Difference between revisions of "Devil" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Baphomet 2.png|thumb|The Devil as Baphomet]]
{{dablink|This is an overview of the Devil. For more specific versions, see [[Devil in Christianity]], [[Iblis]] (Islam), and [[Satan]] (Judaism). For the Die Ärzte album, see [[Devil (album)]].}}
 
[[Image:Gustave Dore Inferno34.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Satan frozen at the center of [[Cocytus]], the ninth circle of Hell in [[The Divine Comedy|Dante's Inferno]].]]
 
  
'''The Devil''' is the title given to the [[supernatural]] being, who, in mainstream [[Christianity]], [[Islam]], and some other religions, is believed to be a powerful, [[evil]] entity and the tempter of humankind. The Devil is commonly associated with [[Heresy|heretics]], [[infidel]]s, and other unbelievers.
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'''The Devil''' is the title given to the [[supernatural]] being who is believed to be a powerful, [[evil]] entity and the tempter of humankind. The name "Devil" derives from the Greek word ''diabolos,'' which means "accuser." In Christianity, [[God]] and the Devil are usually portrayed as competing over the [[soul]]s of humans, with the Devil seeking to lure people away from God and into [[Hell]]. The Devil commands a force of lesser evil spirits, commonly known as [[demons]].
  
The name "Devil" derives from the Greek word ''diabolos'', which means "[[defamation|slanderer]]" or "accuser".<ref>"devil," ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 29 June 2007 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9030155>.</ref>  In mainstream Christianity, God and the Devil are usually portrayed as fighting over the [[soul]]s of humans, with the Devil seeking to lure people away from God and into [[Sheol]]. The Devil commands a force of lesser evil spirits, commonly known as [[demons]]. The [[Hebrew Bible]] (or Old Testament) does not assign this level of personification to the devil; there, the Adversary (Ha-[[satan]]) is a servant of God whose job it is to test humankind.
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The [[Hebrew Bible]] does not assign this level of personification to the Devil. Instead, the adversary ''(ha-satan)'' is a servant of God whose job is to test humankind. However, in the Jewish [[apocrypha]] and rabbinical tradition, the Devil took on many of the characteristics inherited by Christianity.  
  
This entity is commonly referred to by a variety of names, including [[Abbadon]], [[Angra Mainyu]], [[Satan]], [[Asmodai]], [[Beelzebub]], [[Lucifer]], [[Belial]], and [[Iblis]]. Many other religions have a trickster or tempter figure that is similar to the Devil. Modern conceptions of the Devil include the concept that it symbolizes humans' own lower nature or [[sin]]fulness.  
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The Devil is referred to by a variety of names, including [[Abbadon]], [[Angra Mainyu]], [[Satan]], [[Asmodeus]], [[Beelzebub]], [[Lucifer]], [[Belial]], and [[Iblis]]. Many other religions have figures similar to the Devil.
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The Devil is commonly associated with [[Heresy|heretics]], [[infidel]]s, and [[witch]]es. Modern conceptions of the Devil include the idea that he symbolizes humanity's own lower nature or [[sin]]fulness, or is a projection of unconscious human energies. In some traditions, believers gain power over the Devil through their [[faith]], righteousness, or knowledge of the truth, and thus come to prosecute him before God, rather than the other way around.
  
People put the concept of the Devil to use in social and political conflicts, claiming that their opponents are influenced by the Devil or even willingly supporting the Devil. The Devil has also been used to explain why others hold beliefs that are considered to be false and ungodly.
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==The Devil in Abrahamic  religions==
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===Judaism===
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In the [[Hebrew Bible]], the concept of the Devil is not highly developed, and [[Satan]] is only mentioned a few times. The idea took form in later Jewish writings, however, and was further elaborated in the rabbinical tradition.
  
