SATAN
Dr. W. A.
Criswell
1 Peter 5:
8-9
2-24-74
10:50 a.m.
This is the pastor bringing the
message entitled: Of Demons and Devils. It is by no means a topic
suggested by a current secular and religious fad. The discussion of
demons and demonology brought to pass in no small part at this present moment by
a movie called The Exorcist, which I haven't seen. But the message is
the verses that follow where I left off last Sunday preaching through the
epistle of Simon Peter.
Last Sunday morning we closed at
verse 7 and chapter 5. And this morning we begin with verses 8 and 9 in
that same chapter. The reading of the text is:
Be sober, be vigilant, because
your adversary the devil
as a roaring lion, walketh about
seeking whom he may devour,
whom resist steadfast in the faith
[1 Peter
5:8, 9]
Now, let's look at the words first
before we begin an exposition of the passage. The imagery that lies back
of what Simon Peter is saying is a shepherd, keeping watch over his flock by
night. And in the nighttime a lion prowls, and stalks, and circles the
flock, seeking which one of them he will devour.
And using that imagery of a
shepherd, guarding his flock at night and the stalking lion picking out which
one upon he will devour, the apostle writes two vigorous imperative
words. In the English, each one is translated with two words; “be sober”,
be vigilant because your “adversary.” In the way that Simon Peter wrote
it, nepsate, gregoresate, two imperatives. “Be sober”—nepho—not
drunken, intemperate; nepsate, “be sober”. Gregoresate—awake! Be
watchful, don't be asleep. Then in his text there is no “because”, just
immediately, “your adversary”—diabolos—the devil.
In the Scriptures there is
always just one diabolos—there is one Satan. There is one king;
sovereign ruler over all of the demons of disease, and darkness, and despair,
and ruin, and destruction. There are many diamonioi—many “demons”—
many unclean spirits, but there is one great prince and ruler over them
all. And in Scripture he is always presented as that. There is one
devil, diabolos, there is one Satan. In Hebrew, in Greek, in
English it is always the same, Satan, the same word. There is one Lucifer;
there is one serpent and dragon.
In the twelfth chapter of the Book
of Revelation, in one verse he is called “the dragon,” “the serpent,” “Satan,”
and “the devil” [Revelation 12:9]. There is just one and he is the
sovereign ruler over all of the kingdom of darkness. Nepsate, gregoresate,
diabolos. “As a roaring lion walketh about seeking…” whom? Seeking “which
one”—tina—“which one he may devour”—Katapino—gulp
down, literally “gulp down”; swallow down. “Whom anthistemi”—and the
medical profession has made us acquainted with that word, histemi, means
“to stand” or to place; anti, is “against.” “Whom stand against”—place
yourself against steadfast. And here is another word that these kids all
know—stereo — the word here, stereo. Stereo is the Greek
word meaning, “firm, steadfast.” I presume they use it in the
stereophonic musical world to describe the firmness of the music; it is all
there, you can hear it all. It is the word here—anthistemi, “stand
against him,” face against him, stereoi, “steadfast, firm.” How?
In the faith!
Now this is what Simon Peter
wrote. There is a mystery of iniquity into which the human mind cannot
enter. Paul, in the second chapter of 2 Thessalonians [verse 4] used that
expression, “the mystery of iniquity.” It is hidden in the heart of
God. We cannot understand evil in the world or in the human heart.
In the tenth chapter of the Apocalypse, in the seventh verse, the Apostle John
by inspiration says that when the seventh angel sounds, in his day, the mystery
of God shall be finished.
Why God allows Satan, and evil,
and darkness in His universe is unknown to us. Why does not the
Lord, by the sweep of His hand or by the fiat word of His voice, destroy all
evil, why? We do not know. It is called in the scriptures, the musterion,
the secret of evil, which to us is not revealed. But what we do know,
both in Scripture and in life, are for us to understand. So we speak of
this diabolos, who as a roaring lion, circles the flock of God seeking
which one he will seek to destroy.
