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14 Sobering
Facts about Satan, the Devil
.
Satan is God’s chief
enemy, and therefore our chief enemy. Even though our adversary may gain a
tactical advantage here and there, his fate is sealed - we can trust that the
war will be won - Satan will be defeated, and God will ultimately run the
universe in partnership with his human image-bearers. Through Christ’s death
and resurrection, his power is broken and his fate is sealed — but we still
need to be vigilant so as not to give him an advantage in leading us astray
Faithlife Staff
He’s
the universe’s public enemy number one, the chief opponent of God and his
people, and the leader of uncounted demonic forces.
Jesus
says he’s been a murderer from the beginning, and he’s engaged in an all-out
war against the forces of good in the universe.
The
Bible calls him the devil, Satan, the evil one.
Paul
tells the Ephesian church to put on the full armor of God, so that they can
stand firm against his schemes.
James
tells Christians that if they resist the devil, he will flee from them. Peter
tells believers to beware: he is always on the prowl.
We
have an enemy — and if we’re going to stand firm against him, we need to know
whom we’re up against.
However,
there’s a lot of devil folklore out there. It can be difficult to distinguish
traditions from what the Bible actually says about Satan.
So,
let’s take a look at some biblical facts about the devil.
A
quick note on worldview
The
Bible was written millennia ago by people with a far more supernatural
worldview than we tend to have today.
To
truly understand what the Bible says about Satan and spiritual warfare, we need
to understand its original authors’ and readers’ perspectives.
A
particularly helpful resource for this is Dr. Michael S. Heiser’s book, The
Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible.
This
post references it a good deal, and anyone interested in spiritual warfare
should check it out, too.
1. “Satan”
means “adversary”
“Satan”
is a transliteration of a Hebrew word, which means “adversary,” or “opponent.”
The
word satan is used multiple times in the Old Testament, often referring to
anyone who is blocking or challenging someone else. For example:
The
angel of the Lord opposes Balaam (Numbers
21:22–32).
Two
of David’s bloodthirsty warriors, Joab and Abishai, make life difficult for the
king (2 Samuel 19:22).
Solomon
faces political opponents after he turns from God (1 Kings 11:14–25).
In
each of these episodes, the Hebrew Bible calls these figures satan, because
they are acting as adversaries.
So
how did the devil get the name “Satan”?
Over
the centuries between Malachi and Jesus, Jewish writers began to use this label
as a name for the biggest adversary of them all: a divine being who rebelled
against God in the Garden of Eden by tempting Adam and Eve to eat the forbidden
fruit.
In The Unseen Realm, Dr. Michael S. Heiser says, “The
dark figure of Genesis 3 was eventually thought of as the ‘mother of all
adversaries,’ and so the label satan got stuck to him. He deserves it.”
2. Pride
fueled the devil’s origin story.
Perhaps
the last place you’d look to find information about Satan is in a list of
pastoral qualities.
And
yet, as the apostle Paul lays out the qualities he expects of church leaders,
he makes specific mention of the devil.
The apostle warns Timothy that any elder “must not
be a recent convert, or he may become conceited and fall under the same
judgment as the devil” (1 Timothy
3:6).
The
Bible doesn’t give us a great deal of specifics when it comes to Satan’s
rebellion against God.
But
in the passages that do seem to touch on the devil’s fall from grace, pride is
a predominant theme.
Clue:
Ezekiel’s oracle against the prince of Tyre
In
the Old Testament, the prophet Ezekiel takes up an oracle against the human
ruler of Tyre, an arrogant person smug enough to claim to be a god himself (Ezekiel 28:2).
God
plans to bring this prince down a notch.
But
while Ezekiel preaches against this ruler, he seems to make several allusions
to a similar story on a cosmic scale.
In
fact, the prophet says a few things that point all the way back to the Garden
of Eden:
“You were the seal of perfection, full of wisdom and
perfect in beauty. You were in Eden, the garden of God […] you were anointed as
a guardian cherub, for so I ordained you. You were on the holy mount of God;
you walked among the fiery stones” (Ezekiel 28:12–14).
Later in the oracle, Ezekiel tells us that this being
had a pride problem similar to the prince of Tyre’s: “Your heart became
proud on account of your beauty, and you corrupted your wisdom because of your
splendor” (Ezekiel 28:17).
This
being is punished: he’s expelled from Eden to a new domain: earth and the
underworld.
Clue:
Isaiah’s parable against the king of Babylon
The
prophet Isaiah compares the arrogant king of Babylon to a particularly
ambitious divine being who has “fallen from heaven” (Isaiah 14:12).
