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The Origin Of The Presence Of Satan

Essay, Research Paper


The Origin of the Presence of Satan


The United Press International stated that on October 11, 1978, a


father “kept his


daughter, Tina Ann, 10, imprisoned in a 3 foot by 4 foot closet in [his


small, white frame house]


while he slowly beat her to death. He buried her under a dilapidated


shed at the rear of the house


and the family left town several months later.” In another horrid


scenario, the UPI reported that


on January 1, 1980, “Thai pirates held 121 Vietnamese women and children


captive on a deserted


jungle island for seven days, raping them and hunting them down like


animals . . . One eight-year-


old little girl was raped by 100 different men . . . The pirates took as


much pleasure in the hunt as


in the capture (Russell, Tradition 15-16).” Acts of pure evil exist and


cannot be explained except


to say that an unearthly presence tempts and consumes the lives of


people to encourage them to


perform such wickedness. Satan’s presence has been known about since


the beginning of


mankind and lures one away from God.


First, a few assumptions must be clarified. One must assume that God


is omnipotent, all-


knowing, and all-good. God allows evil to occur in the world because


suffering tests the soul and


instructs one in time of hardship; this allows one to mature. Sin is


punishable by suffering and


evil is the direct result of sin; sin occurs because of the Lord’s gift


of free will (Russell, Tradition


17). Evil is produced because humans turn away from everlasting good in


favor of temporary and


“passing pleasures” of the flesh (Russell, Tradition 206). This


imperfection is vigorously tested by


Satan.


Job 2:1-3 says, “One day the heavenly beings came to present themselves


before the Lord,


and Satan also came among them to present himself before the Lord. The


Lord said to Satan,


‘Where have you come from?’ Satan answered the Lord, ‘From going to and


fro on the earth,


and from walking up and down on it (Metzger 627).’” This establishes


Satan’s entrapment and


banishment to the earth as commanded by God (Russell, Prince 37).


The Devil is created by God and is without question inferior to him


(Russell, Tradition


67). Revelation 12:7-9 says, “And a war broke out in heaven; Michael


and his angels fought


against the dragon. The dragon and his angels fought back, but they


were defeated, and there was


no longer any place for them in heaven. The great dragon was thrown


down, that ancient serpent,


who is called the Devil and Satan, the deceiver of the whole world – he


was thrown down to the


earth, and his angels were thrown down with him (Metzger 376).” Satan


was the highest of all


the angels, but he was cast down because he envied the Lord. The Devil


was “the first cause of


evil, . . . the cause of every individual sin as well, encouraging


individuals to despair and nations


to warfare.” Satan, in turn, exacted revenged upon Adam and Eve by


causing them to sin. Satan


was given power over the earthly world by God; this allows for such


occurrences such as natural


disasters and mental depression. The Devil exists and thrives on those


who sin because they


become servants of Satan (Russell, World 40).


However, even though “The Devil’s power remains ‘as big as the world,


as wide as the


world, and he extends from heaven down to hell,’” his power cannot


ascend any further than the


Lord allows. An old hymn, “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God,” establishes


this idea:


“A mighty fortress is our God,


A good weapon and defense;


He helps us in every need


That befalls us.


The old, evil enemy


Is determined to get us;


He makes his cruel plans


With great might and cruel cunning;


Nothing on earth is like him. . . .


But if the wild world were full of devils


Eager to swallow us,


We would not fear.


For we should still be saved.


The prince of this world,


No matter how fierce he claims to be,


Can do us no harm;


His power is under judgment


One little word can fell him (Russell, World 43).”


Matthew 16: 23 says, “. . . Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling


block to me; for you are


setting your mind not on divine things but on human things (Metzger


25).” One’s timeless


defense against Satan is the power of Jesus Christ.


Another revival of the presence of Satan came during the “witch craze”


of the sixteenth <

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and seventeenth centuries. The Protestant Reformation produced a


knowledge and fear of the


Devil. Ideas of magic and science were on the rise while many Christian


morals were put on the


back burner (Russell, World 30). This is because many people were


looking so hard for the


presence of evil that they were soon consumed by the same evil they were


trying to decimate.


