SATAN: |
(a.k.a. The Devil, Beelzebub, Lucifer, |
Mephistopheles, Prince of Darkness, |
Accursed Dragon, Foul Spirit, Satanic |
Power, Master of Deceit, etc.) |
Part 2: The development of the concept of Satan: |
Before 300 BC in Ancient Israel |
Before 300 BCE in Ancient Iran |
Between 300 BCE and 100 CE |
In the early Christian church |
Middle Ages to the Renaissance |
Present day |
Development of the Concept of
Satan prior to 300 BCE in Ancient Israel: |
Traditionally, Christians have believed that the Pentateuch [the first 5 books of the Hebrew Scriptures or Old Testament] were written by Moses under the inspiration of God circa 1450 BCE during the nation's exodus from Egypt. The book of Daniel was seen as having been written by Daniel in the 6th century CE, etc. Conservative Christians still believe this today, largely because the Bible mentions the identity of its authors in many locations, and conservatives believe the Bible to be inerrant. However, analysis of the Bible as a historical document since the late 19th century has convinced essentially all non-Evangelical Old Testament scholars that most of the Pentateuch is made up of a mixture of writings and editings by three individuals or groups: in 950 BCE by "J", 750 BCE for "E" and 539 BCE for "P". Deuteronomy was written in the 7th century BCE, and Daniel was written in the 2nd century BCE. In the following material, we will assume that the liberal interpretation is correct. |
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Among those books of the Hebrew Scriptures written before 300 BCE, the term "satan" (root word "s'tn") appears often. The word is derived from the original Hebrew verb "satan" which means "to oppose." The Septuagint translation of the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek was widely used in the early Christian church. They translated "satan" as "diaboloc" from which we derive our English term "devil" and "diabolic." |
The word is used to refer to: |
Any person acting as an accuser or enemy. For example: 1 Samuel 29:4: The Philistines were distrustful of David, fearing that he would be a satan. (translated "adversary" or "someone who will turn against us"). |
2 Samuel 19:22: Shime-i apologizes to King David. The King rejects the apology, saying that they should not be a satan to each other (translated "adversary" or "opponent"). |
1 Kings 5:4: King Solomon is talking to Hiram, the King of Tyre. He says that now that there is neither satan nor bad luck to stop him, he can build the Temple. (translated as "adversary", "enemy", or "one who opposes"). |
1 Kings 11:14: God raised up Hadad the Edomite as a satan against Solomon. (translated as "adversary," or "opponent"). |
a divine messenger sent by
God as an adversary: Numbers 22:22 & 32: God appears in a dream, telling Balaam to go
with the princes of Moab to meet Balak. But when Balaam sets out the next morning on his
donkey, God is angry with him for some reason, and sent an angel/messenger to kill him.
The donkey saw the angel and took evasive actions. The angel was invisible to Balaam, who
beat the animal. The donkey asked Balaam why he had beat her three times. Balaam, who
doesn't seem to realize that a talking donkey is an unusual occurrence, replies. The angel
then appears and explains that he has come as a satan to kill him. (translated as
"one who opposes, "withstand," "adversary") |
a member of God's inner
council; a type of chief prosecutor of Heaven: 1 Chronicles 21:1: Satan, "a
supernatural evil emissary," acting on God's behalf, has influenced David to hold a
census. The census is taken, and God is angry for an unknown reason. Perhaps God does not
want humans to be aware of the strength of the army. God then offers David his choice of
one of three punishments: a 3 year famine, 3 months of fleeing before his enemies' armies,
or a plague throughout Israel. David selects the plague and God killed 70,000 men (and
presumably a similar number of women and many tens of thousands of children). In 2 Samuel
24, the identical event is described. However, this time, the text states that God
influenced David to hold the census. Even though God had incited David to enumerate the
men of Israel and Judah, he was still angry that it was done and punished the Israelites
with a plague. The writings in 2 Samuel are believed to be the original account; 1
Chronicles came later. It is believed that when Samuel was finally edited (circa 560 BCE),
the editors thought that all supernatural actions (good and bad) came from God. When
Chronicles was written over a century later, (circa 400 BCE) the author viewed God as
operating indirectly through his helpers. |