==The Devil in different religions==
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In the Bible, "Satan" is not so much a proper name but an office: "The satan." In [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], the word ''ha-satan'' (שָׂטָן) means "the adversary" or even "the [[prosecutor]]" or accuser. In the [[Book of Job]], ''ha-satan'' is the title of an [[angel]], one of the "sons of God" who comes to report to God. After God proudly points out [[Job (Biblical figure)|Job's]] piety, ''ha-satan'' asks for permission to test the faith of Job. God grants ''ha-satan'' this power, and the righteous man is afflicted with loss of family, property, and, finally, his health. However, the book is clear in its view that none of this happens outside of God's sovereign will.
===Judaism===
 
{{main|Satan}}
 
In [[Judaism]] there is no concept of a devil like in mainstream Christianity or Islam. In [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], the biblical word ''ha-satan'' (שָׂטָן) means "the adversary"<ref>For example in {{bibleverse||Numbers|22:22|HE}} and {{bibleverse||Samuel|29:4|HE}} and other places, the word "adversary" appears in the translation, which in the original Hebrew is "ha-satan".</ref> or ''the obstacle'', or even "the [[prosecutor]]" (recognizing that God is viewed as the ultimate [[Judge]]).
 
  
In the [[book of Job]] (Iyov), ''ha-satan'' is the title, not the proper name, of an [[angel]] submitted to God; he is the divine court's chief prosecutor. In Judaism ''ha-satan'' does not make evil, rather points out to God the evil inclinations and actions of humankind. In essence ''ha-satan'' has no power unless humans do evil things. After God points out [[Job (Biblical figure)|Job's]] piety, ''ha-satan'' asks for permission to test the faith of Job. The righteous man is afflicted with loss of family, property, and later, health, but he still stays faithful to God. At the conclusion of this book God appears as a [[whirlwind (atmospheric phenomenon)|whirlwind]], explaining to all that divine justice is inscrutable. In the epilogue Job's possessions are restored and he has a second family to "replace" the one that died.
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The idea of Satan as the accuser is retained in Zech. 3:1-2, where he is described as the adversary of the [[high priest]] Joshua. In the book of [[Books of Chronicles|1 Chronicles 21:1]], ''ha-satan'' acts as the more traditional Devil when he incites [[David (Biblical king)|David]] to an unlawful [[census]]. However, the earlier version of this story in 2 Samuel 24:1 portrays God himself, moved by anger, as leading David to this sinful act. The [[Book of Isaiah]], Job, [[Ecclesiastes]], and [[Deuteronomy]] all have passages in which God is credited for exercising sovereign control over both good and evil.
  
In the [[Torah]], ''ha-satan'' is mentioned several times. The main time is during the incident of the golden calf. As the source of people's evil inclination, or ''yetser harah'', he is responsible for the Israelites building the golden calf while [[Moses]] was on Mount Sinai receiving the Torah from God. In the book of [[Books of Chronicles|1 Chronicles 21:1]], ''ha-satan'' incites [[David (Biblical king)|David]] to an unlawful census.
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In the Jewish [[apocrypha]], however, Satan's role came to resemble more closely the character normally associated with the Devil. In the [[Book of Wisdom]] 2:24 he is represented as the author of all evil, who brought death into the world. He was the seducer and the paramour of [[Eve]], and was hurled from heaven together with other angels because of his iniquity ([[Second Book of Enoch]] 24). Since that time he has been called "Satan," although previously he had been termed "Satanel" (ib. 32:3). Satan rules over an entire host of angels (Martyrdom of Isaiah 2:2; Life of Adam and Eve 16). It was Mastema, another name for Satan ([[Book of Jubilees]], 17:18), who induced God to test [[Abraham]] through the sacrifice of Isaac. In the [[Book of Tobit]], [[Asmodeus]] is likewise identified with Satan, especially in view of his licentiousness. As the lord of other devils, he sometimes bears the special name [[Samael]]. In the [[New Testament]], the opponents of [[Jesus accuse]] him of being an agent of [[Beelzebub]], and this may be an accurate reflection of popular Jewish attitudes of the time regarding the Devil's work with [[sorcerer]]s and [[witch]]es.
  
In fact, the [[Book of Isaiah]], Job, [[Ecclesiastes]], and [[Deuteronomy]] all have passages in which God is credited for exercising sovereign control over both good and evil.
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[[Image:GoldCalf.jpg|thumb|250px|The worship of the golden calf.]]
  