This character at one point said to himself: “I
will ascend to the heavens; I will raise my throne above the stars of God; I
will sit enthroned on the mount of assembly, on the utmost heights of Mount
Zaphon. I will ascend above the tops of the clouds; I will make myself like the
Most High” (Isaiah 14:13–14).
Heiser notes that this passage reads like “an
attempted coup in the divine council. […] He wanted to be ‘like the Most High’
(elyon). But there can be only one of those.”
3. Satan’s
domain is earth and Sheol.
In
the third chapter of Genesis, the serpent persuades Adam and Eve to eat the
forbidden fruit, expelling them from Eden and sealing their doom.
But
although Adam and Eve are punished, Satan gets the fiercest curse from the God
he rebelled against.
The Lord says to him: “Cursed are you above all
livestock and all wild animals! You will crawl on your belly and you will eat
dust all the days of your life” (Genesis
3:14).
What
does this curse mean for Satan?
The
serpent was cursed to crawl on its belly.
This
is strikingly similar to the fate of our villain in Ezekiel 28 and Isaiah 14,
who is cast down to the ground (Ezekiel
28:8, 17; Isaiah 14:11–12, 15).
But
it’s worse than just getting knocked to the ground.
The
prophets say this rebel was cast to ʾerets, a Hebrew term
Heiser says can refer literally to the dirt and metaphorically to the
underworld.
Heiser goes on to explain the serpent’s fate: “The
curse also had him ‘eating dirt,’ clearly a metaphorical reference, since
snakes don’t really eat dirt as food for nutrition. It isn’t part of the
‘natural snake diet.’
“The point being made by the curse is that the nachash
[Hebrew word translated “serpent” in our Bible], who wanted to be ‘most high,’
will be ‘most low’ instead — cast away from God and the council to earth, and even
under the earth.
“In the underworld, the nachash is even lower
than the beasts of the field. He is hidden from view and from life in God’s
world. His domain is death.”
4. Satan
rules the nations of the earth.
The author of 1 John states that “the whole world
is under the control of the evil one” (1
John 5:19), and other passages of the New
Testament specifically point to the devil’s control over the nations of the
world.
For
example, pay attention to Satan’s final offer as he tempts Jesus in the wilderness:
Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and
showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their splendor. “All this I
will give you,” he said … (Matthew
4:8–9).
There’s
no indication that Satan was bluffing here.
In fact, in John’s gospel, Jesus calls him the “prince
of this world” (John 12:31; 14:30;
16:11).
When
did Satan get so much power?
Heiser
suggests that Satan accumulated this power over the time between the Tower of
Babel incident and the Jesus’ ministry:
“As the
original rebel, the nachash [the Hebrew word for ‘serpent’] of Genesis 3
(cf. Rev. 12:9) had, by New Testament times, achieved the status of
the lead opposition to Yahweh. This was part of the logic of attributing the
term saṭan to him as a proper personal name.
“Recall as well that the nachash has been cast
down to the ʾerets,
a term that referred not only to ‘earth’ but also the realm of the dead, Sheol.
“The ‘original
rebel,’ whose domain became earth/Sheol, nachash/Satan was
perceived by Second Temple and New Testament theology as primary authority over
all other rebels and their domains.”
5. Satan
commands his own host of demons.
By
the time of Jesus’ ministry, Satan had not only attained power over all the
nations of the earth, but he had also amassed a following of demons.
The
Jews of Jesus’ time believed that Satan was the ruler of the demons.
In
fact, some even claimed that it was only by Satan’s power that Jesus could cast
out demons the way he did.
But Jesus says this isn’t the case: “How can Satan
drive out Satan? If a kingdom is divided against itself, that kingdom cannot
stand. If a house is divided against itself, that house cannot stand. And if
Satan opposes himself and is divided, he cannot stand” (Mark 3:23–26).
Freeing
people from the influence of these demons was a major part of Christ’s earthly
ministry — which makes sense, as Jesus came into the world to destroy the
devil’s work (1 John 3:8).
6. The Bible doesn’t say he rules ALL the demons.
Scripture
doesn’t give us a cut-and-dry picture of the divine hierarchy, good or evil.
So,
while we can assume Satan is the most prominent of God’s adversaries, we
shouldn’t necessarily assume that all God’s divine opponents are under Satan’s
control.
Here’s how Heiser puts it: “It is clear that Satan
is leader of at least some of the powers of darkness.
