THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
Dr. W.A. Criswell
Ezekiel 28:13-19
5-26-85 10:50 a.m.
And
all of us welcome the multitudes of you who are listening with us in open heart
to the Word of God on radio and on television. This is the pastor bringing the
message entitled: The Origin of Evil, The Origin of Satan. And it
is from the Book of Ezekiel, chapter 28, beginning at verse 11. And you can
turn to that passage in the Bible and then wait for a moment as I introduce the
sermon with an extended introduction.
No
one of us but is aware of the glory and majesty and omnipotence of God
evidenced in the created world above us and around us. The nineteenth Psalm
begins: “The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth His
handiwork, His lace work.” All of the glory and wonder and omnipotence of the
Lord God is seen in the starry heavens and in the beautiful and verdant earth
all around us. But no one of us can but sense the sinister shadow over all of
God’s creation. In the evidences of His Almightiness, there are no less
evidences of the destructive power of a sinister force in the universe. It is
seen everywhere. We live in a fallen creation. There are burned out stars and
there are black holes throughout it.
And
the apostle Paul writes in the eighth chapter of Romans that the whole creation
“groaneth and travaileth in agony and sorrow until now” [Romans 8:22]. And
in that creation, the man that the Lord made is the most pitiful and sad of all
of the works of His hands. He lives in a world of sin, and of sorrow, and of
tears, and of disease, and of age, and death. How do you explain this world and
this creation with its illimitable and unbounding sorrows and tears? Here the
atheist has a field day. He says in sarcasm and in derision, “Look at your
God. You say He made this world. Then look how he made it so burdened and
flooded with illimitable lack and sorrow and tears.” And in the perverted
mentality of the atheist, the mocker, and the scoffer at the idea of God, they
have a blame giving day, mocking our Thanksgiving Day, and they sing a doxology
and the doxology is this:
Blame God from whom all
cyclones blow.
Blame God when rivers
overflow.
Blame God who swirls down
house and steeple,
Who sinks the ships and
drowns the people.
[author
unknown]
This
is the mocking derisive answer of the atheist to us who say that God made this
world.
Then
let the atheist explain it. It is a reality and for us not to accept it and
look at it would be of all things most unconscionable and blind. Then looking
at the creation, and looking at the world, and looking at us, where we came
from, our destiny that lies before us, let the atheist, and the materialist,
and the secularist, and the humanist explain it. How do they avow it? Well,
they say that somehow nothing created something. Nothing out of nothing came
matter, materiality. Then they go a second step. Out of inert matter there
was created of itself human personality. We came out of inert, dead matter.
And out of that matter, there came human life and human personality. Then
their third and final step is that in the process of evolution we shall find
ourselves free of sin and disease; and we shall progress and evolve into
angelic orders of heavenly perfection.
For
example, the brilliant evolutionist, and American historian, and Harvard professor
John Fistz wrote saying:
Sin
is nothing more nor less than the brute inheritance which every man carries with
him. His animal ancestors and the process of evolution is an advance toward
the true salvation. We are stumbling now, but upward and finally, we will
evolve out of the sin and the disease and the death that decimates us.
Now
I have trouble with that from both ends of it. I have trouble with it at the
beginning end. How is it that nothing created matter? Nothing that we ever
observed creates something. That is not demonstrable and these are supposed to
be scientists. They do research. They study. They tell us the results of
their observations. Where do you find that observation that out of nothing is
created something? I don’t see it at the beginning end. I don’t see it at the
beginning end. I don’t see matter creating life. Matter is dead. Everywhere
we see matter, it is inert. And matter does not create personality. I have trouble,
I say, from the beginning end of it.
I
no less have trouble from the end of it; from the other side of it. I don’t
see evolution advancing us out of our depravity and our iniquity. In the Stone
Age of our human life, we killed one another with a club. Then we evolved and
we learned to kill each other with a sword. Then we progressed and we learned
to kill each other with a gun. Then we further progressed and we learned to
kill each other with a cannon and with artillery. And then we further advanced
to this present age where we are learning to kill each other by raining fire
and bombs down on us from the sky, before which we cringe every political and
national day of our lives.
There
has never been an instrument of destruction that has not been used against
mankind, never. There is no doubt but that we progress in science and in
understanding from a lesser ability to a greater ability. But there is no
evidence in human history that we have ever progressed from bad to good; from
evil to perfection. We are no better today than Abraham was when he walked on
the ground or rode on a beast. The fact that we can sail through the sky in a
jetliner has no meaning whatsoever in our progress from bad to good.