Job 1 and 2: Satan is described as one of the members of the court of heaven. God mentions that he is impressed at the behavior of Job, a blameless man who has lived an upright life. Satan attributes Job's commendable behavior to his good fortune and says that Job would soon curse God if he had a string of really bad luck. God decides to conduct an experiment with Job; he instructs Satan to destroy all that Job has: kill his animals, murder his employees, and murder his innocent children. But, even after these disasters, Job still does not curse God. So God instructs Satan to up the ante by returning to earth and destroying Job's health. Here, Satan is portrayed as a servant of God whose task it is to dutifully carry out evil deeds at God's instruction. |
Zechariah 3:1-7: Satan is again portrayed as a member of God's council. Here he objects to the selection of Joshua as the high priest. |
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There are no passages within the older parts of the Hebrew Scriptures where Satan is portrayed as an evil devil - the arch enemy of God and of mankind. At most, he is described as a henchman who carries out God's evil instructions. There is no dualism here between two powerful supernatural entities: an all-good God and an all-evil Satan. God is portrayed as performing, directly and indirectly, both kind and evil deeds. When: |
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plagues are to be sent or |
a great genocidal flood is created to kill off almost all of humanity, except for Noah and his family, or |
Onan was killed because he practiced an elementary form of birth control, in violation of a cultural tradition, or |
Sodom and Gomorrah was destroyed because its residents were abusive to the needy and to strangers, or |
Lot's wife is turned into a pillar of salt because she looked the wrong way, |
it is God who does it. In essence, the ancient writers of the early Hebrew Scriptures looked upon Jehovah as performing both good and evil deeds. A good indication of this is found in: |
Isaiah 45:6-7: |
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"...I am the LORD and there is none else. I form the light and create darkness. I make peace an create evil. I the LORD do all these things." (KJV) |
or in Job 9:22-23: |
"...[God] destroys both the blameless and the wicked. When a scourge brings sudden death, he mocks the despair of the innocent." (i.e. laughs at the suffering of the victim) |
or in Lamentations 3:37-38: |
"Who has commanded and it came to pass, unless the Lord has ordained it? Is it not from the mouth of the Most High that good and evil come?" |
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Development of the Concept of Satan prior to 300 BCE in Ancient Iran: |
Historians have traced the foundations for the concept of Satan to the Indo-European invasion circa 2000 BCE. This migration of what are now called the Kurgan people, emigrated from what is now southern Russia into the Near East, Middle East and Europe. They were polytheists, and worshiped at least one Mother Goddess and one male God. Their religious beliefs were based on the Hindu sacred writings of the Vedas. Those who settled in western Europe became the Celtic people with their religion of Druidism and perhaps what is now called Wicca. Those Kurgans who settled in the Middle East developed religious belief along different lines. They developed the twin concepts of salvation and damnation after death. Upon dying, they believed that soul of the deceased must pass over a narrow bridge on horseback. It was called the "Bridge of the Petitioner." Rashu, a god, judged each soul and decides who is sufficiently righteous to cross the bridge and who will fall into a type of Hell with "flames and terrible smells." 1 Once salvation and Heaven, (and damnation and Hell) were created, then the stage was set for the next logical concept: that of a Devil. |
Zoroaster (a.k.a. Zarathrustra, Zarthosht) is believed by some to have lived circa 628 to 551 BCE. (Other estimates run from 600 to 6,000 BCE) He was a Persian prophet in what is now Iran. Like Jesus, he was recorded as having been tempted by Satan; he performed many miracles and healings and was considered a supernatural being by his followers. He introduced a major spiritual reform and created what is generally regarded as the first established monotheistic religion in the world. He rejected the worship of the established trinity of Varuna, Mithra and Indra. The new religion, to be called Zoroastrianism, involved the worship of a single male god, Ahura Mazda, the "sovereign, lawmaker, supreme judge, master of day and night, the center of nature and inventor of moral law." He created the heavens and the earth. In short, he had all of the attributes attributed to Jehovah by the ancient Israelites, but with a different name. Zoroaster also recognized Ahura Mazda's twin brother: Angra Manyu, (a.k.a. Ahriman) the God of Evil. The only things that he created were snakes, demons, and all of the world's evil. 2 The old gods of the previous polytheistic religion became the demons of the new faith. Thus, Ahriman became the first Devil that the world has seen, and his assistants became the first cohort of demons under the control of a all-evil deity |
