Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
governors, as those sent by him to punish those who do wrong
and praise those who do not. ... As slaves of God, live as free
people. . . . Honor all people. Love the brotherhood. Fear God.
Honor the emperor (1 Pet. 2:13-16).
SATAN’S EARTHLY KINGDOM / 147
What
was
revolutionary, however, was that Christians
professed primary allegiance to God. Such allegiance could
divide one's loyalties; it challenged each believer to do
something most pagans had never considered doing—decide for
oneself which family and civic obligations to accept, and which
to reject.
Tertullian, for example, who lived in a world where what we
call freedom of religion was alien or unknown, nevertheless
claims such liberty for himself and censures the emperors for
“taking away religious liberty [
libertatem religionis
] so that I may
no longer worship according to my inclination, but am compelled
to worship against it.”105 Origen, as we have noted, defending
Christians against charges of illegality, dares argue that people
constrained by an evil government are right not only to disobey
its laws but even to revolt and to assassinate tyrannical rulers:
It is not irrational to form associations contrary to the existing
laws, if it is done for the sake of the truth. For just as those
people would do well who enter a secret association in order to
kill a tyrant who had seized the liberties of a state, so
Christians also, when tyrannized ... by the devil, form
associations contrary to the devil's laws, against his power, to
protect those whom they succeed in persuading to revolt
against a government which is barbaric and despotic.106
Such convictions did not arise from a sense of the “rights of
the individual,” a conception that emerged only fifteen hundred
years later with the Enlightenment. Instead they are rooted in
the sense of being God's people, enrolled by baptism as “citizens
in heaven,” no longer subject merely to "the rulers of this
present evil age,” the human authorities and the demonic forces
that often control them.
A hundred years after the gospels were written, then,
Christians adapted to the circumstances of pagan persecution the
political and religious model they found in those gospels—God’s
people against Satan’s people—and identified themselves as allies
of God, acting against Roman magistrates and pagan mobs,
148 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
whom they see as agents of Satan. At the same time, as we shall
see in the next chapter, church leaders troubled by dissidents
within
the Christian movement discerned the presence of Satan
infiltrating among the most intimate enemies of all—other
Christians, or, as they called them, heretics.
VI
THE ENEMY WITHIN:
DEMONIZING THE HERETICS
During the second century Christianity's success in attracting
converts raised new questions about what “being a Christian”
required. Within provincial cities throughout the empire,
Christian groups gained many thousands of new converts.
Especially in the cities, conversion aroused conflict within
households. When heads of wealthy households converted,
they often required their families and slaves to accept baptism.
More often, however, conversions occurred among the women
of the household, as well as among merchants, traders, soldiers,
and the hundreds of thousands of slaves serving in every
capacity in Roman apartments, great houses, and palaces.
Conversions may even have happened within the emperor's
household. Tertullian, writing in the city of Carthage in North
Africa (c. 180) boasts to his pagan contemporaries that “we are
only of yesterday, and we have filled every place among you:
city, islands, fortresses, towns, market places, the army camp,
tribes, palace, senate, and forum.”1 All converts understood, of
course, that baptism washes away sins and expels evil spirits, and
conveys to the recipient the spirit of God, the spirit that
transforms a sinner into an ally of Christ and his angels. But then
what? What does a Christian have to do to stand “on the side of
the angels” in this world? What precisely is required if, for
example, the baptized Christian is married to a pagan, or is a
soldier, who has sworn allegiance to the emperor, or is a slave?
Most pagans regarded the baptism of a family mem-
150 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
ber or a slave as a calamity portending disruption within the
household. Tertullian himself describes how pagans ostracized
converts:
The husband casts the wife out of his house; the father
disinherits the son; the master, once gentle, now commands
the slave out of his sight; it is a huge offense for anyone to be
called by that detested name [Christian].2
Among themselves, Christians debated whether converts
should maintain ordinary social and familial relationships or
break them, as Jesus in the gospels required when he said,
“Whoever does not hate his father and mother, wife and
children, brothers and sisters, yes, even life itself, cannot be my
disciple” (Luke 14:26). Such questions evoked many different
answers as the movement increased in size and diversity
throughout the empire. Sometimes in one city there were several
groups, each interpreting “the gospel” somewhat differently and
often contending against one another with all the vehemence
ordinarily reserved for family quarrels. The apostle Paul himself,
confronted two generations earlier by rival teachers, tried to
prevent them from speaking, calling them Satan’s servants,
false aposdes, deceptive workers, disguising themselves as
apos-des of Christ. And no wonder! Even Satan himself
disguises himself as an angel of light. So it is not strange if his
servants disguise themselves as servants of righteousness (2
Cor. 11:13-15).
“But,” Paul adds ominously, “in the end they will get what
they deserve.” Christians dreaded Satan’s attacks from outside—
that is, from hostile pagans—but many of them believed that
even more dangerous were Satan’s forays among the most
intimate enemies of all—other Christians, or, as most said of
those with whom they disagreed, among heretics.