Evil
is present with us. And the world around us is fallen. And the whole creation
of God has been blasted and cursed by some kind of a sinister catastrophe. I
do not think there will ever be an explanation for what we see and feel and
endure in any kind of atheistic, or materialistic, or agnostic, or secular, or
humanistic approach.
That
leads me to the Word of God. The Word of God reveals to us the whole matter,
the whole substance, and it goes like this: God’s revealed Word says to us
there is another world beyond what we see with our physical eyes. Beyond this
earth and beyond the materiality of the ground upon which we walk and beyond
the physical that makes up the outward human body of a man, beyond this present
sensual world, there is another world. There is a world of spirit. There is a
world of God and there is a world of angelic orders. And that is described in
the twenty-eighth chapter of the Book of Ezekiel. In the twenty-eighth chapter
of Ezekiel, the prophet addresses the prince of Tyre, the nagiyd, the
governor, the commander, the leader.
Then,
beginning at verse 11 he directs his word to a melek, to a king, and
beyond that king of Tyre, there is a person. And he describes this person:
The
word of the Lord came unto me saying,
Son
of man, thus saith the Lord God to the melek of Tyre, representing this
tremendous person who is thus described; Thou sealest up the sum, full of
wisdom, and perfect in beauty.
Thou
hast been in Eden the garden of God; every precious stone was thy covering.
Thou
art the anointed cherub that covereth; I have set thee so; thou wast upon the
holy mountain of God; thou hast walked up and down in the midst of the stones
of fire.
Thou
wast perfect in thy ways from the day that thou was created, until iniquity was
found in thee.
--Verse
17—
Thine
heart was lifted up because of thy beauty, thou hast corrupted thy wisdom by
reason of thy brightness.
And
you have a like description of that heavenly being in the fourteenth chapter of
Isaiah beginning at verse 12: “How art thou fallen from heaven, O heylel
morning star, shining star.” The Latin translation is Lucifer, light bearer.
How art thou fallen from heaven:
O
Lucifer, son of the dawn.
How
thou art cut down to the ground!
For
thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my
throne by the stars of God: I will sit upon the mount of the congregation.
I
will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the Most High.
Yet
thou shalt be brought down to hell, to the sides of the pit.
[Isaiah
14:12-15]
In
this angelic host of the Lord God in heaven, above the archangels, and above
the seraphim, and above the cherubim, and above all the orders of celestial
beings there was one that God chose to be the crown prince of them all. His
name is Lucifer, the star of the morning, the leader of the hosts of heaven, the
guardian of the throne of God. And into his hands, into Lucifer’s hand was
committed, all that the Lord God had made and all of the angels that He had
created. He was beautiful. He was perfect. And in his beauty and in his perfection,
he said in his pride, “I will be God.”
You
have an identical illustration of that in the beautiful, marvelously gifted son
of David named Absalom. Absalom was lifted up because of his beauty, and
because of his perfection, and because of his strength. And he stole away the
hearts of the people of Israel; rebelled against David. And had it not been
for the intervention of heaven, Absalom would have slain his own father and
crowned himself as the king of the people of God. That is exactly what
happened in the life of Lucifer, in his pride, in his beauty, in his glory,
lifted up. He rebelled against God! “I will be God!” And he drew with him
according to the twelfth chapter of the Revelation, one-third of the angelic
hosts of heaven [Revelation 12:4].
Always
something tragic happens when sin enters into the universe, when sin enters
into the human life. There is no exception to that. When sin enters into a
house, when sin enters into a home, when sin enters into a bank, when sin
enters into a corporation, when sin enters into a political party, when sin
enters into a nation or its national life, there is no exception to it. When
sin enters into the heart, when sin enters into the life of young people or
teenagers, when sin enters it creates chaos and havoc! And thus it happened in
the beginning of this fall of God’s universe.
First,
the angels who rebelled against God fell. They are demons and some of them are
imprisoned in darkness against the great day of judgment, and some of them are
in this world; innumerable. But the tragedy of all tragedies beside the fall
of the angels when Lucifer fell was the fall of God’s created universe.
Genesis begins in the first verse: “In the beginning God created the heaven and
the earth.”
And
if God did it, God could not have done an evil thing, or a vile thing, or an
imperfect thing. If God did it, God did it beautifully, and perfectly, and
excellently, and marvelously, and gloriously. “In the beginning God created
the heavens and the earth” [Genesis 1:1]. Then the next sentence: “And the
earth became without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep”
[Genesis 1:2]. Between that first verse and that second verse is the fall of
Lucifer. And when Lucifer fell, the whole universe fell with him. This
universe was given into his hands. And he was the guardian of all of God’s creation.