First, the beauty of his person: in
the twenty-eighth chapter of Ezekiel, in the fourteenth chapter of Isaiah,
Lucifer is described: “the son of the morning.” He is called “perfect in
beauty.” I have never seen a perfect anything! Everything in the world
has in it some measure of imperfection. He is called perfect in
beauty. He is covered, and he walks, and his garments are the iridescent
light of the gems of diamond, and sapphire, of jasper, of pearl, of gold.
In the Second Corinthian letter, the [fourteenth] verse and the [eleventh
chapter], the Apostle Paul refers to him as “the angel of light,” the
brightness of the meridian sun.
In medieval days, all through
Europe there were presented by the church, miracle plays. They were the
precursors of Shakespeare and all of the dramatic presentations the modern
world knows. In those miracle plays Satan was always presented in one
way. He was a devil with horns, with tail, with hooves, with a red coat,
and with a pitchfork. It is manifestly a caricature, and it may please
Satan that in the imagery of the world he is a devil like that. Actually,
he is the opposite of that! Satan is beautiful, and alluring, and powerful
beyond anything that a human mind could imagine.
If I could by illustration, try to
enter into somewhat of what Satan is like, it would be like this: In the days
of the Second World War, I remember beautiful women, whose pictures would be on
the front pages of the newspaper. It would be a beautiful and alluring
woman who was in the pay and in the hire of the enemy. And they would
persuade her and buy her to seduce a general, or a great representative of
government and finding secrets from us, would deliver them to the enemy.
That is Satan: beautiful, alluring, seductive; but treacherous and traitorous
in the extreme.
If I could find an example of what
Satan is really like, I would say you would find him in the mind, and the voice,
and the prestige, of a brilliant and gifted theological professor. He
speaks in learnedness and in eloquence but he denies the faith. He
empties Scripture of it's inspiration. He takes away deity from Christ,
makes Him just another man, and robs the church of all of its hope of a
consummating and glorious tomorrow. That is Satan.
If I could pick out Satan, as he
really is, I would picture him as a great, popular leader of government. And
he comes forth as the champion of the people and rather than face the harsh
realities and stubborn facts of economic life, he soothes the people into the
persuasion that he is their great benefactor and patron, and he looks at the
printing press making money ; thousands of dollars, millions of dollars.
And he gives order through the instruments of government for deficit financing,
and the presses—it is that simple—and they print money, and print money, and the
government goes in debt and what finally happens is: it's a painless way to rob
the poor, and to destroy the pensioner, and finally to bring the country into
economic collapse and chaos. That is Satan! Smart, shrewd, deceptive,
but beyond his soft and mellifluous t voice there is destruction and ruin: that
is Satan.
Here in the gutter is a drunken
bum in his vomit. That isn’t Satan. That is one of his minions who
has destroyed a human life, plunged into despair and ruin. Satan is
somewhere in a plush office, presiding over an empire! Thinking up ways and
means and approaches to allure our young people and to destroy their lives both
inwardly and on highways where they're killed by the thousands and thousands
every year. That genius at the top, presiding over the great
corporations, that is Satan. Beautiful, amenable, courteous, alluring,
interesting, acceptable, but treacherous! Deceptive in the extreme, that is
Satan.
I speak of the extent of his power.
It is hard for us to enter into the vast, vast unimaginable control he has of
God's universe—the mystery of evil. In the Book of Jude the apostle
writes that even Michael the archangel, when disputing with diabolos—Satan—about
the body of Moses, he dares not bring against him a railing accusation but said,
“The Lord rebuke thee” [Jude 9]. Even Michael the archangel dare not
cross Lucifer. In the twelfth chapter the Book of the Revelation: “And
there was war in heaven, Michael and his angels fought against the dragon,
against Satan and his angels” [Revelation 12:7].
His illimitable power—he is king
over the fallen angels. In the twelfth chapter of the Revelation,
one-third—one-third of all of the angels of God fell in rebellion with Satan
[Revelation 12:4]. I remember one time, speaking of that in this pulpit, and
when we think of that and wonder how it is that the angels of God turned aside
from the Lord and followed Satan, why do you do it? Why do you do
it? For Satan is alluring. He's deceptive. He's interesting,
and he places his wares in beautiful order and asks you to buy them, and we do!
What the angels do we do, and do all the time. One-third of them left
their first estate and followed Satan, rebelling against God, refusing the mandates
and disciplines of the Lord God. And the king over that fallen, angelic host—called
“demons” in the Bible—the king is Satan.
