Interesting artcle via fark
What the Devil? Prince of Darkness Is Misunderstood, Says UCLA Professor
Is this true? Are Christians ignorant of Satan’s true role?
Interesting artcle via fark
What the Devil? Prince of Darkness Is Misunderstood, Says UCLA Professor
Is this true? Are Christians ignorant of Satan’s true role?
Its funny…but for years I’ve thought the same thing from my own reading of the bible. I just assumed it was because I was coming at it from an agnostics perspective and I was missing all that deep, underlieing meaning…
-XT
I dunno. “Get they behind me, J. Edgar Hoover” doesn’t have quite the right ring to it. I think the coneption we have of Satan comes from sources other than the Bible.
Man, my fingers are so sloppy today. Get thee behind me, of course.
I’ve long wondered why Satan was viewed as the bad guy. In the OT he frequently comes out looking better than the other guy (imho, of course).
Who kills babies? Who tortures innocents? Who punishes countless generations for the sins of one or two people?
Yeah, I think christians are ignorant…
… of Satan’s true role.
It doesn for me.
There isn’t all that much about Satan in the Bible and some of what there is is thought to be later interpolations.
God is pretty friendly with and accomdating to Satan in the Book of Job.
Well, it looks like the word “Satan” appears in the Bible just 49 times:
Assuming the KJV says “Satan” every time the originals do.
Would be interesting, then, to search these 49 references and see what kind of picture they paint.
Most Christians also identify Satan with the serpent in the Garden of Eden, and with the Dragon in Revelation. I don’t know if “the devil” is a separate term in the greek or if it is the same thing as “Satan,” but if separate, most Christians identify “the Devil” with Satan as well. That probably increases the number of citations by quite a bit… but it’s perfectly legitimate IMO to debate whether the identification of “Satan” with these various labels is correct in the first place.
-FrL-
I see from the list I provided that the identity between Satan, the Devil, the Dragon, and arguably the Serpent, is made in a passage from Revelation. I can’t believe I didn’t know that.
-FrL-
From the article
“An apology for the devil: it must be remembered that we have heard one side of the case. God has written all the books.”
– Samuel Butler
Thanks, I hadn’t read the whole article.
I wonder where this came from:
Hadn’t heard that one before! :eek:
-FrL-
It’s not new. Some persons even identify Satan as the true father of Cain, saying that he impregnated Eve before Adam even figured out what the wang was for. This extremely stupid Wikipedia article can tell you more, but reading it may give you apoplexy.
[porgy & bess]
Now dey’ll tell you chillun
Da Devil’s a villain
But don’t you believe it all
[/p&b]
Only if you limit your reading to the Old Testament.
:dubious: I fail to say how that makes Satan look any better.
To see . . .
The ironic thing is the idea of Cain as child of Eve committing adultery with the Serpent originally shows up in the Talmud and Kabbalistic literature.
I was afraid that the Wikipedia article would be actually advocating it. It was an incomplete article but still wasn’t bad as it examined that stupid idea.
To the OP- Satan in the OT is more Prosecutor than Super-Villian, but the NT does indeed present Satan as Evil and Hateful.
I’m familiar with the notion’s roots in Jewish folklore, but I don’t see how that is “ironic” in any but an Alanis Morisettian sense. In what sense do you think it ironic?
As for why I call the article stupid:
[quote=someone who spent high school biology smoking marijuana in the bathroom and later wrote a wikipedia article]
William Branham taught that the fall of mankind resulted from Eve having sexual intercourse with an upright ‘Serpent’* [1]. From this relationship, Cain was conceived and produced as a man/serpent hybrid. While from a scientific perspective, it is unusual to have interspecies hybrids that are fertile, it is not impossible as evidenced by animals such as the Beefalo/cattalo (a cross of an American Bison and a domestic European cow) and the Wolphin (a cross between a False Killer Whale and a Bottlenose Dolphin). The result of these interspecies cross-breeds is that they produce an offspring that has to breed back into one of its parental lineages. This would mean that Cain’s children would have come through Adam’s daughters, and the evidence of any difference between Adam and Cain’s lineages would have been diluted with each successive generation.
[quote]
That was when I had my apoplexy and gave up on Wikipedia.
Yup I agree.
As Al Pacino said “Gods up there laughing his ass off”
At least we know where we stand with Old Nick…he’s the bad guy…or is he?
I always thought he was a terrific poster.