And when Lucifer fell, the whole creation fell with him, and it became void and
chaotic.
The
tragedy of all God’s marvelous work: the destructive fall of Lucifer, the
prince of the morning and the star of the dawn. Then God did another thing, a
wonderful thing, an amazing thing. Out of all of the chaos of the creation of
God’s omnipotent and almighty hand, the Lord chose a planet called Earth to
recreate it, to rejuvenate it, and in five days, God regenerated that chaotic
earth. He made it perfect again. He made it beautiful again and for
fellowship with the Lord God; for someone to talk to and to visit with, God
made a new order of created beings like Himself. The Lord God made a man, in
His image and in His likeness, male and female, created He them like Him
[Genesis 1:27].
And
the Lord God sat that created order of man and women in the garden of Eden.
And He gave them the title deed of this earth. “It is yours. You subdue it.
And have dominion over it and dress it and keep it. The title deed is in your
name and in your hands, this earth is yours”—the beautiful man and the glorious
woman that the Lord God created in His image that he might have fellowship with
the Almighty.
When
the Lord God did that in five days, creating this marvelous perfect earth and
on the sixth day creating that man in His own likeness and in His own image; when
God did that, outside of the gate of the garden of Eden, stalks that same
sinister being, Lucifer, Satan, Diabolos, the Devil. And he hears all that God
has said to the man and his wife. And he comes into the Garden of Eden. What
he was must have been beautiful beyond description. Cursed, he’s a serpent but
even some serpents exhibit marvelous beauty of a previous life. In the form of
some kind of a creation of God who could speak and who could talk and who could
approach the woman in beautiful manner and courteous form, he presents to her the
same temptation that he himself succumbed to: I will be God. And he says to
her, “The Lord God knows that in the day that you eat of this forbidden fruit,
you will be like Him. You will be God like Him. Therefore, eat, partake, and
you will be like God” [Genesis 3:5]: the same identical thing that he sought
when he said in his heart, “I will be like God,” you eat of the forbidden fruit
and you will be like God.
And
when Adam and his wife disobeyed the injunction and the commandment of the
Lord, the title deed of this earth passed from the hands of Adam and mankind
into the hand of Satan. He became the god of this world. In the fourth
chapter of the Book of Luke, the same temptation you read of when Satan comes
before the Lord Jesus he says, “All of this world and all of its glory has been
delivered unto me. And I can give it to whomsoever I please” [Luke 4:6]. The
title deed of the earth passed from the hands of Adam and mankind into the
hands of Satan. And Satan rules this world. He has made it nothing but a
place to bury our dead in. He has strewn it down. He has oversowed it with
every kind of disease, and sorrow, and age, and disappointment, and frustration,
and death.
And
we live in this kind of a world--death, tomorrow, today. I buried a young man
yesterday. On Tuesday, I will have two funerals, already. I live in that kind
of a world. When anyone calls me, I expect it to be full of tears, and agony,
and hurt, and sorrow. It is oversown by Satan, the title deed is in his hand.
We live in that kind of a fallen world. And we belong to a race of fallen
humanity.
There
is coming a judgment, and it arises in a most unusual manner. In the fourth
chapter, for example, of 1Thessalonians, we are told that without announcement—suddenly,
nobody knows when; could be before I am through this sermon; it could be this
afternoon or tonight; it could be at midnight or in the morning—suddenly
without publication, suddenly known but to God, suddenly the archangel shall
shout, and the trumpet shall sound, and the Lord shall descend, and these
things will happen. First, the dead will be raised from their corruption and
graves. First, the dead shall rise [1 Thessalonians 4:13-18]. Second, all of
God’s children will be changed, immortalized, glorified, in a moment, in the
twinkling of an eye [1 Corinthians 15:51-52]. And third, the Lord shall
descend from heaven, and we shall meet Him in the air [1 Thessalonians 4:16].
And when that happens, the rage and the fury of Satan knows no end. These
dead, he says, are mine! They are buried in my earth! And they are corrupting
bodies belong to me! They are dead and the dead belong to me.
And
these that are stolen away and raptured, Satan in his fury says, “These are
mine to afflict, and to kill with disease, and to bury in my earth. These belong
to me!” And when they rise to meet the Lord in the air, Satan is described as
the prince of the power of the air; “This very air belongs to me and You
intervened and come down—this is my domain!” His fury knows no end!
Then
the Bible says in the twelfth chapter of the Revelation and there is war.
