Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
explains to Simon, Andrew, James, and John, who gather around
him, “that is what I came to do” (1:38).
During his next public appearance, as Mark tells it, the scribes
immediately took offense at what they considered his usurpation
of divine authority. In this episode Jesus speaks to a crowd
pressed together so tightly that when four men came carrying a
paralyzed man,
they could not get near him because of the crowd; so they
removed the roof above him; and when they had made an
opening, they let down the pallet on which the paralytic lay.
And when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “My
son, your sins are forgiven” (2:4-5).
By pronouncing forgiveness, Jesus claims the right to speak for
God—a claim that, Mark says, angers the scribes:
“Why does this man speak this way? It is blasphemy! Who can
forgive sins but God alone?” (2:7).
According to Mark, Jesus, aware of the scribes’ reaction,
immediately performs a healing in order to
prove
his authority to
his critics:
And immediately Jesus, perceiving in his spirit that they thus
questioned within themselves, said, “Why do you question
thus in your hearts? . . .
But so that you may know that the Son
of man has power on earth to forgive sins
”—he said to the
paralytic—“I say to you,
rise, take your pallet, and go home.
”
And he rose, and immediately picked up his pallet and went
out before them all, so that they were all astonished, . . . saying,
“We never saw anything like this!” (2:8-12, emphasis added).
When Jesus first appeared proclaiming “Repent: the Kingdom
of God is at hand!,” he must have sounded to many of his
contemporaries like one of the Essenes, who withdrew to the
wilder-
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ness in protest against ordinary Jewish life. From the desert caves
where they lived in monastic seclusion, the Essenes denounced
the priestly aristocratic leaders in charge of the Jerusalem
Temple—men like Josephus and those he admired—as being
hopelessly corrupted by their accommodation to Gentile ways,
and by collaboration with the Roman occupiers. The Essenes
took the preaching of repentance and God’s coming judgment to
mean that Jews must separate themselves from such polluting
influences and return to strict observance of God's law—
especially the Sabbath and kosher laws that marked them off
from the Gentiles as God’s holy people.25
But if Jesus sounded like an Essene, his actions violated the
standard of purity that Essenes held sacred. Instead of separating
himself from people who polluted themselves by “walking in
the ways of the Gentiles” (
Jubilees
1:9), Jesus chose for one of his
disciples a tax collector—a class that other Jews detested as
profiteers who collaborated with the hated Romans. Indeed,
Mark says, “There were many tax collectors who followed him”
(2:15). Instead of fasting, like other devout Jews, Jesus ate and
drank freely. And instead of scrupulously observing Sabbath
laws, Jesus excused his disciples when they broke them:
One Sabbath he was going through the grainfields; and as they
made their way, his disciples began to pick ears of grain. And
the Pharisees said to him, “Look, why are they doing what is
not lawful on the Sabbath?” And he said to them, “Have you
never read what David did, when he was in need and was
hungry, he and those who were with him: how he entered the
house of God . . . and ate the sacred bread,. . . and also gave it to
those who were with him?” (2:23-26).
Here Jesus dares claim, as precedent for his disciples’
apparently casual action, the prerogative of King David himself,
who, with his men, broke the sacred food laws during a wartime
emergency.
Claiming divine and royal power while simultaneously
violating the purity laws, Jesus, at the beginning of his public
activity,
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 19
outrages virtually every party among his contemporaries, from
the disciples of John the Baptist to the scribes and Pharisees.
The next time Jesus entered the synagogue on a Sabbath, Mark
says,
a man was there who had a withered hand. And they watched
him, to see whether he would heal him on the Sabbath, so that
they might accuse him. And he said to the man who had the
withered hand, “Come here.” And he said to them, “Is it
lawful on the Sabbath to do good or to do harm, to save life or
to kill?” But they were silent. And he looked around at them
with anger, grieved at their hardness of heart, and said to the
man, “Stretch out your hand.” He stretched it out, and his
hand was restored (3:1-5).
Instead of postponing the healing for a day, Jesus had chosen
deliberately to defy his critics by performing it on the Sabbath.
Seeing this, Mark says:
The Pharisees went out, and immediately conspired against
him with the Herodians [the party of King Herod], how they
might kill him (3:6).
For Mark the secret meaning of such conflict is clear. Those
who are offended and outraged by Jesus’ actions do not know
that Jesus is impelled by God’s spirit to contend against the
forces of evil, whether those forces manifest themselves in the
invisible demonic presences who infect and possess people, or in
his actual human opponents. When the Pharisees and Herodians
conspire to kill Jesus, they themselves, Mark suggests, are acting
as agents of evil. As Mark tells the story, Jesus has barely
engaged Satan’s power before his opponents “conspired . . . how
they might kill him” (3:6).
Mark suggests that Jesus recognizes that the leaders who
oppose him are energized by unseen forces. Immediately after
this powerful coalition has united against him, Jesus retaliates by
commissioning a new leadership group, “the twelve,” presum-
20 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
ably assigning one leader for each of the original twelve tribes of
Israel. Jesus orders them to preach and gives them “power to cast
out demons” (3:13).
This escalation of spiritual conflict immediately evokes
escalating opposition—opposition that begins at home, within
Jesus’ own family. Mark says that when Jesus “went home ... his
family . . . went out to seize him, for they said, ‘He is insane [or:
beside himself]’ ” (3:21 ).26 Next “the scribes who came down
from Jerusalem” charge that Jesus himself “is possessed by
Beelzebub; by the prince of demons he casts out demons” (3:22).