In the ninth chapter of the Book
of the Revelation he is called their king and he's given two other names there
in Hebrew Abaddon, in Greek Apollyon and in either instance the
word means the same thing, it means “ruin and destruction and death”
[Revelation 9:11]. He's the king over all of the fallen hosts of the dark
and evil world in heaven and in earth. He is also the sovereign ruler
over fallen men, men who reject God. If a man will not accept God, the
true God, and worship the true God he will accept the devil and worship him,
because a man's made that way. He will worship something. He will
follow something. He will give his life to something. He is
interested in something, and whatever we are interested in, whatever we give
our lives to, other than the true God, is idolatrous. It is sin; it is
Satan, it is satanic.
And finally in the twenty-fifth
chapter of Matthew and the forty-first verse, Satan controls the man completely
and he is sent away into the fire prepared for the devil and his angels.
[Matthew 25:41] That is Satan! Satan is called—in the [fourth] chapter
of 2 Corinthians—Satan is called, “The god of this world” [2 Corinthians
4:4]. Isn't that an astonishing thing? There is a kingdom in this
world and it is presided over by his satanic majesty, the king, Apollyon,
Abaddon.
I was eating dinner with Dr. Black
in Istanbul, the president of Robert College—a Presbyterian college in
Istanbul. He had married a Bulgarian and was in Bulgaria when the
communists took it over. And he said to me, “You cannot realize the strength
and the power of those communists over their people.” He said, “Children
will turn informer against their parents when they know that what they report will
mean the death of their fathers and their mothers. But children will
inform against their own parents; seeing them die, executed, put to death!”
Then he added to me a word I'll never forget. He said, “There is a
kingdom of darkness in this world, presided over by a king, just as there is a
kingdom of light in this world presided over by Jesus Christ.” And he
said, “The kingdom of atheism, of communism, of totalitarianism is an
expression of the kingdom of Satan and its king is diabolos, the devil.”
There is a God in this world and
we see Him in his illimitable power and in His command of the elements and of
disease. It was Satan who destroyed God's first creation. It was
Satan who destroyed God's recreation, and made the animal kingdom vicious and
carnivorous. And made men full of murderous thoughts—wars and bloodshed—and uses
the elements of nature to destroy the man that he hates.
For example, there came upon a day
to Job, a messenger saying, the Sabeans and the Chaldeans have come and they “have
taken away the flocks and the herds and they have slain the servants…”
And while he was speaking there came another messenger and saying, “And fire
from the heavens came down and burned up the sheep…” And while he was
speaking there came another saying, “And there is a mighty wind that came out
of the wilderness that over turned the house and crushed all the of your
children…” And finally, Job himself was struck with a loathsome disease
and “sat in the ash heap” [Job 1:13-2:8]. Who did that? Who does
that? Who raises up murderers who dip their hands in human blood, who are
guilty of violence? Who does that? Who sent lightning out of the
sky to burn up the flocks? Who sent the wind to crush the children?
And who afflicted Job with a loathsome disease? Under the permissive will
of God, Satan did it. He did it.
In the eighteenth chapter of the
Book of Luke there is a woman bowed down with that infirmity. Eighteen
years she couldn't lift herself and the Lord Jesus said, “Satan has bowed her
down.” In the twelfth chapter of the 2 Corinthian Letter, the Apostle Paul
says, “I have a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to buffet me.”
All of these violences that you see in the world: the turbulence of nature, the
stress of the wind and the storm, and the disease that afflicts us—all of that
was not intended by God, it’s Satan! Satan is an interloper; he is an
intruder. God never intended that, that is Satan!
And I speak of his power over the
human heart, and over the human mind, and the facility with which he enters
us. It is almost unthinkable how easy it is for Satan to get into the
human mind and into the human heart. In a thousand ways and in a thousand
forms, does he enter. Day and night, circling, seeking whom he may
devour, and his ways are so innocuous and so deceptive.