===Christianity===
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[[Talmud]]ic Judaism reflected these popular concepts of the Devil. [[Samael]], the lord of the satans, was formerly a mighty prince of angels in heaven (Gen. R. xix.). Like all celestial beings, he flies through the air (Gen. R. xix.) and can assume any form, as of a bird (Sanh. 107a), a stag (ib. 95a), a woman (Ḳid. 81a), a beggar (ib.), or a young man (Tan., Wayera). He is said to "skip" (Pes. 112b; Meg. 11b), in allusion to his appearance in the form of a goat. He is the incarnation of all evil, and his thoughts and activities are devoted to the destruction of humanity. Satan, the impulse to evil ("yetzer ha-ra'"), and the angel of death are one and the same personality.
{{main|Devil in Christianity}}
 
[[Image:Michael Pacher 004.jpg|thumb|right|''[[Saint Wolfgang]] and the Devil'' by [[Michael Pacher]]).]]
 
In mainstream [[Christianity]] the Devil is also known as Satan and sometimes as [[Lucifer]], although most scholars recognize the reference in Isaiah 14:12 to Lucifer, or the Morning Star, to be a reference to the Babylonian king (see, for example, the entries in [http://studylight.org/con/ntb/view.cgi?number=T3103 Nave's Topical Bible], the [http://studylight.org/dic/hbd/view.cgi?number=T3937 Holman Bible Dictionary] and the [http://studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=isa&chapter=14&verse=12#Isa14_12 Adam Clarke Commentary]). Some consider the Devil to be an [[angel]] who rebelled against [[God]] and has consequently been condemned to the [[Lake of Fire]]. He is described as hating all humanity, or more accurately creation, opposing God, spreading lies and wreaking havoc on the souls of mankind. Other Christians consider the devil in the Bible to refer figuratively to human sin and temptation and to any human system in opposition to God. In the [[Bible]], the devil is identified with the serpent in the [[Garden of Eden]], the dragon in the [[Book of Revelation]] (e.g. [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Bible_%28American_Standard%29/Revelation#Chapter_12 Rev. 12:9]), and the tempter of the [[Gospels]] (e.g. [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Bible_%28American_Standard%29/Matthew#Chapter_4 Mat. 4:1]).
 
  
===Islam===
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Satan the [[serpent]] was an active agent in the [[human fall]] (Pirḳe R. El. xiii) and was even the father of [[Cain]] (ib. xxi). He was also instrumental in the death of [[Moses]] (Deut. R. xiii. 9) and in [[David]]'s sin with [[Bathsheba]] (Sanh. 95a). If Satan does not attain his purpose, as was the case in his temptation of Job, he feels great sorrow (B. B. 16a). It was a terrible blow to him that the [[Torah]] should be given to Israel. He endeavored to overthrow it, and finally led the people to make the [[golden calf]] (Shab. 89a). He also appeared as a tempter to Rabbi [[Akiba]] (Ḳid. 81a).
{{main|Iblis}}
 
In Islam the Devil is referred to as [[Iblis]] (Arabic: ''[[Shaitan]]'', a word referring to evil devil-like beings). According to the [[Qur'an]], God created Iblis out of "smokeless fire" (along with all of the other [[Djinn#Djinn in Islam|jinn]]) and created man out of clay. The primary characteristic of the Devil, besides [[hubris]], is that he has no power other than the power to cast evil suggestions into the heart of men and women.
 
  
According to [[Muslim theology]], Iblis was expelled from the grace of God when he disobeyed God by choosing not to pay homage to Adam, the father of all mankind. He claimed to be superior to Adam, on the grounds that man was created of earth unlike himself. As for the angels, they prostrated before Adam to show their homage and obedience to God. However, Iblis, adamant in his view that man is inferior, and unlike angels was given the ability to choose, made a choice of not obeying God. This caused him to be expelled by God, a fact that Iblis blamed on humanity. Initially, the Devil was successful in deceiving Adam, but once his intentions became clear, [[Adam and Eve]] repented to God and were freed from their misdeeds and forgiven. God gave them a strong warning about Iblis and the fires of Hell and asked them and their children (humankind) to stay away from the deceptions of their senses caused by the Devil.
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Satan kindles the evil impulse to impurity (Ex. R. xx). In the hour of birth, he brings his accusation against the mother (Eccl. R. iii. 2). As the incarnation of evil, Satan is the arch-enemy of the [[Messiah]]: He is the [[Antichrist]].
  