Jesus objects:
“How can Satan cast out Satan? If a kingdom is divided against
itself, that kingdom cannot stand. And if a house is divided
against itself, that house will not be able to stand. And if Satan
has risen up against himself and is divided, he cannot stand,
but is coming to an end. But no one can enter a strong man’s
house and plunder his goods unless he first binds the strong
man; then indeed he may plunder his house” (3:23-27).
According to Mark, it is apparently the “house of Israel” that
Jesus sees as a divided house, a divided kingdom. Jesus openly
contends against Satan, who he believes has overtaken God's
own household, which he has come to purify and reclaim: Jesus
wants to “bind this enemy” and “plunder his house.”
As for the scribes’ accusation that Jesus is possessed by the
“prince of demons,” he throws back upon them the same
accusation of demon-possession and warns that in saying this
they are sinning so deeply as to seal their own damnation (3:28-
30). For, he says, whoever attributes the work of God’s spirit to
Satan commits the one unforgivable sin:
“Truly, I say to you, all sins will be forgiven to human beings,
and whatever blasphemies they utter; but whoever
blasphemes against the holy spirit is never forgiven, but is
guilty of an eternal sin”—because they said, “He is possessed
by an evil spirit” (3:28-30).
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 21
Mark deliberately places these scenes of Jesus’ conflict with
the scribes between two episodes depicting Jesus’ conflict with
his own family. Immediately after this, the Greek text of Mark
says that members of the family, who had previously declared
him insane and had tried to seize him (3:21), now come to the
house where he is addressing a large crowd and ask to see him.
Jesus repudiates them:
And his mother and brothers came, and standing outside they
sent to him, and called him. And a crowd was sitting about
him, and they said to him, “Your mother and your brothers are
outside, asking for you.” And looking around at those who sat
around him, he said, “Here are my mother and brothers! For
whoever does the will of God is my brother, and sister, and
mother” (3:31-35).
Having formed a new family, and having appointed twelve
new leaders for Israel to replace the old ones, Jesus has, Mark
suggests, “re-formed God's people.” From this point on, Jesus
sharply discriminates between those he has chosen, the inner
circle, and “those outside.” He still draws enormous crowds, but
while teaching them, he offers riddling parables, deliberately
concealing his full meaning from all but his intimates:
Again he began to teach beside the sea. And a very large crowd
gathered about him . . . and he taught them many things in
parables. . . . And when he was alone, those who were around
him with the twelve asked him about the parables. And he said
to them, “
To you has been given the secret of the Kingdom of
God, but for those outside everything is in parables; so that they
may indeed see but not perceive; and they may hear but not
understand; lest they should turn again, and be forgiven
” (4:1-
12, emphasis added).
Although he often criticizes the disciples—in 8:33 he even
accuses Peter of playing Satan’s role—Jesus shares secrets with
them that he hides from outsiders, for the latter, he says, quoting
Isaiah, are afflicted with impenetrable spiritual blindness.27
22 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
Criticized by the Pharisees and the Jerusalem scribes for not
living “according to the traditions of the elders” because he and
his disciples eat without washing their hands, Jesus, instead of
defending his action, attacks his critics as “hypocrites” and
charges that they value their own traditions while breaking
God’s commandments. Then he publicly calls into question the
kosher laws themselves—again explaining his meaning to his
disciples alone:
And he called the people to him again, and said to them, “Hear
me, all of you, and understand; there is nothing outside a man
which by going into him can defile him; but the things which
come out of a man are what defile him.” And when he had
entered the house, and left the people, his disciples asked him
about the parable. And he said to them, “Are you, too, without
understanding? Do you not see that whatever goes into a man
from outside cannot defile him, since it enters not his heart but
his stomach, and so passes out of him? What comes out of a
man is what defiles him; for from within, from the human
heart, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, . .
. envy, pride, foolishness. . . . All these evils come from
within” (7:14-23).
Here Mark wants to show that although Jesus discards
traditional kosher (“purity”) laws, he advocates instead purging
the “heart”—that is, impulses, desires, and imagination.
Now that Jesus has alienated not only the scribes, Pharisees,
and Herodians, but also his relatives and many of his own
townspeople, he travels with his small band of disciples,
preaching to the crowds. Anticipating what lies ahead of him in
Jerusalem, where he will challenge the priestly party on its own
ground, Jesus nevertheless resolutely leads his followers there,
walking ahead of them, while “they were astonished, and those
who followed were terrified” (10:32). On the way he tells the
twelve exactly whom they are to blame for his impending death:
“The chief priests and scribes . . . will condemn [the Son of
man] to death, and hand him over to the nations, and they
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 23
will mock him and spit upon him, and scourge him and kill
him” (10:33).
Opposition to Jesus intensifies after he enters Jerusalem.
Having prepared a formal procession to go into the city, Jesus is
openly acclaimed, in defiance of the Romans, as the man who
comes to restore Israel’s ancient empire: “Blessed is the kingdom
of our father David that is coming!” Then, with his followers, he
enters the great Temple and makes a shocking public
demonstration there:
He entered the Temple, and began to drive out those who sold
and those who bought in the Temple, and he overturned the
tables of the money changers and the seats of those who sold