Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
attack.
So compelling is this vision of cosmic war that it has pervaded
the imagination of millions of people for two thousand years.
Christians from Roman times through the Crusades, from the
Protestant Reformation through the present, have invoked it to
interpret opposition and persecution in myriad contexts. To this
day, many Christians—Roman Catholic, Protestant, Evangelical,
and Orthodox—invoke the figure of Satan against “pagans”
(among whom they may include those involved with non-
Christian religions throughout the world) and against “heretics”
(that is, against other Christians with whom they disagree), as
well as against atheists and unbelievers. Millions of Muslims
invoke similar apocalyptic visions and switch the sides, so that
those who Christians believe are God’s people become, for many
Muslims, allies of “the great Satan.”
Many religious people who no longer believe in Satan, along
with countless others who do not identify with any religious
tradition, nevertheless are influenced by this cultural legacy
whenever they perceive social and political conflict in terms of
the forces of good contending against the forces of evil in the
world. Although Karl Marx’s extreme and resolutely materialist
version of this apocalyptic vision is now nearly defunct, a
secularized version of it underlies many social and political
movements in Western culture, both religious and antireligious.
So long as the Christian movement remained a persecuted,
suspect minority within Jewish communities and within the
Roman empire, its members, like the Essenes, no doubt found a
sense of security and solidarity in believing that their enemies
were (as Matthew's Jesus says of the Pharisees) “sons of hell,”
CONCLUSION / 183
already, in effect, “sentenced to hell.” This vision derives its
power not only from the conviction that one stands on God’s
side, but also from the belief that one’s opponents are doomed to
fail. The words Matthew places in Jesus’ mouth characterize his
opponents as people accursed, whom the divine judge has
already consigned “into the eternal fire prepared for the devil
and his angels.”
Yet among first-century Christian sources we also find
profoundly different perceptions of opponents. Although
Matthew’s Jesus attacks the Pharisees and bitterly condemns
them, and John at one point characterizes Jesus’ opponents as
Satan’s progeny, the Q source that Matthew uses also suggests
different ways of perceiving others, in sayings attributed to
Jesus that urge reconciliation with one’s opponents:
If you are offering your gift at the altar, and there remember
that your brother has something against you, leave your gift
there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your
brother, and then come and offer your gift (5:23-24).
Or Matthew 5:43-44:
You have heard that it was said, “You shall love your neighbor
and hate your enemy.” But I say to you, “Love your enemies
and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be
children of your father in heaven.”
To pray for one’s enemies suggests that one believes that
whatever harm they have done, they are capable of being
reconciled to God and to oneself. Paul, writing about twenty
years before the evangelists, holds a still more traditionally
Jewish perception that Satan acts as God’s agent not to corrupt
people but to test them; at one point he suggests that a Christian
group “deliver to Satan” one of its errant members, not in order
to consign him to hell, but in the hope that he will repent and
change (1 Cor. 5:5). Paul also hopes and longs for reconciliation
between his “brothers,” “fellow Israelites,” and Gentile
believers (Rom. 9:3-4).
184 / CONCLUSION
Many Christians, then, from the first century through Francis
of Assisi in the thirteenth century and Martin Luther King, Jr.,
in the twentieth, have believed that they stood on God’s side
without demonizing their opponents. Their religious vision
inspired them to oppose policies and powers they regarded as
evil, often risking their well-being and their lives, while praying
for the reconciliation—not the damnation—of those who
opposed them.
For the most part, however, Christians have taught—and acted
upon—the belief that their enemies are evil and beyond
redemption. Concluding this book, I hope that this research may
illuminate for others, as it has for me, the struggle within
Christian tradition between the profoundly human view that
“otherness” is evil and the words of Jesus that reconciliation is
divine.
N O T E S
1. Martin Buber, cited in discussion with Malcolm Diamond, professor of
religion at Princeton University, May 1994.
2. Neil Forsyth,
The Old Enemy: Satan and the Combat Myth
(Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1987).