I was in a meeting one time as a
little boy and the evangelist called up a great big powerful man and set him in
a chair right there on the platform. And he took a string and he put it
around the man seated in the chair and he said, “Break it.” And the man
just broke it. He took the string and put two or three strands around him
and said, “Break it.” And the man broke it just like that. And
while the big strong man sat in the chair, the man took that string and he
wrapped it around, and around, and around, and around, and around, and around,
and around, and around the man and then he said, “Break it!” And that big
strong man did all in his power to strain against that and failed; he was
bound. That is Satan—you didn't know it, you didn't realize it.
There was a man and a pig was
following him, and the man was dropping beans and the pig was following along
eating those beans as the man dropped them, and a fellow watching said, “Where
are you taking the pig?” And the man replied, “To the slaughter house.”
That's Satan. And how easily he conquers us a little at a time—a little
here, a little there, a little push there, a little suggestion yonder, and
finally we don't recognize ourselves. We are somebody else. That is
the deceptiveness of Satan.
How do I war against him? Anthistemi—resist,
face him stereoi—steadfastly! But how, Lord? However a man may
find strength in himself to oppose, he is no match for Satan. Satan is
too deceptive, and too smart and too shrewd, and too strong for flesh and blood.
We are no match; we lose the battle before we begin. How does a man stand
to face Satan? You do it in God, in the faith.
Let me show you. In just a
moment:
When the unclean spirit is gone
out of a man he walketh throughout dry places, seeking rest and findeth none.
Then he sayeth, “I will return
into my home from whence I went out.” And when he is come, he findeth it
empty, swept, and garnished
then goeth he and taketh unto
himself seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter in and
dwell there in that man and his last state is worse than the first
[Matthew
12:43-45]
What is that that the Lord has
said in the twelfth chapter of Matthew? It is a very simple thing and it
is one that all of us have experienced. Here is a man that has an unclean
spirit. Now you just name anything of a thousand things, drunkenness,
cursing, lying, stealing, whore-mongering, vile—whatever it is—and so he says, “I'm
going to reform. I'm going to thrust that evil spirit out of me, I'm not…”
and then just name it. “I'm not going to whore-mongering any more, I'm
not going to lie anymore; I'm not going to get drunk anymore; I'm not going to
embezzle anymore; I'm not going to steal any more; I'm not going to…” whatever
it is, “I'm going to live a new life. I'm going to be a new man; I’m good
going to walk straight.” So he thrusts that spirit of uncleanness out of
him and then the days pass and that spirit comes back and looks on the inside
of that man's heart. It is empty, it is empty; it is swept, and clean,
and garnished. He's really fine, he's walking straight. He's really
reformed, but his heart is empty, though it’s swept, and clean, and
garnished. And that spirit sees the emptiness on the inside of that man's
heart and he goes out and he finds seven other spirits worse than himself and
comes back in that man. And what he once was, so he is ten times, seven times
worse than even that. For not only does he get drunk now, but he curses,
and he lies, and he's filthy, and he has descended into the gutter.
What's the matter? Why, it
is very evident what's the matter, the man's heart is empty, though it is clean,
and swept, and garnished. For you see, a man can't live without something
in his heart; he has to give himself to something. He can't help being
that way he's created like that. And if a man's heart is empty, then you'll
find him giving himself to false pride, vain ambition, money, covetousness,
pleasure, indulgence, a thousand things—they come and live in that man's
heart. What does the man need? He needs what Simon Peter wrote
there, when he says, “anthistemi, stereo” —“face the devil
firmly.” How, Lord? In the faith; letting Jesus, letting God come
into your heart. He dwells in our heart, by faith. There is another
Spirit in your heart, it is the Spirit of Jesus; i t is the Spirit of
God. And when a man has the Spirit of Jesus in his heart and the Spirit
of God in him, when a man is born again and he's got the Lord in his soul, that
evil spirit has no place. He can't dwell there. He can't.
The spirit of evil, of
covetousness, of drunkenness, of lying, of debauchery, of whore-mongering, of a
thousand other things that are vile and bad; when they come into the Christians
heart, brother, you got to fight! You’ve got to resist it—you’ve got an anthistemi—you’ve
got a confrontation! And the Spirit of Jesus won't let an evil spirit stay in
the heart. There's no room for him, he can't get in because God is there
and that is the triumphant life. The Christian doesn't lose the battle…