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Zoroaster taught that Ahura Mazda and Ahriman would continually battle each other until the God of Evil is finally defeated. At this time, the dead will be resurrected, a Last Judgement will divide all the people that have ever lived into two groups; the bad go to Hell for all eternity; the good go to Paradise. As author Gerald. Messandé so eloquently wrote: "The framework of the three monotheisms [Judaism, Christianity, Islam] had been erected. The Devil's birth certificate was filled out by an Iranian prophet." |
Development of the Concept of Satan, 300 BCE to 100 CE: |
The Scofield reference Bible closes the Hebrew Scriptures with the book of Malachi, 397 BCE. It opens the Christian Scriptures with Matthew's gospel in 37 CE. This is a gap of over 4 centuries. This interval has traditionally been called the "intertestamental period." But modern Bible scholarship has found that reality is not quite that neat: |
The Book of Daniel seems to have been written circa 165 BCE, in the middle of the intertestamental period. It recounts events 4 centuries earlier and is written as if Daniel was the author. |
The Book of Esther was apparently written in the 1st or 2nd century BCE |
The Gospel of Mark was the first gospel. Most Old Testament scholars date it to about 70 CE. Matthew came along later, circa 80 CE. |
Many Jewish writings have been preserved from that era. Some were collected and form the Apocrypha (Greek word meaning "hidden."). These books appear in the Septuagint (a Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures) and in the Vulgate (early Latin translation of the Bible). They are found in Roman Catholic Bibles and some Protestant Bibles. Conservative Protestants do not accept the Apocrypha as inerrant or inspired by God. |
During the last three centuries before Christ's birth, the portrayal of Satan underwent a major change. The Zoroastrian / Persian dualism concept appeared in Jewish writing: God was now looked upon as wholly good; Satan as profoundly evil. History was seen as a battle between them. No longer was Satan simply God's prosecuting attorney, helper, or lackey. Satan, and his demons, were now humanity's greatest enemies. |
Author G. Messandé 1 theorizes that from the middle of the 5th century BCE until 53 BC and later, the Jews were on particularly good terms with the Persians. From the latter's religion, Zoroastrianism, the Jews picked up a number of concepts: the immortality of the soul, angels, and Satan. Of the 3 main divisions of Judaism (Essenes, Pharisees, Saducees) in the 1st century BCE, the Essenes seems to have focused the most on Satan. |
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Jesus and his disciples accepted the common belief of the 1st century CE that mental illness and some physical ailments were caused by indwelling demons. "Unclean spirits" are mentioned 7 times in Mark, once in Matthew, 3 times in Luke and once in Revelations. A "dumb spirit" and a "deaf spirit" are each mentioned once in Mark. Luke talks about a "spirit of infirmity" in his gospel, and, a "spirit of divination" & an "evil spirit" in Acts. The concept of "violent possession" appears for the first time in Scripture. Demons are believed to posses individuals and cause them to mutilate themselves, to collapse, to foam at the mouth, to thrash around on the ground. Demons are seen as the cause of many physical disabilities, including blindness, spinal deformities, inability to speak. Satan figures prominently throughout the Christian Scriptures: Jesus is tempted by Satan (Matthew 4:1-3, Luke 4:2). The Pharisees accused Jesus of casting out demons in the name of "Beelzebub, the prince of the demons." (Matthew 12:24) |
In the writings of Paul and the other apostles, the character and range of activities of Satan and his demons is further developed. God and Satan are seen as the two most powerful forces in the universe. The duality between an all-good God and all-evil Satan is firmly established. Examples are: |
2 Corinthians 11:12-14: Satan is seen to be responsible for false teaching by "false apostles, deceitful workers." |
2 Corinthians 12:7: Satan has given Paul a "thorn in the flesh" to trouble him. |
1Thessalonians 2:17-18: Satan hindered Paul's travels |