Within the movement, some people began to develop systems
of organization to unify Christian groups internally, and to
connect them with other Christian groups throughout the
Roman
THE ENEMY WITHIN / 151
world. The authority all Christians acknowledged, besides that
of Jesus himself, was that of the apostles Peter, traditionally
revered as the first leader of Christians in Rome, and Paul,
founder of churches ranging from Greece to Asia Minor. Some
Christians, two or three generations after Paul, wrote letters
attributed to Peter and Paul, including First Peter and the letters
of Paul to Timothy. These letters, later included in the New
Testament and widely believed to have been written by the
apostles themselves, attempted to construct a bridge between the
apostles and Christians of later generations by claiming, for
example, that Paul had “laid hands” on his young convert
Timothy to ordain him as “overseer” or “bishop” of the
congregation as Paul’s successor. These letters are meant to show
that, like Timothy, bishops legitimately exercise “apostolic”
authority over their congregations. Those who wrote First Peter
and First Timothy were also concerned to deflect pagan hostility
to Christians by modifying some of the more strident demands
the gospels attribute to Jesus. Needing codes of conduct that
offered moral guidance to those who were married and engaged
in ordinary society and were not prepared to reject these
commitments as, according to Luke, Jesus admonishes, these
authors borrowed from pagan catalogues of civic virtue to
construct new, “Christian” moral codes. As New Testament
scholar David Balch has shown, these letters cast Peter and Paul
in the unlikely role of urging believers to emulate conventional
Roman behavior.3 So, in First Peter, “Peter” urges believers, “For
the sake of the Lord, accept the authority of every human
institution” (2:13), specifically that of the emperor and his
government. “Peter” also insists that believers carry out essential
household responsibilities; wives must “accept the authority of
your husbands, even if some of them do not obey the Word”
(3:1); and husbands should “honor the woman, as the weaker
vessel” (3:7). Slaves are to serve their masters as if serving the
Lord himself, and masters, in turn, are not to mistreat their
slaves; children are to show their parents appropriate deference
and obedience (2:18-22; 5:5). In First Timothy, likewise, “Paul”
offers Timothv similar moral advice, which he tells the young
bishop, in turn, to enjoin upon his congregation.
152 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
But not everyone accepted these codes of conduct or the
leaders determined to enforce them. Around 90 C.E., a famous
letter attributed to Clement, a man regarded by many as the
second or third bishop of Rome, after the apostle Peter, and
written to Christians in the Greek city of Corinth, the site of a
church originally founded by Paul himself, shows that the
community was in an uproar over a matter of leadership.4 In this
letter, Bishop Clement expresses distress that those he calls “a
few rash and self-willed people”3 are refusing to accept the
superior authority of the priests who he insists are their proper
leaders. Such dissidents have initiated what Clement calls a
“horrible and unholy rebellion”6 within the church. They have
rejected several priests set over them; apparently they also object
that distinctions between “clergy” and “laity”—between those
who claim to hold positions of authority and those they now call
“the people” (in Greek,
loos
)—are not only unprecedented but
unacceptable among Christians.
Denying the dissidents’ charge that clerical ranks are an
innovation, Clement, like the author of First Timothy, insists
that the aposdes themselves “appointed their first converts . . . to
be bishops and deacons.” Clement invokes the authority of the
prophet Isaiah, making a farfetched claim that in ancient times
Isaiah had already endorsed the “offices” of bishop and deacon.
Clement cites Isaiah 60:17 (“I will make your
overseers
peace,
and your
taskmasters
righteousness”), and interprets the key
terms (“bishops” and “deacons,” respectively), translated into
Greek, to suit his argument.
Clement also appeals to the letters of Paul to Timothy to argue
that “the apostles themselves appointed their first converts as
‘bishops’ and ‘deacons.’ ” Although Clement writes at about the
same time as the authors of Matthew and Luke, who depict the
Jewish high priests as Jesus’ enemies, Clement encourages
Christians to imitate the Jewish priesthood. Among Christians,
as formerly among Jews, Clement says, the high priests and the
subordinate priests are divinely ordained for special duties,
while “the layperson is bound by the order for laypeople.”7
Clement even urges his fellow Christians to emulate the Roman
army:
THE ENEMY WITHIN / 153
Let us then serve in our army, brethren. . . . Let us consider
those who serve as our generals. . . . Not all are prefects, nor
tribunes, nor centurions, nor commanders, or the like, but each
carries out in his own rank the commands of the emperor and
of the generals.8
Later, Christians actually did adapt from Roman army
administration the practice of organizing into districts (dioceses),
each administered by a central overseer (bishop), an organiza-
tional strategy that persists to this day.
As bishop, Clement describes the dissidents’ position as
having arisen from arrogance and jealousy. “Even the apostles,”
he says, “knew that there would be strife over the title of
bishop” (1
Clement
14:1). The remedy, Clement continues, is for