According to the verses of the [[Qur’an]], the Devil's mission until the [[Qiyamah]] or Resurrection Day ''(yaum-ul-qiyama)'' is to deceive Adam's children (mankind). After that, he will be put into the fires of Hell along with those whom he has deceived. The Devil is also referred to as one of the [[genie|jinn]]s, as they are all created from the smokeless fire. The Qur'an does not depict Iblis as the enemy of God, as God is supreme over all his creations and Iblis is just one of his creations. Iblis's single enemy is humanity. He intends to discourage humans from obeying God. Thus, humankind is warned to struggle ''([[jihad]])'' against the mischiefs of the Satan and temptations he puts them in. The ones who succeed in this are rewarded with Paradise ''(jannath ul firdaus)'', attainable only by righteous conduct.
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===Christianity===
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[[Image:Michael Pacher 004.jpg|thumb|200px|right|''[[Saint Wolfgang]] and the Devil'' by [[Michael Pacher]]).]]
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In mainstream [[Christianity]], the Devil is likewise known as Satan and is identified as the fallen archangel, [[Lucifer]]. In the [[Gospels]], the Devil and his kingdom are regarded as encompassing the entire world, and are factors in all the events of daily life. He bears many names, being called "Satan" (Matt. 4:10, Mark 1:30, Luke 10:18, etc.), "devil" (Matt. 4:1 et passim), "adversary" (1 Peter 5:8, 1 Tim. 5:14), "enemy" (Matt. 13:39), "accuser" (Rev. 12:10), "ancient serpent" (Rev. 20:2), "great dragon" (Rev 12:9), [[Beelzebub]] (Matt. 10:25), and Belial. He is the author of all evil, who beguiled Eve (2 Cor. 11:3), and who brought death into the world (Heb. 2:13). He is ever the tempter (1 Thess. 3:5, 1 Peter 5:8), and was even able to tempt Jesus (Matt. 4). The Devil is identified with the serpent in the [[Garden of Eden]] and the dragon in the [[Book of Revelation]]. He is described as hating all humanity, opposing God, spreading lies and wreaking havoc on the souls of humankind.
  
===Zoroastrianism===
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In medieval Christian theology, the Devil was once the [[archangel]] [[Lucifer]], but rebelled against [[God]] and has consequently been condemned to the [[Lake of Fire]]. Historically, he is thought to have inspired [[heretic]]s, [[infidel]]s, and all of those who oppose God and the Church. He is also strongly active in the life of many great [[saint]]s, tormenting them and trying with all of this strength to tempt them to sin. As [[Baphomet]], he allegedly seduced the [[Knights Templar]] to worship him. As [[Beelzebub]], he caused untold evil through the works of [[witch]]es. As the [[Antichrist]], he is destined to deceive the majority of humankind, causing them to receive his mark of 666 on their foreheads. However, he and his followers will ultimately be defeated at the [[Second Coming]] of Christ, and will be thrown forever into the Lake of Fire.
{{main|Angra Mainyu}}
 
In the [[Gathas]], the oldest texts of the Zoroastrian [[Avesta]], believed to have been composed by [[Zoroaster]] himself, the poet does not mention a manifest adversary. [[Ahura Mazda]]'s Creation is "truth," ''[[asha]]''. The "lie" ''(druj)'' is manifest only as decay or chaos, not an entity.
 
  
Later, in [[Zurvanism]] (Zurvanite Zoroastrianism), Ahura Mazda and the principle of evil, [[Angra Mainyu]], are the "twin" offspring of Zurvan, 'Time'. No trace of Zurvanism exists after the 10th century.
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Today, some Christians consider the Devil to refer figuratively to human sin and temptation, and to any human system in opposition to God. Some hold that the Devil, though admittedly a powerful force in human affairs, is actually the psychological projection of unconscious human energies.
  