As the original rebel, he likely ranked first (or
worst) in terms of example in the minds of ancient readers.
The fact that he is the one who confronted Jesus in
the desert […] and offered Jesus the kingdoms of the world suggests as much.
The lack of a clearly delineated hierarchy leaves the
possibility that there are competing agendas in the unseen world, even where
there exists the common goal of opposition to Yahweh and his people.”
7. The
devil tried to make at least one deal.
Making
deals with the devil is a common storytelling motif.
And
although the Bible doesn’t say anything about fiddles made of gold, Scripture
does tell us of at least one attempted bargain Satan tried to make.
We
looked at Satan’s attempts to tempt Jesus earlier in this list. Satan offered
all the kingdoms of the world to Jesus.
But
there was a catch: Jesus would have to bow down and worship the devil.
Lucky
for us, the Son of God will not be bartered with in this way.
Jesus tells the tempter, “Away from me, Satan! For
it is written: ‘Worship the Lord your God, and serve him only’” (Matthew 4:10).
Why
is Jesus’ refusal to bargain important?
Heiser
explains that Satan’s offer was a clever attempt to get Jesus to pay for
something Satan stole.
“Had Jesus given in, it would have been an
acknowledgment that Satan’s permission was needed to possess the nations. It
wasn’t. Satan presumed power and ownership of something that, ultimately, was
not his but God’s.
“The messaging behind Jesus’ answer is clear: Yahweh
will take the nations back by his own means in his own time. He doesn’t need
them to be given away in a bargain. Jesus was loyal to his Father.
“Since reclaiming the nations was connected with
salvation and redemption from the effects of the fall in Eden, accepting
Satan’s offer would have undermined the necessity of the atonement of the
cross.”
8. Satan
is on the defensive
From
the Garden of Eden until the time of Jesus, Satan continued to accumulate
power.
Like
we saw earlier, he had grown powerful enough to demand that Jesus worship him
in exchange for the nations Jesus had come to redeem.
But
after Jesus resisted his temptations, the game changed.
In
all three synoptic gospels, Jesus does three things after his trial in the
wilderness:
- He
proclaims that the kingdom of God is at hand.
- He
begins choosing his disciples.
- He
begins casting out demons.
You
can already start to see Satan’s power coming undone. But it gets even better.
Later,
Peter famously confesses that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God (Matthew 16:16).
Jesus responds, “I tell you that you are Peter, and
on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome
it” (Matthew 16:18).
This
is a dramatic statement of Jesus’ (and our) impending victory over the devil.
This
should inform our outlook on Satan and spiritual warfare in general.
We’re
not holed up in a bunker, waiting for some heavenly air raid to rescue us from
an all-too-powerful foe. We’re already winning.
Heiser puts it this way: “Gates are defensive
structures, not offensive weapons. The kingdom of God is the aggressor. […] It
is the gates of hell that are under assault — and they will not hold up against
the Church. Hell will one day be Satan’s tomb.”
The apostle Paul is even more direct: “The God of
peace will soon crush Satan under your feet” (Romans 16:20).
9. Satan
is a liar by nature
Jesus
tells us that lying is second nature to the devil. He doesn’t sugarcoat it,
either:
“He was a
murderer from the beginning, not holding to the truth, for there is no truth in
him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, for he is a liar and the
father of lies” (John 8:44).
The
apostles tell us that our enemy is a great deceiver, too.
When early church member Ananias makes a shady
donation, Peter asks, “how is it that Satan has so filled your heart that
you have lied to the Holy Spirit […] ?” (Acts
5:3).
And
Paul later tells the Corinthian church that the serpent deceived Eve through
cunning lies (2 Corinthians 11:3), and goes on to say that Satan himself masquerades as
an angel of light (2 Corinthians 11:14).
But
Satan’s deceitfulness doesn’t stop with Satan. And his followers aren’t limited
to the unseen realm, either.
Unfortunately,
there are others under Satan’s influence.
10. Satan has spiritual children, just like God
does
The
New Testament often refers to God as our Father, and to believers as “children
of God.”
This
is obviously a spiritual statement, not a biological one.
We’re
part of God’s spiritual family. We live under God’s roof, abide by his rules,
and enjoy the benefits of being his.
However,
God isn’t the only spiritual father the Bible speaks of. Satan has children,
too.
This
comes up multiple times in the New Testament:
In the same passage where Jesus calls Satan the father
of lies, he tells the Jews who want to kill him: “You belong to your father,
the devil, and you want to carry out your father’s desires” (John 8:44).
