Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
supernatural forces that Mark sees being played out on earth in
Jesus’ lifetime. Mark intends to tell the story of Jesus in terms of
its hidden, deeper dynamics—to tell it, so to speak, from
God’s
point of view.
What happened, Mark says, is this: Jesus of Nazareth, after
his baptism, was coming out of the water of the Jordan River
when “he saw the heavens torn apart and the spirit descending
like a dove on him” and heard a voice speaking to him from
heaven (1:10-11). God’s power anointed Jesus to challenge the
forces of evil that now dominate the world, and drove him into
direct conflict with those forces.20 Mark frames his narrative at
its beginning and at its climax with episodes in which Satan and
his demonic forces retaliate against God by working to destroy
Jesus. Mark begins by describing how the spirit of God
descended upon Jesus at his baptism, and “immediately drove
him into the wilderness,
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and he was in the wilderness forty days being tempted by Satan,
and was with the animals, and the angels ministered to him”
(1:12-13). From that moment on, Mark says, even after Jesus left
the wilderness and returned to society, the powers of evil
challenged and attacked him at every turn, and he attacked them
back, and won. Matthew and Luke, writing some ten to twenty
years later, adopted and elaborated this opening scenario. Each
turns it into a drama of three temptations, that is, three
increasingly intense confrontations between Satan and the spirit
of God, acting through Jesus. Luke shows that the devil,
defeated in these first attempts to overpower Jesus, withdraws
“until an opportune time” (Luke 4:13). Luke then says what
Mark and Matthew imply—that the devil returned in person in
the form of Judas Iscariot to destroy Jesus, initiating the betrayal
that led to his arrest and execution (Luke 22:3). All of the New
Testament gospels, with considerable variation, depict Jesus’
execution as the culmination of the struggle between good and
evil—between God and Satan—that began at his baptism.
Satan, although he seldom appears onstage in these gospel
accounts, nevertheless plays a central role in the divine drama,
for the gospel writers realize that the story they have to tell
would make little sense
without
Satan. How, after all, could
anyone claim that a man betrayed by one of his own followers,
and brutally executed on charges of treason against Rome, not
only
was
but still
is
God's appointed Messiah,
unless
his capture and death were, as the gospels insist, not a final defeat but only a
preliminary skirmish in a vast cosmic conflict now enveloping
the universe? The final battle has not yet been fought, much less
won, but it is imminent. As Jesus warns his interrogator at his
trial, soon he will be vindicated when the “Son of man” returns
in the clouds of heaven (Mark 14:62); here Mark has Jesus recall
one of the prophet Daniel’s visions, in which “one like a son of
man” (that is, a human being), comes “with the clouds of
heaven” and is made ruler of God’s Kingdom (Dan. 7:13-14).
Many of Mark’s contemporaries would have read Daniel’s
prophecy as predicting the coming of a conqueror who would
defeat Israel’s foreign rulers.
While at first glance the gospel of Mark may look like histori-
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 13
cal biography, it is not so simple as this, for Mark does not intend
to write history, as Josephus had, primarily to persuade people of
the accuracy of his account of recent events and make them
comprehensible on a human level. Instead Mark wants to show
what these events mean for the future of the world, or, in the
scholarly jargon, eschatologically. Mark and his colleagues
combine a biographical form with themes of supernatural
conflict borrowed from Jewish apocalyptic literature to create a
new kind of narrative. These gospels carry their writers’
powerful conviction that Jesus’ execution, which had seemed to
signal the victory of the forces of evil, actually heralds their
ultimate annihilation and ensures God’s final victory.21
Many liberal-minded Christians have preferred to ignore the
presence of angels and demons in the gospels. Yet Mark intends
their presence to address the anguished question that the events
of the previous decades had aroused: How could God allow such
death and destruction? For Mark and his fellows, the issue of
divine justice involves, above all, the issue of human violence.
The gospel writers want to locate and identify the specific ways
in which the forces of evil act
through certain people
to effect
violent destruction, above all, in Matthew’s words, “the
righteous blood shed on earth, from the blood of innocent Abel
to the blood of Zechariah the son of Barachiah” (23:35)—
violence epitomized in the execution of Jesus, which Matthew
sees as the culmination of all evils. The subject of cosmic war
serves primarily to interpret human relationships—especially
all-too-human conflict—in supernatural form. The figure of
Satan becomes, among other things, a way of characterizing one’s
actual enemies as the embodiment of transcendent forces. For
many readers of the gospels ever since the first century, the
thematic opposition between God’s spirit and Satan has
vindicated Jesus’ followers and demonized their enemies.
But how does the figure of Satan characterize the enemy?
What is Satan, and how does he appear on earth? The New
Testament gospels almost never identify Satan with the Romans,
but they consistently associate him with Jesus’ Jewish enemies,
primarily Judas Iscariot and the chief priests and scribes. By
placing
14 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
the story of Jesus in the context of cosmic war, the gospel writers
expressed, in varying ways, their identification with the
embattled minority of Jews who believed in Jesus, and their
distress at what they saw as the apostasy of the majority of their
fellow Jews in Jesus’ time, as well as in their own. As we shall
see, Jesus’ followers did not
invent
the practice of demonizing
enemies within their own group, although Christians (and
Muslims after them) carried this practice further than their
Jewish predecessors had taken it, and with enormous
consequences.
