Satan?
“The Ruler of This World”
By Kyle Pope
W
hen
Satan tempted Jesus by offering Him rule over the earth if He would
worship
him, Luke 4:6 records Satan’s bold claim “all this authority…has
been delivered
to me” (NKJV). This is echoed in John 16:11 where Jesus
confirms his claim
identifying Satan as “the ruler of this world.” While these
statements declare
Satan’s rule over this world little is revealed about the nature
of this
rule or the circumstances under which it came to him.
Some
connect Satan’s rule with his fall. We actually know very little about the
fall
of Satan. The infamous Lucifer passage of Isaiah 14:12 has been
improperly
used to describe Satan’s fall, but the context makes it clear it is
talking about the
king of Babylon, not Satan (see. 14:3). Jesus declared, “I
saw Satan fall like
lightening from heaven,” but He does so in the context of
His disciples casting
out demons (Luke 10:18). Was Jesus talking about a past
fall or what happened
in the work of His disciples (i.e. Satan’s power being taken
away)?
In Revelation 12:7-12 it describes Satan and his angels being cast out
of heaven,
but it does so in the context of Christ’s victory over sin by His
blood. Whatever
power Satan had at the temptation of Christ in Luke 4:6 would
predate this.
If the book of Revelation is understood in terms of cycles that
describe the
same tribulation-deliverance pattern in different ways, the
binding of Satan
in Rev. 20:1-3 describes the same fall as 12:7-12. In either
case, neither of these
gives us an account of Satan being granted authority
over the earth.
What
we know about Satan’s fall comes more from inference than from direct statement.
For example, in the qualifications for elders given in 1Timothy 3:6, Paul warns
that if a novice was appointed he could be “puffed up with pride” leading him
to “fall into the same condemnation as the devil.” At the very least that
infers that in some way Satan’s pride led to his downfall and condemnation. What
is clear is that Satan has “sinned from the beginning” (1 John 3:8) which
likely refers to the beginning of this creation. He deceived the woman in the
garden and even still he “deceives the whole world” (Rev. 12:9). In the
parable of the wheat and the tares it is Satan who sows tares in the world
(Matt. 13:39). So, Satan in one sense is responsible for sin, even though each
of us individually is responsible when we give in to sin (James 1:14).
The
real questions that we wrestle with regarding Satan’s rule is what authority
does Satan actually possesses and in what sense was that authority “delivered
over” to him by God? If we go so far as to say that any sinful influence (or
authority) was established by God, it would make God the cause of sin (or
temptation). That is clearly not what the Bible teaches (James 1:13). On the
other hand, delivering something over to Satan does not have to express assent,
agreement, or approval. For example, in 1 Timothy 1:20, Paul “delivered”
Hymenaeus and Alexander to Satan (i.e. he gave them over to their desire to
follow Satan in their blasphemous behavior). The same is said of the man who
had his father’s wife, from whom the church in Corinth was to withdraw. Paul describes
this as the man being delivered “to Satan” (1 Cor. 5:5). For God to allow
Satan to tempt, deceive, and control the world through sin, does not make God
complicit in this temptation, it is simply allowing Satan to exercise this type
of influence. This may be the sense in which Satan’s power was “delivered” to
Him.
Yet,
what power (or authority) does Satan actually possess? In the temptation, Satan
offered Jesus rule over all kingdoms. Did he really have that power and if so
to what extent? It is true that often hardships of the flesh are attributed to
Satan. The woman with the flow of blood was said to be “bound by Satan” (Luke
13:16). Paul’s thorn in the flesh is called a “messenger of Satan” (2 Cor.
12:7). Yet, it is unclear how directly these things should be understood. It
may be that Satan is allowed to exercise some negative influence over nature.
On the other hand it may be that the fact that Satan’s influence over man in
the garden, which led to a world of sickness, death, hardship, and decay, means
that all natural hardship could be said to trace back to Satan as its cause. Most
of the “power” that Satan seems to possess concerns man’s spiritual state. We
know that when one follows the desires of Satan, he becomes a child of Satan
rather than a child of God (John 8:44). In 1 Tim. 5:15 Paul speaks of those
turning to sin as having “turned aside after Satan.” This is a personal choice
and not compulsion, but having followed Satan rather than God it puts one in
obedience to Satan rather than under the rule of God. It yields to Satan’s rule.
Hebrews 2:14 says that Satan had the “power of death,” and Jesus conquered this
in His death. Obedience to the gospel allows one deliverance from the “power
(or authority—exousia) of Satan” (Acts 26:18). If this is understood we
can see that Satan’s authority is much like the sense in which we in Christ are
part of His kingdom—it is dependent upon the assent of the governed. When I
submit myself to the reign of Christ, I am under His rule. When I submit myself
to the reign of Satan, I am under his rule.
One
final point should observed from Satan’s very name. Satan means “accuser.”
In Revelation 12:10 Satan is called “the accuser of our brethren” who accuses
them before God “day and night.” This comes in the context of the description
of his fall. This may give us more information about what God has allowed Satan
to do. To some extent Satan was granted the right to “accuse” human beings before
God. In Job 1:6-7 Satan appears in this role of the “accuser” with some right
to roam “to and fro” over the earth. In addition to Satan’s rule over man
through sin and death, it may be that this role of “accuser” is a power which
God has granted Satan. Yet, Christ’s death robs him of that power because it offers
the atonement for sin whereby the repentant Christian can no longer properly be
accused of sin.
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Pope, Kyle. "The Ruler of This World" Biblical Insights 11.9
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