Today, the [[Parsis]] of India largely accept the 19th century interpretation that Angra Mainyu is the 'Destructive Emanation' of [[Ahura Mazda]]. Instead of struggling against Mazda himself, Angra Mainyu battles Spenta Mainyu, Mazda's 'Creative Emanation.'
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===Islam===
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In [[Islam]], the Devil is referred to as [[Iblis]]. According to the [[Qur'an]], God created Iblis out of "smokeless fire" (along with all of the other [[Djinn#Djinn in Islam|jinn]]) and created man out of clay. His great influence is due to his power to cast evil suggestions into the heart of men and women.
  
===Bahá'í Faith===
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According to Muslim tradition, Iblis was expelled from the grace of [[Allah]] when he disobeyed God by choosing not to pay homage to Adam, the father of all mankind. He claimed to be superior to Adam, on the grounds that man was created of mere earth while he, Iblis, was created of fire. The angels dutifully prostrated themselves before Adam to show their obedience to God. However, Iblis—being unlike the angels in his ability to choose—decided not to bow. This caused him to be expelled by God, a fact that Iblis blamed on humanity. He therefore determined to bring mankind into disobedience as well. Initially, the Devil was successful in deceiving Adam and Eve, causing them to sin. However, they soon repented and were forgiven by God. Adam went on to become the world's first [[prophet]] and never sinned again. God gave the couple a strong warning about Iblis and the fires of Hell, commanding them and their children to stay away from the deceptions caused by the Devil.
In the [[Bahá'í Faith|Bahá'í]] Writings, "devil" or "satanic" can have a number of meanings. Sometimes it is used to refer to the Bahá'í interpretation of Satan. Other times it refers to people who are ruled by their own lower nature. In this sense, the Bahá'í consider certain evil people to be devils incarnate, not in the sense of being ruled by an external evil force, but by their own selfish desires. The Báb referred to His persecutors as "the followers of the devil".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/tb/SWB/swb-6.html|title=reference.bahai.org/en/t/tb/SWB/swb-6.html<!--INSERT TITLE—>|accessdate=2007-07-12}}</ref> Demonic possession mentioned in the Bible is considered to be another example of individuals who are ruled by their own lower natures. Shoghi Effendi wrote:
 
  
<blockquote>"Regarding your question relative to the condition of those people who are described in the Gospel as being possessed of devils; this should be interpreted figuratively; devil or Satan is symbolic of evil and dark forces yielding to temptation."[http://bahai-library.com/index.php5?file=hornby_lights_guidance_2.html&chapter=4]</blockquote>
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The [[Qur’an]] teaches that the Devil's role, until the Resurrection Day, is to attempt to deceive Adam's children (mankind). After that, he will be put into the fires of Hell along with those whom he has deceived. The Qur'an depicts God as supremely sovereign over all his creations, and thus Iblis does not technically act outside of God's will. Iblis's single enemy is humanity. Thus, humankind is warned to struggle ''([[jihad]])'' against the mischief of the Devil. The ones who succeed in this are rewarded with [[Paradise]], attainable only by righteous conduct.
  
In the context of the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness, the devil is interpreted as the human nature of Jesus. His human nature showed Him what He could attain with His great powers, if He were to follow the ways of the world. However, the Holy Spirit within Christ refused to submit to the lower nature, choosing to do the Will of God instead.
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===The Devil in folklore===
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[[Image:Paul Cézanne 055.jpg|thumb|300px|The Temptation of Saint [[Anthony the Great]], by [[Paul Cezanne|Paul Cézanne]].]]
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In the Western Christian and Jewish tradition, the Devil has entered popular [[folklore]], particularly in his role as a [[trickster]] figure. He is found, for example, as a character in a large number of traditional folktales and [[legend]]s from [[Ireland]], [[Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland]], [[Italy]], and the [[United Kingdom]], where he often attempts to trick or outwit other characters. Similar tales exist in Jewish and Christian tradition in Eastern Europe. In some of these tales, the Devil is portrayed as more of a folk villain than as the [[personification]] of evil. In other popular stories, several of which have been made into Hollywood films, the Devil offers people power, wealth, and irresistibility to the opposite sex, in exchange for their souls.
  