There is war in heaven. Michael who stands for the people of God in Daniel, in
the Revelation, Michael and his angels fight against Satan and his angels. And
they prevail not; and Satan and his angels are cast out of heaven [Revelation
12:9].
Milton, in his Paradise Lost has
one of the most unusual couplets describing that. Milton says it, “him—Satan—the
Almighty hurled headlong, flaming out of the ethereal sky and woe unto you that
are in the earth, for the devil has come down to you, having great wrath, for
he knows that his time is short” [Revelation 12:12]. And that is the
tribulation. When Satan comes down into this earth, and the tribulation is
described in the Book of Revelation from chapter 5 to chapter 19, those awesome
days when Satan has but a few more years. How were the people saved from his
majestic ableness?
It
is a medieval caricature for you ever to think that Satan has horns, and tail,
and a red suit, and a forked tongue. Satan is the god of this world. He is
described as the god of light. He always comes in the presence of a glory.
You eat. He doesn’t tell you the end result, the enjoyment of it. Always
Satan is bright, educated, brilliant—always. Don’t you ever think that Satan
tempts you to drink like that alcoholic in the gutter? He tempts you to drink
like the big executive at the beautiful party. Don’t you ever think he tempts
you to embezzle like that convict in the penitentiary. He entices you with all
the emoluments of this money. It is yours, just take it. Always Satan has a
brilliance about him; a glory about him. He is the god of this world.
But
he also has a fury. He has a wrath that burns to the deepest against God, and
against God’s people, and God’s saints. What do we do? I am no match for
him. We are not equal to him, this great mighty angel that God created to have
charge over the whole universe and the angelic orders of glory.
This
is our hope. In the tribulation in chapter 7, God seals these that are set
apart for Him. God seals them, and they are His—God’s forever. And God seals
us who find refuge in Him. God seals us. In the first chapter of the Book of
Ephesians, God seals us with His Holy Spirit, and we cannot ultimately fall, and
we cannot ultimately be lost, and we cannot ultimately find ourselves a prey of
the Evil One. God seals us. God sustains us. God saves us. God strengthens
us. God cares for us. And our hope of heaven lies in the goodness and the
graciousness of the love of Jesus in our hearts, in our lives, and we overcome
him, the evil of Satan, we overcome him by our trust and faith in our living
Lord. This is the background of the writing of, I suppose, the greatest hymn
ever written, Ein' feste Burg, “A Mighty Fortress,” written by
Martin Luther in 1529. He had a sensitivity toward the presence of Satan that
was astonishing. One time he took his ink bottle and threw it at him, and it
dashed and broke against the wall. He wrote in that glorious hymn:
A mighty fortress is our
God
A bulwark never failing.
Our helper He, amid the
flood
Of mortal ills prevailing.
For still our ancient foe,
Satan,
Doth seek to work us woe.
His craft and power are
great
And armed with cruel hate.
On earth is not his equal.
And though this world with
demons filled
Should threaten to undo us,
We will not fear for God
hath willed
His truth to triumph
through us.
The prince of darkness
grim.
We tremble not for him.
His rage we can endure
For lo, his doom is sure.
One little word of faith
will fell him.
That word above all earthly
powers
No thanks to them,
These demons abideth,
The Spirit and the gifts
are ours
Through Him who with us
sideth.
Let goods and kindred go,
This mortal life also.
The body they may kill.
Gods truth abideth still.
His kingdom is forever.
This
is a marvelous gospel that we preach, and without it there is no other hope.
We live in a world of sin and of death. It is a matter of a while. Is it
tomorrow, is it the next day, until we ourselves will fall into corruption and
buried in the very dust of the ground? What hope have we? It lies in the
blessed grace of the Lord Jesus who overcame sin, and death, and the grave, and
is our great friend and Savior. I could never if I lived a thousand lifetimes
understand why anyone would say no to the Lord Jesus.
Lord,
Lord, if I have any hope, it is in Thee. If there is any blessed tomorrow, it
is in Thee. Beyond death and the grave, Lord, it is only in Thee. And I give
Thee the love, and the faith, and the commitment, and the consecration, and the
confession of my life, and gladly do I do it. This is our invitation to your
heart.
This
solemn assembly and this holy and consecrated day in the balcony round, down
one of these stairways, “Pastor, God has spoken to my heart and I am on the
way. My family; all of us are coming. This is my wife and my children. We are
all answering God’s call today.” Or as the Lord shall speak to your heart, when
we sing this song, on the first note of the first stanza that first step will
be the most meaningful you could ever make in your life. Make it now. Do it
now. Come now. And may angels attend you in the way as you answer, while we
stand and while we sing.