I Timothy 1:19-20: Hymenaeus and Alexander have fallen away from the faith and blasphemed. Paul had excommunicated them and "delivered them unto Satan." Here, he is expressing the belief found also in 1 Corinthians 5:5 that once a believer is excommunicated, he will be no longer protected by God. Satan will torment him and perhaps purify him. |
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The author of Revelations develops the concept of a great battle between Satan and God at the end of the world as we know it: |
Revelation 2:8-9: Satan is portrayed as the power behind the Roman Empire's persecution of the Christians. The author apparently condemns ex-Christians who pretend that they are Jewish in order to avoid the persecution. They are referred to as the "Synagogue of Satan." |
Revelation 2:7-9: This passage is similar to Revelation 2:8-9. |
Revelation 12:9: Satan, viewed as the great dragon, and his fallen angels were cast down to earth. |
Revelation 20:2-3: Satan is bound and sealed into an abyss for 1000 years, so that he could no longer deceive the nations. |
Revelation 20:7-8: Satan is released after 1000 years, deceives the nations, and gathers them together for war. He loses. |
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Development of the Concept of Satan, in the Early Christian Church: |
Much of the attention of the early church was spent in trying to firm up theological beliefs on the exact nature of God, Jesus, Satan, salvation, Heaven, Hell, etc. The early church writers debated: |
whether Satan's fall occurred before the creation of the world, while Adam and Eve were in Eden, or after the fall. |
the precise cause of Satan's rebellion. |
whether angels lusted after human women, and whether this lust was the cause or a result of their fall. |
whether or not Satan, his demons and unsaved humans would all be eventually saved. |
Clement of Alexander (circa 150-213 CE) was the first major Christian writer to claim that the gods of other religions were demons: "The verdict of the prophets is that the gods of all the nations are images of demons." 3 This teaching contradicted the general belief in the Roman Empire that the gods of all religions and nations were universal, and differed only in their names and certain minor characteristics. |
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Development of the Concept of Satan, from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance: |
In the development of religions, the gods of the old religion often became the demons of the new faith. This was seen above when Zoroastrianism was founded. It was seen again in the Middle Ages when many of the attributes of the Greek God Pan were adsorbed by Satan: "goat-hoofs, horns and unremitting lust; sometimes also a goat head and an attendant throng of satyrs," who became demons. 4 Pan was the horned God of the Greeks, and is also seen as the horned consort of the Goddess among the Wiccans. Later, he was given additional attributes: "a long serpentine tail with a heart-shaped tip, long claw-like fingernails, the leathery wings of bats, and a trident." 5 |
Saint Augustine (354-430 CE) invented a new type of demon - a kind of sexual tormentor. Incubi were male fallen angels who sexually attacked women at night time and brought them immense sexual pleasure. Succubae were female fallen angels who coupled with men during their sleep. Their existence was confirmed by Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274). Aquinas also believed that the devil is the cause of sin, and "was probably the very highest angel who, through pride, fell immediately after creation, seducing those who followed him to become his subjects." 6 |
The Roman church's Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 determined that: "The devil and the demons were also created by God; at the moment of their creation, they were not evil; they became so through their own sins, and ever since they have busied themselves with the temptation of men." |
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The church taught that pastimes and spirituality outside of orthodox Christianity are a form of Satan worship. This included astrology, ceremonial magick, divination, pagan and rituals of other religions, etc. 7 Once other religious faiths are considered as forms of Satan worship, then the worse excesses of religious intolerance and genocide can follow. The church exterminated the Cathars as devil worshipers in the 13th Century, and killed off the Knights Templar in the 14th century. Other non-conforming religious groups were similarly targeted and wiped out. |