The Bahá'í Faith teaches that Satan is also a metaphor for the "insistent self" or "lower self" which is a self-serving inclination within each individual. This tendency is often referred to in the Bahá'í Writings as "the Evil One." [[Bahá'u'lláh]] wrote:
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The Devil also features prominently in a number of [[hagiography|hagiographical]] tales, where he tempts the saints by adopting various disguises and torments them in graphic, often sexually suggestive, detail. Some of these tales, such as the popular legend of St. [[Dunstan]], fall outside the authorized religious canon.
  
<blockquote>"Watch over yourselves, for the Evil One is lying in wait, ready to entrap you. Gird yourselves against his wicked devices, and, led by the light of the name of the All-Seeing God, make your escape from the darkness that surroundeth you."[http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/b/TB/tb-8.html] </blockquote>
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The Devil is also a recurring feature in tales explaining the [[etymology]] of [[toponymy|geographical names]], lending his name to natural formations, such as [[The Devil's Chimney]]. He also plays a role in folk music, such as the American fiddle songs "Devil's Dream" and "Up Jumped the Devil." In the [[blues]] tradition, the Devil supposedly gave certain players, such as notably [[Robert Johnson]], great musical and spiritual power in a deal made at the crossroads at midnight.  
  
<blockquote>"This lower nature in man is symbolized as Satan - the evil ego within us, not an evil personality outside."[http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/ab/PUP/pup-96.html]</blockquote>
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In contemporary culture, the Devil figures prominently in popular fiction and film, such as ''[[The Exorcist]],'' ''[[Rosemary's Baby]],'' and many others.
  
===Neopaganism===
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==The Devil in other religions==
Christian tradition has frequently identified [[paganism|pagan]] religions and [[witchcraft]] with the influence of Satan. In the [[Middle Ages]], the Church accused alleged witches of consorting and conspiring with Satan. Several modern conservative Christian writers, such as [[Jack Chick]] and [[James Dobson]], have depicted today's [[neopagan]] and witchcraft religions as explicitly Satanic.
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===Hinduism===
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In contrast to Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Zoroastrianism, [[Hinduism]] does not recognize any central evil force or entity, such as the Devil, opposing God. However, evil beings (for example, ''[[asura]]s'') do sometimes oppose the will of the gods and cause human suffering.  
  
Few neopagan reconstructionist traditions recognize Satan or the Devil outright. However, many neopagan groups worship some sort of [[Horned God]], for example as a consort of the [[Great Goddess]] in [[Wicca]]. These gods usually reflect [[mythology|mythological]] figures such as [[Cernunnos]] or [[Pan (mythology)|Pan]], and any similarity they may have to the Christian Devil seems to date back only to the 19th century, when a Christian reaction to Pan's growing importance in literature and art resulted in his image being translated to that of the Devil.<ref>{{cite book |last=Hutton |first=Ronald |authorlink=Ronald Hutton |title=Triumph of the Moon |pages=p. 46 |year=1999 |publisher=Oxford UniverUniversity Press |location=Oxford |id=ISBN}}</ref>
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A prominent [[asura]] is [[Rahu]], whose characteristics are in some ways similar to those of the Devil. In Hindu mythology, Rahu is a snake that swallows the sun or the moon, causing eclipses. According to legend, Rahu drank some of the divine nectar of immortality. But before the nectar could pass his throat, [[Mohini]] (the female avatar of [[Vishnu]]) cut off his head. Rahu's head, however, remained immortal. Rahu also appears in Buddhist writings and art as one of the terror-inspiring deities.
  