Due to times such as these, Satan became ever-present, and his


opportunities to possess lives


increased dramatically.


Satan’s power and knowledge are given by God and also limited by


him. The theory of


evil is personified through the Devil. He is a conglomeration of evil,


not just an inferior demon.


He is the manipulator of evil itself (Russell, Tradition 23). The


Devil introduces himself


personally: as there is a “God experience” there is also a “Devil


experience (Russell, Tradition


24).” In the Christian religion, the Devil plays the counterpart of


Jesus Christ. “The prince of


evil tries to lure us out of the army of light into that of darkness and


so lose us to the kingdom of


God (Russell, Tradition 39).” He has incredible power, but this power


is always regulated by the


Lord (Russell, Tradition 32). “. . . The Devil, or Satan, is an


‘obstructor’ of the will of the good


Lord.” Satan’s primary function is to produce the feeling of “My will,


not yours, be done


(Russell, Tradition 25).”


Satan’s most powerful weapon is temptation, as first documented by the


Bible. He will


continually agitate people to try to get them to sin. Luke 8:12 says,


“The ones on the path are


those who have heard; then the Devil comes and takes away the word from


their hearts, so that


they may not believe and be saved (Metzger 92).” 1 Corinthians 7:5


states, “Do not deprive one


another except perhaps by agreement for a set time, to devote yourselves


to prayer, and then


come together again, so that Satan may not tempt you because of your


lack of self-control


(Metzger 235).” Satan went so far as to tempt his prime adversary,


Jesus Christ (Russell,


Tradition 27). Luke 4:2 says, ” . . . for forty days he [Jesus] was


tempted by the Devil (Metzger


83).” Although Satan was unsuccessful in his attempt of tempting Jesus


Christ, this shows the


Devil’s extreme reliance and confidence in the power of temptation.


Through the choice of free will, sin and evil occurs. Satan is


ever-present to exploit the


imperfect human. As long as sin exists, then Satan exists. To


eliminate sin is to eliminate the


Devil. Let it be known: “The devil is not a principle; the Devil does


not limit God’s power; the


Devil is a creature; the Devil is permitted by God to function; the


Devil has some purpose in the


cosmos that we cannot grasp; the Devil is God’s enemy and our enemy and


must be resisted with


all our strength (Russell, Tradition 230).”


Criticism on the authors and books


Professor Elaine Pagels


The Origin of Satan


“The Origin of Satan is indeed groundbreaking.


Professor Pagels has the remarkable talent of taking


primary scholarship . . . and making it accessible to


intelligent nonspecialists. Many times in the course of


reading her explications I found myself saying, ‘Of


course, why hasn’t someone said this before?’. . . But


the book is much more than an articulation of ancient


controversies. By showing how the sectarian


demonization of the ‘intimate enemies’ – Jews and


heretics – shaped early Christianity, the book helps us to


understand the power of irrational forces that still need


to be confronted in contemporary society.”


-S. David Sperling


Professor of Bible, Hebrew Union College


Professor Jeffrey Russell


Mephistopheles: The Devil in the Modern World


Satan: The Early Christian Tradition


The Prince of Darkness: Radical Evil and the Power of Good in History


Frank Hensley wrote,


“It gives me great pleasure to announce the recipient of this year’s Erick Nilson Award: Dr. Jeffrey Russell, History Professor from the University of California, Santa Barbara.”


Jim Cook wrote,


“I praise God for His leading and I’m excited to see how God uses this in Dr. Russell’s life. The $1,000 grant, we pray, will add to the possibilities for the faculty ministry at Santa Barbara.”


Bruce M. Metzger and Roland E. Murphy


The New Oxford Annotated Bible


Bruce Metzger and Roland Murphy were the hardest to find anything on until I looked under my nose and the it was the New Oxford Annotated Bible. In the bible I found criticism and

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