Religious dualism, originating with the Zoroastrians, and filtered through Judaism, reached its logical conclusion in Christianity. If God has innumerable angels as messengers, and a visible church of believers, it was reasoned that Satan must have demons as helpers and an invisible assembly of Satan worshipers. And so, the church imagined the existence of an entire network of people who had sold their soul to Satan, worshiped him, and dedicated their life to harming and killing other people. With the exception of some mentally ill individuals, no such network existed. |
In the 14th century, Nicholas Eymerich, a Dominican, wrote a tract called "Directorium Inquisitorum", or the "Handbook of the Inquisitors." He described three forms of Devil worship: |
Latria: praising Satan and flagellating oneself |
Dulia: "combining the names of demons with those of the blessed" |
"curious practices, including the use of the magic circle and other necromancies such as love potions, magical philters and talismans." 8 |
Near the end of the 15th century, two Dominicans by the name of Henry Kraemer and Jacques Sprenger wrote a book: "Malleus Maleficorum" or "Witches' Hammer." It became the legal reference book of the Witch burning times. The book was inspired by a combination of hatred of women, fear of sexuality and religious superstition. Hundreds of thousands of innocent people were accused of Satan worship, tortured until they confessed, and burned at the stake. The Inquisitors prosecuted this activity with the greatest thoroughness; they feared that if even one Satanist were left alive, the church would be in danger. Their rationale for the torture/murder of heretics was very simple: their victims were destined for eternal torment in Hell because of their beliefs. By torturing them until they recanted their faith and accepted Christianity, they had a chance to attain heaven. And then, of course, the church burned them alive so that they could not revert to their original heresy. A few hours or days of pain on earth was a great bargain if it avoided eternal torture in Hell. For 3 centuries, western Europe was caught in an orgy of demonic superstition. The last European heretic was burned alive at the stake in 1792. |
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From the church's hatred of women and fear of human sexuality came the belief that every newborn was possessed by an indwelling demon. The church regularly exorcised babies at the time of baptism with the following ritual: |
"I exorcise you unclean spirit in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Come out and leave this servant of God [infant's name]. Accursed and damned spirit, hear the command of God himself, he who walked upon the sea and extended his right hand to Peter as he was sinking. Therefore, accursed devil, acknowledge your condemnation...and depart from this servant of God [infant's name]...Never dare, accursed devil, to violate the sign of the holy cross which we place upon his/her forehead. Through Christ our Lord." |
When the Church of England split from Roman Catholicism, they abandoned the baptism-exorcism ritual. The Protestant churches also rejected it, at the time of the Reformation. The Protestant churches continued to torture and kill religious heretics. Their main difference was that they used a less horrible method of execution: they hung their victims instead of burning them alive. |
The church taught that Satan can appear as an angel of light. Thus the Inquisition could charge a person with Satan worship if they claimed to have had an angelic vision. Joan of Arc was so charged, as an "invoker of demons," and burned at the stake. She was later recognized as a saint. |
The Development of the Concept of Satan in the Present Day: |
The Witch-Heretic burning times came to a halt, late in the 18th century. The rationale of the Inquisition still matched church belief - that by forcing heretics to recant their faith, they might avoid eternal torture in Hell. But people simply grew to understand that whatever demonic-inspired religious activity there was in western Europe in the 15th to the 18th century, it was mostly within the church itself, and not in any supposed Satan worshipers. The church suffered a major loss of credibility. |
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In the 19th century, some theologians began to question the existence of Satan. They concluded that: "Jesus and is disciples drew their demonology from the common life of the period rather than from Scripture, so that the concept of Satan is not a permanent element in Christian doctrine." |
In 1972, the Catholic church abandoned the office of Exorcist. Any priest can now approach his bishop for permission to cast out demons. In 1999, they reduced the role of Satan as a living entity during exorcisms. The church now views demon possession as being primarily caused by a force "lurking within all individuals," not a living entity attacking from outside. 11 With the rise in the public's faith in the mental health professions, exorcisms have become quite infrequent. They still continue at some level, because accidental deaths during amateur Christian exorcisms by both Protestants and Roman Catholics are reported at the rate of about one a year in North America. |