===New Age movement===
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In Hindu philosophy, the [[asura]]s are not nearly so powerful as in the Abrahamic tradition. Their powers are inferior and exist as illusions in the mind. Asuras may also be human beings in whom bad motivations and intentions have temporarily outweighed the good ones.
Participants in the [[New Age]] movement have widely varied views about Satan, the Devil, and so forth. In some forms of [[Esoteric Christianity]] Satan remains as a being of evil, or at least a metaphor for sin and materialism, but the most widespread tendency is to deny his existence altogether. [[Lucifer]], on the other hand, in the original [[Roman mythology|Roman]] sense of "light-bringer," occasionally appears in the literature of certain groups as a metaphorical figure quite distinct from Satan, and without any implications of evil. For example, [[Theosophy]] founder [[Madame Blavatsky]] named her journal ''Lucifer'' since she intended it to be a "bringer of light." Many New Age schools of thought follow a [[Nondualism|nondualistic]] philosophy that does not recognize a primal force for evil. Even when a dualistic model is followed, this is more often akin to the [[Chinese philosophy|Chinese]] system of [[yin and yang]], in which good and evil are explicitly not a complementary duality. Schools of thought that do stress a spiritual war between good and evil or light and darkness include the philosophy of [[Rudolf Steiner]], [[Agni Yoga]], and the [[Church Universal and Triumphant]].
 
  
===Satanism===
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The demon Kali—not to be confused with the goddess [[Kālī]]—may also be mentioned. According to the ''Vishnu Purana,'' he is a negative manifestation of [[Vishnu]] who, along with his extended evil family, perpetually operates as a cause of the destruction of this world. In [[Ayyavazhi]], the [[Satan]]-like figure, [[Kroni]] is a ravenous demon with multitudinous limbs each the size of a mountain, Kroni is the primordial manifestation of evil who appears in various forms—[[Ravana]], [[Duryodhana]], and so on—in different ages or [[yuga]]s. Kroni is said to be virtually omnipresent in this age.
{{main|Satanism|LaVeyan Satanism|Setianism|Theistic Satanism}}
 
Some religions worship the Devil. This can be in a polytheistic sense where "God," Satan, and others are all deities with Satan as the preferred patron; or it can be from a more monotheistic viewpoint, where God is regarded as a true god, but is nevertheless defied.
 
  
Some variants deny the existence of God and the Devil altogether, but still call themselves [[Satanism|Satanists]], such as [[Anton LaVey|Anton LaVey's]] [[Church Of Satan]] which sees Satan as a representation of the primal and natural state of mankind.
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===Buddhism===
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A devil-like figure in Buddhism is [[Mara (demon)|Mara]]. He is a tempter, who also tempted [[Gautama Buddha]] by trying to seduce him with the vision of [[beauty|beautiful]] women who are often said to be Mara's daughters. Mara personifies unskillfulness and the "death" of the spiritual life. He tries to distract humans from practicing spirituality by making the mundane alluring or the negative seem positive. Another interpretation of Mara is that he actually is the desires that are present in one's own mind, preventing the person from seeing the truth. So in a sense Mara is not an independent being but a part of one's own being that has to be defeated.
  
==Similar concepts in other religions==
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In the daily life of the Buddha, the role of the Devil has been given to [[Devadatta]], his cousin and jealous fellow monk who attempted to kill him and caused a schism in the monastic community.
{{Refimprove|date=October 2007}}
 
===Hinduism===
 
In contrast to Christianity, Islam, and Zoroastrianism, [[Hinduism]] does not recognize any central evil force or entity such as the Devil opposing God. Hinduism does recognize that different beings (e.g., [[asuras]]) and entities can perform evil acts, under the temporary dominance of the [[guna]] of ''[[Tamas (philosophy)|tamas]]'', and cause wordly sufferings. The Rajasic and Tamasic Gunas of Maya are considered especially close to the Abrahamic concept , the hellish parts of the Ultimate Delusion called "Prakriti." An embodiment of this is the concept of Advaita (non-dualism) where there is no good or evil but simply different levels of realization.
 