When
the disciples ask Jesus to explain his parable of the wheat and tares, Jesus
tells them that the good seed represents the sons of his kingdom, while the
tares represent the sons of the evil one (Matthew
13:36–40).
The newly converted apostle Paul tells a sorcerer: “You
are a child of the devil and an enemy of everything that is right! You are full
of all kinds of deceit and trickery” (Acts
13:10).
And
in his first epistle, John says the children of the devil are evident based on
their sinful behavior and their lack of love for their brothers and sisters (1 John 3:10).
Like
most things involving Satan, this concept goes right back to Genesis.
When
God cursed the serpent, he put enmity not only between the devil and the woman,
but between both of their descendants.
In
a way, this prophecy is partially fulfilled in the very next chapter of
Genesis, in the story of Cain and Abel.
One
brother was righteous, and the other was a murderer.
John
even uses them as a case study for the differences between the children of God
and the children of the devil — he goes so far as to say that Cain was “of
the evil one” (1 John 3:11).
Heiser notes that “the rest of the biblical story
doesn’t consist of humans battling snake people.
That’s no surprise, since the enemy of humanity wasn’t
a mere snake.
The Bible does, however, describe an ongoing conflict
between followers of Yahweh and human and divine beings who follow the
spiritual path of the nachash.”
11.
Satan influenced Judas Iscariot
John
tells us that the devil had been prompting Judas Iscariot to betray Jesus
before the night of the Last Supper (John
13:2).
Both
John and Luke say that the devil entered Judas on the night he betrayed his
Lord (John 13:27; Luke 22:3).
The
Bible doesn’t give us the mechanics of what happened here.
But
it is important to note that on this occasion, Satan found it necessary to be
personally involved in making sure Jesus died.
However,
if Satan could do it all over, he probably wouldn’t have taken this course of
action.
Jesus’
death was not the victory Satan thought it was.
12.
Satan’s power of death is broken
It
turns out that Jesus’ death broke at least some of Satan’s deathly power. The
author of Hebrews explains it this way:
“Since the children have flesh and blood, he too
shared in their humanity so that by his death he might break the power of him
who holds the power of death — that is, the devil — and free those who all
their lives were held in slavery by their fear of death” (Hebrews
2:14–15).
The
power of death is waning.
Paul claims that death will be “swallowed up in
victory” (1 Corinthians 15:54).
And in the book of Revelation, Christ proclaims, “I
was dead, and now look, I am alive for ever and ever! And I hold the keys of
death and Hades” (Revelation 1:18).
13.
Discord gives Satan an advantage
While
Satan’s power is broken, he’s not powerless yet.
In
fact, some New Testament passages tell us that there are certain ways for the
devil to gain a tactical advantage against us.
The
apostle Paul indicates that anger, unforgiveness, and resentment between
Christians give Satan a particular edge.
We
have several examples in Scripture of this:
Paul
encourages the church at Corinth to forgive and reassure any repentant believer
who may have caused the rest of the church grief.
The
apostle urges the church to make such a person feel welcome and loved. Why?
Because Paul particularly does not want Satan to outwit them (2 Corinthians 2:11).
Paul
tells married couples not to deprive one another sexually, otherwise Satan will
capitalize on the deprived spouse’s lack of self-control (1 Corinthians 7:5).
Paul
tells the Ephesians not to let the sun go down on their anger, so as not to
give the devil a foothold (Ephesians
4:26–27).
Satan
can (and must) be resisted, and we need to be vigilant against giving him any
opportunities to get the better of us (James
4:7; 1 Peter 5:8–9).
14.
Satan’s defeat is certain, and imminent
Even
though our adversary may gain a tactical advantage here and there, his fate is
sealed.
John
the Revelator sees the ultimate end of Satan, the devil, the serpent of old:
“And the
devil, who deceived them, was thrown into the lake of burning sulfur, where the
beast and the false prophet had been thrown. They will be tormented day and
night for ever and ever” (Revelation
20:10).
The
Bible doesn’t tell us exactly when this will happen. But we can trust that the
war will be won.
Satan
will be defeated, and God will ultimately run the universe in partnership with
his human image-bearers.
Conclusion
Satan
is God’s chief enemy, and therefore our chief enemy.
Through
Christ’s death and resurrection, his power is broken and his fate is sealed — but
we still need to be vigilant so as not to give him an advantage in leading us
astray.
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https://blog.logos.com/2017/10/14-sobering-facts-satan-devil/
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