Belief in the existence of Satan as a living entity remains active in the Roman Catholic church. "Although Satan remained the tempter, faith and prayer would deliver us from evil, and through a constant awareness and charity, and the seeking after justice and individual holiness one can defeat the devil." 9 Satan is also regarded as an all-evil devil by Fundamentalist and other Evangelical Christians. Many of the latter see the Christian believer as permanently engaged in "Spiritual Warfare," fighting off continual attacks by Satan and his demons, who seek to dominate, manipulate, tempt and control. |
Two socially destructive movements related to belief in Satanism became widely believed in the 1980's: |
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Allegations of Satanic Ritual Abuse: (SRA) This involved a return to the beliefs of the Middle Ages: the conviction that Satanists were secretly organized on a local, county, state/province, national and international level. They were kidnapping or otherwise obtaining tens of thousands of infants and children for human sacrifice each year in North America. The initial trigger for this civil panic was the publishing of a book, "Michelle Remembers" which alleged to be a documentary account of a young girl's abuse at the hands of Satanists. The book has since been investigated by three groups and found to be a fraud. But other similar books followed, and a whole SRA industry grew up during the 1980's, reached a peak in the early 1990's and is now in decline. The complete absence of hard evidence of any criminal activity has led to credibility problems. There are many indicators that SRA does not exist, or exists at an extremely low level. The main driving force behind the SRA panic was the belief in the accuracy of recovered memories which has since subsided. |
Allegations of Ritual Abuse in Day Care Centers: This involved the belief that children in some day care centers were being sexually abused; some within a ritual setting. There was a parallel belief that children were being kidnapped by adults and abused in a home setting. The first case was in Bakersfield CA; the second in Manhattan Beach CA (McMartin Preschool). Dozens of other cases arose throughout North America. The driving force behind these cases appears to be the accidental implantation of false memories by police officers, social workers and child psychologists. It was not realized at the time how easy it is for an investigator to implant memories in young children, simply by asking repeated and/or direct questions. Hundreds of innocent adults were found guilty of crimes that probably never happened, and were given long jail sentences. Many of these cases have since been reviewed and overturned. |
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Religious Satanists do exist. But they generally do not recognize the existence of, nor worship the Christian devil. Most recognize Satan as a pre-Christian pagan force, and have a code of behavior that promotes "indulgence... vital existence... undefiled wisdom... kindness to those who deserve it... vengeance.. responsibility to the responsible... physical, mental or emotional gratification."10 And there is no credible evidence that adult religious Satanists engage in significant criminal activity. Some teenage and youth "dabblers" into Satanism do engage in graffiti and minor vandalism, but they have little or no connection with religious Satanists. |
Wiccans and other Neopagans are often confused with devil worshipers. There total about 250,000 in the United States. They follow a nature based religion, not unlike Native American spirituality. Neopagans worship a God and a Goddess, but do not recognize the existence of an all-evil deity such as the Christian devil. |
A great deal of religious
intolerance is generated by a key belief of some Fundamentalist and other Evangelical
denominations - that the gods and goddesses of non-Christian religions are in fact demonic
entities. It is difficult for a believer to accept the legitimacy of Buddhism, Hinduism,
Neopaganism and hundreds of other religions, if he/she believes that the deities of those
religions are demons controlled by Satan. This is particularly true if the believer has
sensed what they believe to be Satanic oppression in their own lives. Also,
misunderstandings occur when North American society has two very different definitions of
Satanism: |
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