On the other fella

Thomas

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Extracted from Dr Philip Harland blog, Rebellious Fallen Angels and the Flood, 1 Enoch

The figure of Satan, as chief angel among the angels who rebel against God emerges some time around 200BC in 1 Enoch, an apocalypse text, generally divided into five books, with book one (chapters 1-36) being among the earliest.

1 Enoch is an exegesis of Genesis 6:1-8, where the “sons of God” (angelic figures) mate with human women, events which bring about the Flood. Notable here is that the emphasis in the literature is on Genesis 6, and nor the Fall as recounted in Genesis 3.

Enoch says that evil came into the world by way of fallen angels, and questions regarding the degree to which human of fallen s or divine beings (angels), on the other, were responsible for the introduction and continuation of evil and sin among humanity would continue to occupy those who told and re-told the story of Satan in subsequent centuries. Some would configure things differently than Enoch.

In explaining the origins of evil, Enoch possibly weaves two separate traditions concerning a conspiracy among the angels, perhaps drawing on a lost work called the “Book of Noah”, mentioned in Jubilees 10, for one of these traditions. In 1 Enoch there are inconsistencies with regard to who led the rebel angels. At times the author speaks of Semyaz (Semihazah), but at others of Azazel (Asa’el). Not only that, but the author seems to have preserved the different emphases of each tradition (as we can see in the two traditions informing Genesis 1 and Genesis 2). The Semyaz material portrays the conspiracy against God as centred on sexual union with humans, while the Azazel tradition focusses on how the fallen angels subsequently reveal skills that lead to war and seduction, to the general chaos that brings about the flood.

For Enoch, the offspring of angels and humans are giants whose spirits after death are demons that continue to mislead humanity (15:8-12).

The Lord instructs Raphael: "'Bind Azazel hand and foot and throw him into the darkness!’ And he (Raphael) made a hole in the desert. . . he threw on top of him (Azazel) rugged and sharp rocks. And he covered his face in order that he may not see light; and in order that he may be sent into the fire on the great day of judgment." (1 Enoch 10:1-7)

This fate is echoed in the Apocalypse of John: "And I saw an angel descending from heaven, holding in his hand the key to the abyss and a great chain. And he seized the dragon, the ancient serpent, who is a Slanderer and the Accuser, and bound him for a thousand years, and cast him into the abyss, and shut it and sealed it over him, so that he should no longer lead the gentiles astray until the thousand years are finished... " (20:1-4)

As in other apocalyptic writings, the flood of long ago becomes a precursor or foreshadow of God’s final intervention in the end times, the “great day of judgment”, when the angels who rebelled, along with the humans who sided with them by doing evil, will meet their end. The righteous ones, on the other hand, will go on to live in a new world cleansed “from all sin and from all iniquity” (cf 10:17-22).

The name “Satan” does not appear at all, but the fallen angels story was soon to be linked up with passages involving the angelic 'adversary' (“satan”) in the Hebrew Scriptures. The idea of 'fallen angels' would inevitably be read by Christian authors to include the Babylonian king as cosmic rebel in Isaiah 14, who speaks of the “Day Star, Son of Dawn” who falls from heaven (where he imagines himself to belong). It was Jerome who translated the Hebrew "shinning one, son of dawn" into Latin (410AD) as "lucifer qui mane oriebaris" ('light-bearer who rose in the morning').
 
Continued from above: Enter the Serpent: Adam, Eve, and the Devil

The story of Adam and Eve in the first chapters of Genesis makes no explicit reference to “Satan” or the “Devil” (merely the serpent). Yet around the first century BC/AD we first get clear signs that some Jews were interpreting this narrative in ways that clearly linked the serpent with the story of Satan as an evil-intentioned angel.

As outlined above, the early fallen angel narratives centre on Genesis 6. In the 1st or 2nd centuries AD, sectarian authors of the Dead Sea Scrolls – those who composed the Community Rule (or Manual of Discipline) – placed the origins of an evil angelic power, identified variously as Belial (Worthless one) and the Angel of Darkness, earlier in the mythical time-line:

God “created man to rule the world and placed within him two spirits so that he would walk with them until the moment of his visitation: they are the spirits of truth and of deceit. In the hand of the Prince of Lights is dominion over all the sons of justice. . . And in the hand of the Angel of Darkness is total dominion over the sons of deceit. . . [God] created the spirits of light and of darknesss and on them established all his deeds” (1 QS III 17-25; The Dead Sea Scrolls Translated).

As time progressed, some Jewish and Christian authors point to the origins of a personified evil earlier than Genesis 6. In some respects, this is the interpretive context in which to make better sense of the association of the serpent in Paradise or Garden of Eden with the fallen angel. This begins to appear contemporaneous with the very early Church.

The pseudo-Apocalypse of Moses (Greek, first century AD) and the Life of Adam and Eve (Latin, 3rd-4th centuries AD) likely reflect an earlier source of the first century BC, a source which scholars often call the Book of Adam and Eve. In these particular expansions the blame for sin, illness, and death is placed firmly upon Eve's shoulders (in a way that diverges from the Genesis account itself, which is somewhat more “balanced”, one could say, in apportioning blame and punishment to both Adam and Eve for eating from the tree of knowledge). This association of women and Satanic deception was to continue for centuries to come, as we know; the notion that women were more susceptible to evil temptation or were more likely to be deceivers themselves still has its legacies today within our patriarchal culture (despite attempts to deconstruct just such notions or gender stereotypes).

In these stories, Eve is deceived not once, but twice. Eve is deceived for the second time while doing acts of repentance for the first mistake (eating the fruit) and follows the advice of an apparently nice, bright angel (really Satan) who told her that God was satisfied with how much penance she had done (Vita 9-11). God was not (according to the authors of this story).

Following the second temptation, Eve cried out,
“‘Why do you treacherously and enviously pursue us, O enemy, all the way to death?’ And the devil sighed and said, ‘O Adam, all my enmity and envy and sorrow concern you ... When you were created, I was cast out from the presence of God and was sent out from the fellowship of the angels. When God blew into you the breath of life and your countenance and likeness were made in the image of God, Michael (the archangel) brought you and made us worship you in the sight of God, and the Lord God said, ‘Behold Adam! I have made you in our image and likeness” (Vita 11:3-13:3; “Life of Adam and Eve,” in The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol. 2, p. 262).

When Michael then tried to enforce this command of God:

“I (Satan) said to him, ‘Why do you compel me? I will not worship one inferior and subsequent to me. I am prior to him in creation; before he was made, I was already made. He (Adam) ought to worship me.’"

This refusal of Satan's desire (pride) leads Satan to plan to overthrow God himself, alluding to Isaiah 14:
“And I said, ‘If he (God) be wrathful with me, I will set my throne above the stars of heaven and will be like the Most High.'” (15:3)

“So with deceit I assailed your wife and made you to be expelled through her from the joys of your bliss, as I have been expelled from my glory” (16:3).

Thus Satan is culpable of most of the Seven Deadly Sins ... but the first and foremost is pride and his steadfast refusal to 'worship' humans – rather his refusal to pay homage to them as God's creation superior to himself.
 
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Thus Satan is culpable of most of the Seven Deadly Sins ... but the first and foremost is pride and his steadfast refusal to 'worship' humans – rather his refusal to pay homage to them as God's creation superior to himself.
Mmm .. so due to this, satan blames mankind for his fall from grace .. and has vowed to
take with him (to hell) as many as he can.
Remembrance of G-d is vital, to save ourselves from satans plots.
May G-d forgive us our shortcomings. Amen.
 
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