn’t do anything. It
might make you mad, but it doesn’t awaken worship or passion or zeal or love or
resolve to obey.
That’s a spiritual work of God, and Satan is a great blinder.
The question is, Is he ultimately powerful in his blinding,
or does God have final say whether light breaks into your life?
Two verses later, Paul says in 2 Corinthians
4:6: “God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,” has shone
in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
face of Jesus Christ.”
When God resolves to make lights go on in your heart, no devil
can stop him.
Those are seven glimpses. I could multiply them over and over
again.
So here I am, back at my question about the origin of Satan’s
sinfulness. Is God helpless before the will of his own angels?
Is there power outside God himself that limits his rule over
them?
My conclusion is that, from cover to cover, the Bible
presents God as governing Satan in all he does — no exceptions.
And therefore, I would never, ever biblically infer back into
eternity and say, Satan got the upper hand or God was helpless.
God couldn’t exert enough influence to win this guy’s
allegiance.
He could get yours, but he couldn’t get Satan’s?
No, God holds sway over the wills of his angels. He commands
evil spirits, and they obey him.
Therefore, if they disobey, he ordained that they disobey — he
permitted them to disobey.
If God permits Satan’s fall, it isn’t because he’s helpless;
it’s because he’s got a purpose for it.
John Piper (@JohnPiper) is founder and teacher of
desiringGod.org and chancellor of Bethlehem College & Seminary. For 33
years, he served as pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Church, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
He is author of more than 50
books, including Desiring God: Meditations
of a Christian Hedonist and most recently Coronavirus and
Christ.
https://www.desiringgod.org/messages/the-fall-of-satan-and-the-victory-of-christ/excerpts/satan-always-asks-permission
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