Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
Christians engage in atrocities, including ritual eating of human
flesh and drinking blood from freshly slaughtered infants. Only
thirty years earlier, even such a sober-minded official as Pliny,
governor of Bithynia in Asia Minor, having satisfied himself by
torturing Christians that they were not guilty of criminal acts,
had decided that they deserved the death penalty, if only for
their sheer “obstinacy.”33
But why does the mere mention of the Christian name arouse
such violent, irrational hatred? Reflecting on this question,
Justin finds clues in what he calls the apostles' memoirs (which
we call the gospels). There Justin reads that after God's spirit
descended on Jesus at baptism, Satan and his demonic allies
fought back, opposing Jesus, and finally hounded him to his
death. So also now, Justin realizes, when the spirit descends on
those who are baptized, the same evil forces that fought against
Jesus attack his followers. The gospels show Justin how spiritual
energies, demonic and divine, can dwell within human beings,
often without their knowledge, and drive them toward
destruction—or toward God. Now Justin understands the
Pauline warning that
our contest is not against flesh and blood, but against powers,
against principalities, against the world-rulers of this present
darkness, against spiritual forces of evil in heavenly places
(Eph. 6:12).
The conviction that unseen energies impel human beings to
action was, of course, nothing new; it was universally accepted
throughout the pagan world. A thousand years earlier, Homer
had described how such energies played upon human beings—
how Athena had inspired Achilles to heroic warfare, and how
Aphrodite had seized and possessed Helen of Troy, driving her
into the adulterous passion that led her people into war. Recall-
124 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
ing the death of Socrates, Justin realizes with a shock that
Socrates himself had said the same thing the Christians are
saying—that all the gods Homer praises are actually evil energies
that corrupt people, “seducing women and sodomizing boys,”
and terrorizing people into worshiping them as gods.34 It was for
this reason, Justin says, that Socrates denounced traditional
religion and was charged with atheism. These same demonic
powers, furious with Socrates for threatening to unmask them,
drove the Athenian mob to execute him. This universal demonic
deception, Justin realizes, accounts for the irrational hatred that
the mere presence of Christians arouses among pagans—not
merely for the violent passions of the ignorant and unruly mob,
but also for the criminalizing of Christians, approved even by
the most enlightened emperors who ever ruled Rome.
Justin boldly addresses an open letter of protest to these
rulers—the emperor Antoninus Pius and his two sons, the Stoic
prince Marcus Aurelius, whom he calls “truest philosopher,”
and “Lucius the Philosopher”—appealing to them as fellow
philosophers, hoping, he says, to open their eyes. Justin declares
that he writes on behalf of "those people of every nation who are
unjustly hated and slaughtered; I, Justin, son of Priscus and
grandson of Bacchius, of Flavia Neapolis, myself being one of
them."35 By publicly identifying himself with those whom the
demons seek to kill, Justin initiates a public challenge that will
end not with amnesty but, as he admits he fears, with his own
arraignment and execution.
Although Justin begins by honorifically addressing the
emperor Antoninus Pius and his sons, he soon tells them bluntly
that despite their philosophic aspirations, they are not even
masters of their own minds. “Even now,” Justin warns the rulers
of the Roman world, “these demons seek to keep you as their
slaves, by preventing you from understanding what we say.”36
Their irrational public hatred of Christians proves, Justin says,
that their minds have been captured by the same evil spirits who
incited the Athenians to kill Socrates; now, for the same reason,
these spirits are driving them to kill Christians.
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Not long after Justin wrote to the emperors (and apparently
received no answer) he heard of a case involving the arrest of an
aristocratic woman convert. Before conversion, Justin says, she
had participated with her husband in drunken liaisons with their
household slaves and other people; but after baptism, she
became sober, refused to participate in such acts, and wanted to
divorce him. Her friends persuaded her to stay with him, hoping
for a reconciliation, and, Justin says, “she violated her own
feeling and remained with him.” But when she heard that her
husband, on a trip to Alexandria, had behaved worse than ever,
she demanded a divorce and left him. Her husband denounced
her to the authorities as a Christian, and although she succeeded
in delaying her own trial by appealing to the emperor, her
husband turned in fury against Porphyry, her teacher in
Christianity, and had him and several others summarily arrested
and executed.37
Alarmed and distressed by this judgment, Justin wrote a
second letter of protest, this time addressing himself to the
“sacred Senate.”38 Sometime later Justin himself was accused,
arrested, and interrogated. Rusticus, prefect of Rome, ordered
Justin and those of his students who were arrested with him to
“obey the gods and submit to the rulers.” When he was offered
acquittal from the death penalty if he sacrificed to the gods,
Justin defiantly refused: “No person in his right mind turns
from piety to impiety.” Rusticus again warned the accused of the
consequences, and then, finding them adamant, pronounced
sentence:
Let those who have refused to sacrifice to the gods and obey
the commands of the emperors be beaten and led away to
suffer the punishment of beheading, in accordance to the
laws.39
Having lost their case in the Roman court, Justin and his
companions walked toward the flagellation cell, consoling
themselves that they had nonetheless won the decisive battle;
they were triumphing over the demons, who wielded terror—
fear of pain and death—as their ultimate weapon.