Yet who actually
were
Jesus’ enemies? What we know
historically suggests that they were the Roman governor and his
soldiers. The charge against Jesus and his execution were
typically-Roman. The Roman authorities, ever watchful for any
hint of sedition, were ruthless in suppressing it. The historian
Mary Smallwood observes that rounding up and killing
troublemakers, especially those who ignited public
demonstrations, was a routine measure for Roman forces
stationed in Judea.22 During the first century the Romans
arrested and crucified thousands of Jews charged with sedition—
often, Philo says, without trial. But as the gospels indicate, Jesus
also had enemies among his fellow Jews, especially the Jerusalem
priests and their influential allies, who were threatened by his
activities.
The crucial point is this:
Had Jesus’ followers identified
themselves with the majority of Jews rather than with a particular
minority, they might have told his story very differently—and
with considerably more historical plausibility.
They might have
told it, for example, in traditional patriotic style, as the story of
an inspired Jewish holy man martyred by Israel’s traditional
enemies, foreign oppressors of one sort or another. The biblical
book of Daniel, for example, which tells the story of the prophet
Daniel, who, although threatened with a horrible death—being
torn apart by lions—nevertheless defies the king of Babylon in
the name of God and of the people of Israel (Dan. 6:1-28). The
first book of Maccabees tells the story of the priest Mattathias,
who defies Syrian soldiers when they order him to worship
idols. Mattathias chooses to die rather than betray his devotion
to God.23
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 15
But unlike the authors of Daniel or 1 Maccabees, the gospel
writers chose to
dissociate
themselves from the Jewish majority
and to focus instead upon intra-Jewish conflict—specifically
upon their own quarrel with those who resisted their claims that
Jesus was the Messiah. Within the gospels, as we shall see, the
figure of Satan tends to express this dramatic shift of blame from
“the nations”—
bagoyim
, in Hebrew—onto members of Jesus’
own people. The variation in each gospel as it depicts the activity
of the demonic opposition—that is, those perceived as enemies—
expresses, I believe, a variety of relationships, often deeply
ambivalent, between various groups of Jesus’ followers and the
specific Jewish groups each writer regards as his primary
opponents. I want to avoid oversimplification. Nonetheless it is
probably fair to say that in every case the decision to place the
story of Jesus within the context of God's struggle against Satan
tends to minimize the role of the Romans, and to place
increasing blame instead upon Jesus’
Jewish
enemies.
This is not to say that the gospel writers simply intended to
exonerate the Romans. Mark surely was aware that during his
time, and for some thirty years after the war, the Romans
remained wary of renewed sedition. Members of a group loyal to
a condemned seditionist were at risk, and Mark probably hoped
to persuade those outsiders who might read his account that
neither Jesus nor his followers offered any threat to Roman
order. But within Mark’s account, the Romans, even the few
portrayed with some sympathy, remain essentially outsiders.
Mark tells the story of Jesus in the context that matters to him
most—within the Jewish community. And here, as in most
human situations, the more intimate the conflict, the more
intense and bitter it becomes.
Mark opens his narrative with the account of John's baptizing
Jesus and relates that at the moment of baptism the power of
God descended upon Jesus, and “a voice spoke from heaven,
saying ‘This is my beloved son’ ” (1:11). At that moment, all
human beings disappear from Mark’s narrative and, as we have
seen, the spirit of God drives Jesus into the wilderness to
encounter Satan, wild animals, and angels. Recounting this
episode, as James Robinson notes, Mark does not depart from
events in the human,
16 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
historical world but signals that he wants to relate these events
to the struggle between good and evil in the universe.24 Mark’s
account, then, moves direcdy from Jesus’ solitary struggle with
Satan in the desert to his first public appearance in the synagogue
at Capernaum, where immediately on the Sabbath he entered the
synagogue and taught.
And they were astonished at his teaching, for he taught as one
who had authority, and not as the scribes (1:22).
There Jesus encounters a man possessed by an evil spirit who,
sensing Jesus’ divine power, challenges him: “What have you to
do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us?”
(1:24). According to Mark, Jesus has come to heal the world and
reclaim it for God; in order to accomplish this, he must overcome
the evil powers who have usurped authority over the world, and
who now oppress human beings. So, Mark says,
Jesus rebuked him, saying, “Be silent, and come out of him!”
And the unclean spirit, convulsing him and crying with a loud
voice, came out of him, and they were all amazed, so that they
questioned among themselves, saying, “What is this? New
teaching! With authority he commands even the unclean
spirits, and they obey him.” And at once his fame spread
everywhere throughout all the surrounding region of Galilee
(1:25-28).
Even in this first episode, the astonished crowds recognize
that Jesus possesses a special authority, direct access to God’s
power. Jesus’ power manifests itself especially in action, since
Mark does not here record what Jesus taught. Even in this first
public challenge to the forces of evil, Mark shows how Jesus’
power sets him in contrast—and soon into direct conflict—with
the scribes commonly revered as religious authorities. Mark's
point is to demonstrate that, as he says, Jesus "taught as one who
had authority, and not as the scribes" (1:22).
Throughout this opening chapter, Mark emphasizes that Jesus
healed “many who were sick with various diseases” and “drove
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 17
out many demons” (1:34). He traveled throughout Galilee
“preaching in the synagogues and casting out demons,” for, as he