3. Walter Wink,
Unmasking the Powers: The Invisible Forces That Determine
Human Existence
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1986); C. G. Jung,
Answer to
Job
, trans. R. F. C. Hull (London: Routledge and Regan Paul, 1954).
4. Jeffrey B. Russell,
The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primi-
tive Christianity
(Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1970).
5. Robert Redfield, “Primitive World View,” in Redfield, ed.,
The Primitive
World and Its Transformations
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1953), 92.
6. Jonathan Z. Smith, “What a Difference a Difference Makes,” in Jacob
Neusner and Ernest S. Frerichs, etis.,
To See Ourselves As Others See Us:
Christians, Jews, “Others” in Late Antiquity
(Chico, Calif.: Scholars Press,
1985), 3-48.
7. William Scott Green, “Otherness Within: Towards a Theory of Differ-
ence in Rabbinic Judaism,” in Neusner and Frerichs, eds.,
To See Ourselves As
Others See Us
, 46-69.
8. Even a well-known passage in the Talmud assumes that Jewish courts
condemned and executed Jesus. See b. Sahn. 107b and parallel passages, b.
Sotha 47a and j. Hag. 2.2., part of the Gemara on Sanh. 10.2. For discussion, see
E. Bammel, “Christian Origins in Tradition,”
New Testament Studies
13 (1967):
317-35; see also David R. Catchpole,
The Trial of Jesus: A Study in the Gospels
and Jewish Historiography from 1770 to the Present Day
(Leiden: E. J. Brill,
1971), for a fascinating and detailed discussion of the history of scholarship on
this passage.
186 / NOTES
9. Barnabas Lindars,
New Testament Apologetic: The Doctrinal Significance of
the Old Testament Quotations
(London: SCM Press, 1973).
10. James Robinson,
The Problem of History in Mark
(London- SCM Press,
1957; reprinted, Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1982).
11. Albert Schweitzer,
The Quest of the Historical Jesus: A Critical Study of
Its Progress from Reimarus to Wrede
(London: A. and C. Black, 1926).
12. Josef Jacobs,
Jesus as Others Saw Him
(New York: B. G. Richards, 1925); H. Danby, “The Bearing of the Rabbinical Code on the Jewish Trial Narratives
in the Gospels,”
Journal of Theological Studies
21 (1920): 26-51; C. G.
Montefiori,
The Synoptic Gospels
I, 2nd rev. ed. (London: Macmillan, 1927);
Richard W. Husband,
The Prosecution of Jesus: Its Date, History and Legality
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1916); Josef Blinzler,
The Trial of Jesus:
Jewish and Roman Proceedings Against Jesus Christ
, trans. I. and F. McHugh,
2nd rev. ed. (Westminster, Md.: Newman, 1959).
13. Simon Bernlield, “Zur altesten Geschichte des Christentums,”
Jahrbücher fur Judische Geschichte und Literatur
13 (1910): 117.
14. Hans Lietzmann,
Synopsis of the First Three Gospels
, trans. F. L. Cross, 9th rev. ed. (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1968); Martin Dibelius,
Die Form-geschichte
des Evangeliums
(Tubingen: Mohr, 1919), trans, and reprinted in 1971;
Dibelius,
From Tradition to Gospel
(New York: Scribner, 1965), 178-219; John
R. Donahue,
Are You the Christ?
(Missoula, Mont.: Society of Biblical
Literature, 1973).
15. Paul Winter,
On the Trial of Jesus
, 2nd ed. (Berlin: De Gruyter, 1974); see also M. Radin,
The Trial of Jesus of Nazareth
(Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1931); J. Klausner,
Jesus von Nazareth, Seine Zeit, Sein Leben
und Seine Lehre
, 2nd ed. (Berlin: Judischer Verlag, 1934); E. G. Hirsch,
The
Crucifixion from the Jewish Point of View
(Chicago: Bloch Publishing &
Printing, 1921).
16. Fergus Millar, “Reflections on the Trial of Jesus,” in P. R. Davies and
R. White, eds.,
A Tribute to Geza Vermes: Essays on Jewish and Christian
Literature and History
(Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1990), 355-81.
17.