Had the rulers whom Justin addressed actually read his petitions
(it is more likely that an imperial secretary deposited them
126 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
in a government archive), they would have regarded Justin’s
vision of the spiritual world with contempt.40 Marcus Aurelius,
well known from the writings preserved in his private journal,
probably would have detested Justin’s “Christian philosophy” as
obscenely grandiose—the opposite of what Marcus regarded as
the hard-won truths he himself had gained from philosophy.41
Marcus, revered during his reign as master of the civilized world
(c. 161-180), valued more than his imperial wealth and honors
the religious philosophy that helped him bear his responsi-
bilities and sustained him through loneliness, disappointment,
and grief. In his daily round of duties, Marcus constantly
invoked philosophic reflection to remind himself that he, like
everyone else, was subject to the forces that rule the universe.
Marcus was raised by his father, the emperor Antoninus Pius,
to rule. Reluctantly Marcus gave up philosophy, his first love, to
study such practical activities as martial arts, public speaking,
riding, and building a character suitable for an emperor. Marcus
praises his father as his greatest model of human character, and
praises the gods for all the circumstances of his life, especially for
his divinely given capacity “to imagine, clearly and often, a life
lived according to nature,” and for the “reminders—and, almost,
the instructions—of the gods,” who embody the forces of
nature.42
Although Marcus often expresses himself in the language of
traditional piety, he had adapted for himself the reflections of
certain Stoic teachers such as Musonius Rufus, who had
reinterpreted the “old gods”—Zeus, Hera, Aphrodite, Apollo—
as elements of the natural universe. In the process of demytholo-
gizing the ancient myths, Stoic philosophers tended to diminish
the uncanny, capricious, and hostile qualities that the ancient
poets Homer, Sappho, and Hesiod attributed to the gods.43
Marcus had come to believe that all gods and
daimones
(“spirit
beings”), however chaotic or even conflicting they appear, are
actually part of a single cosmic order.44 Alone, at night, writing in
his journal, perhaps in a tent encamped with his soldiers in the
alien wilderness along a tributary of the Danube or on the Hun-
SATAN’S EARTHLY KINGDOM / 127
garian plain, Marcus often expresses awe mingled with a clear
sense of the vulnerability of our fragile species. Yet he believes
that piety consists in willingly submitting to
nature, necessity,
and destiny,
terms Marcus regards as interchangeable. In his
mind there is no question but that we all are subject to these
cosmic forces; the only question is whether we can submit
ourselves to them with equanimity.
Speaking as a man trying to tame the passions of anger and
grief, Marcus continually reminds himself that “death, like
birth, is a mystery of nature,”45 each necessarily complementing
the other:
Everything that happens is as ordinary and predictable as the
spring rose or the summer fruit; this is as true of disease,
death, slander, and conspiracy as anything else. . . . So, then, if
a person has sensitivity and a deeper insight into the things
that happen in the universe, virtually everything, even if it be
only a by-product of something else, will contribute pleasure,
being, in its own way, a harmonious part of the whole.46
Recalling gladiatorial fights and shows featuring people being
torn to death bv wild animals, Marcus reflects that a true
philosopher
will look upon the actual gaping jaws of wild animals with no
less pleasure than upon artistic representations of them; and
will be able to appreciate, in old people, both men and women,
the quality of age, and look with tempered wisdom on the
erotic beauty of the young.47
Marcus speaks of “the gods” as the vast universal powers
through which our own individual lives are woven into the
fabric of existence, into which our elements eventually will
dissolve:
The human soul is most arrogant [
hybrystes
] when it becomes,
so far as it can, a kind of abscess or tumor in the universe. For to
complain at anything that happens is a rebellion against
nature.48
128 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
Acutely aware that catastrophe and good fortune “fall without
discrimination on those who are good and those who are evil,”
Marcus struggles to make sense of this fact. Does the universe
simply function chaotically, “with no design and no direction”?49
Does honesty require us to become atheists? But he rejects the
idea that life is meaningless, and says instead,
It is not a flaw in nature, as if nature were ignorant, or
powerless, or making mistakes, that good and evil things fall
without discrimination upon those who are good and those
who are evil.50
On the contrary, this indiscriminateness shows that “living
and dying, reputation and disgrace, pain and pleasure, wealth
and destitution, actually are neither good nor evil”; instead, all
alike are simply part of “nature's work.” What
does
involve good
and evil, however, is how we
respond
to what nature does:
The only thing that makes the good man unique is that he
loves and welcomes whatever happened, and what has been
spun for him by destiny; and . . . does not pollute the divine
daimon
within . . . harmoniously following god.51
Intent on transcending his own natural responses to betrayal
and loss—anger, self-pity, and grief—Marcus directs his whole
moral energy toward the discipline of practicing equilibrium,
often returning to what the ancients called “the unbearable
grief,” the loss of a child. Marcus and his wife, Faustina, like so
many of their contemporaries, experienced this repeatedly;
eleven of the fourteen children born to them had died in infancy
or childhood. During one of these crises Marcus wrote to
himself, “I see that my child is ill. I see. But I do not see that he is
in danger”52—since his philosophy insists that dying is
equivalent to living. Marcus chides himself harshly for his
impulse to pray, “Let my child be spared”53; even to long that his
child live and not die, Marcus believes, is to “complain against
nature.” Marcus consoles himself with the words of Epictetus,
one of the great Stoic masters: “When you are kissing your
child, whisper under your
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