The Trial of Jesus; the Jewish and Roman Proceedings Against Jesus Christ
Described and Assessed from the Oldest Accounts
(Westminster, Md.: Newman,
1959), 290. See, for example, A. N. Sherwin-White,
Roman Society and Roman
Law in the New Testament
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983); T. A.
Burkill, “The Condemnation of Jesus: A Critique of Sherwin-White’s Thesis,”
Novum Testamentum
12 (1970):321-42; R. E. Brown,
The Death of the Messiah:
From Gethsemane to the Grave
(New York: Doubleday, 1994).
18. See Winter; Lietzmann; Dibelius; G. Volkmar,
Die Evangelien
(Leipzig:
Fues’ Verlag, 1870), 588-91; J. Norden, “Jesus von Nazareth in der Beurteilung
der Juden einst und jetzt,”
Judische Literarische Zeitung
(June 18, 1930): 25; S.
Grayzel,
A History of the Jews
(Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of
America, 1947), 1337; J. Isaac,
Jesus et Israel
(Paris: A. Michel, 1948), 509; G.
Bornkamm,
Jesus von Nazareth
(Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 1956), 1504; E.
P. Sanders,
Jesus and
NOTES / 187
Judaism
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), states that “Jesus was executed by the Romans as would-be ‘King of the Jews’ ” (p. 294) and also that internal conflict
among Jews was “the principal cause of Jesus’ death” (p. 296; cf. pp. 294-318). See
also the important article reviewing recent scholarship by G. S. Sloyan, “Recent
Literature on the Trial Narratives of the Four Gospels,” in T. J. Ryan, ed.,
Critical
History and Biblical Faith: New Testament Perspectives
(Villanova: Villanova
University Press, 1979), 136-76.
For a more technical discussion of the material in this chapter, see “The Social
History of Satan, Part II: Satan in the New Testament Gospels,”
Journal of the
American Academy of Religions
52/1 (February 1994): 201-41.
1. Josephus,
The Jewish War
1.1, Loeb edition, vol. 2, trans. H. St. J. Thack-ery (London: Heinemann, 1926). For an excellent recent discussion of
Josephus's works, see Shave J. D. Cohen,
Josephus in Galilee and Rome: His Vita
and Development as a Historian
(Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1979).
2. Josephus,
Life of Josephus
4, Loeb edition, vol. 1, trans. H. St. J. Thack-ery (London: Heinemann, 1926).
3. Josephus,
War
4.128.
4.
Ibid
., 4.146.
5.
Ibid
., 5.5.
6.
Ibid
., 5.430.
7.
Ibid
., 5.19.
8. For discussion of the dating of Mark, see Dennis E. Nineham,
The Gospel
of Mark
(Baltimore: Penguin, 1963); Vincent Taylor,
The Gospel According to
St. Mark
, 2nd ed. (London: Macmillan, 1966).
9. For discussion, see E. Pagels,
The Gnostic Gospels
(New York: Random
House, 1979); for a summary edition and translation of the texts, see James M.
Robinson, ed.,
The Nag Hammadi Library in English
(New York: Harper, 1977);
for Coptic texts, translation, and scholarly notes, see the series of over twenty
volumes published in Leiden by E. J. Brill as
Nag Hammadi Studies
.
10. Tacitus,
Annals
15.44, Loeb edition, trans. J. Jackson (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1931).
11. Cited in the excellent discussion by Brent D. Shaw, “Bandits in the Roman
Empire,”
Past and Present
165 (November 1984): 3-52. See also G. Humbert,
“Latrocinium,” in C. Davemberg and E. Saglio, eds.,
Dictionnaire des antiquités
grecques et romaines
iii, 2 (1904): 991-92; R. MacMullen, “Brigandage,” appendix B in
Enemies of the Roman Order: Treason, Unrest, and Alienation in the Empire
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1967), 255-68. E. J. Hobsbawm,
Bandits
(London: Penguin, 1969), singles out “social banditry”; Anton Block
criticizes his view in “The Peasant and the Brigand: Social Banditry Reconsidered,”