  
On the other hand in Hinduism, which provides plenty of room for counterpoint, there is also the notion of dvaita (dualism) where there is interplay between good and evil tendencies.<ref>[http://www.shaivam.org/hipgodco.htm Hindu Concept of God<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref> A prominent asura is [[Rahu]] whose characteristics are similar to those of the Devil. However, Hindus, and [[Vaishnavism|Vaishnavites]] in particular, believe that an avatar of [[Vishnu]] incarnates to defeat evil when evil reaches its greatest strength. The concept of [[Guna]] and [[Karma in Hinduism|Karma]] also explain evil to a degree, rather than the influence of a devil.
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===Zoroastrianism===
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In [[Zoroastrianism]], the adversary of the God of goodness is called [[Angra Mainyu]]. In the [[Gathas]], the oldest texts of the Zoroastrian [[Avesta]], the poet does not mention a manifest adversary of God. Here [[Ahura Mazda]]'s creation is "truth," ''[[asha]]''. The "lie" ''(druj)'' is manifest only as decay or chaos, not a personal entity. In classical Zoroastrianism, however, the good God Ahura Mazda, and his evil counterpart, Angra Mainyu, are the "twin" offspring of Zurvan, "Time." This concept of the struggle between personified good and evil is thought by many scholars to have influenced the concept of Satan as the Devil in Judaism during the Babylonian captivity, thus explaining why earlier Hebrew scriptures do not mention the Devil.
  
To be more specific, Hindu philosophy defines that the only existing thing (Truth) is the Almighty God. So, all the [[asura|asuric]] tendencies are inferior and mostly exist as illusions in the mind. Asuras are also different people in whom bad motivations and intentions ([[Tamas (philosophy)|tamas]]) have temporarily outweighed the good ones ([[Sattva]]). Different beings like ''siddha'', ''[[gandharva]]'', ''[[yaksha]]'' etc. are considered beings unlike mankind, and in some ways superior to men.
+
Today, the [[Parsis]] of India largely accept the nineteenth century interpretation that Angra Mainyu is the "Destructive Emanation" of [[Ahura Mazda]]. Instead of struggling against Mazda himself, Angra Mainyu battles Spenta Mainyu, Mazda's "Creative Emanation."
  
In [[Ayyavazhi]], officially an offshoot of Hinduism prominent in [[Tamil Nadu]] (a southern state in India with [[Dravidian people|Dravidian]] heritage), followers, unlike most other branches of Hinduism, believes in a [[Satan]]-like figure, [[Kroni]]. Kroni, according to Ayyavazhi is the primordial manifestation of evil and manifests in various forms of evil, i.e., [[Ravana]], [[Duryodhana]], etc., in different ages or [[yuga]]s. In response to such manifestation of evil, believers, in Ayya-Vazhi religion believe that God, as [[Vishnu]] manifests in His [[avatar]]s such as [[Rama]] and [[Krishna]] to defeat evil. Eventually, the [[Ekam]] with the spirit (the spirit taken by Narayana only for incarnating in the world) of [[Narayana]] incarnates in the world as [[Ayya Vaikundar]] to destroy the final manifestaion of Kroni, [[Kaliyan]].
+
==New ideas bout the Devil==
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===Bahá'í Faith===
 +
In the [[Bahá'í Faith|Bahá'í]] Writings, "devil" or "satanic" can have a number of meanings. Sometimes it is used to refer to the Bahá'í interpretation of Satan. Other times it refers to people who are ruled by their own lower nature. In this sense, the Bahá'ís consider certain evil people to be devils incarnate, not in the sense of being ruled by an external evil force, but by their own selfish desires. [[The Báb]] referred to His persecutors as "the followers of the devil."<ref>''bahai.org,'' [http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/tb/SWB/swb-6.html Selections From the Writings of the Báb.] Retrieved June 20, 2008.</ref>
  
Kroni, the spirit of [[Kali Yuga]] is said to be omnipresent in this age and that is one of the reasons why followers of Ayya Vazhi, like most Hindus, believe that the current yuga, Kali Yuga is so degraded.
+
The Bahá'í Faith teaches that Satan is also a metaphor for the "insistent self" or "lower self" which is a self-serving inclination within each individual. This tendency is often referred to in the Bahá'í Writings as "the Evil One."
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Devil is equated to Kali Purusha in Bhavishya Purana along with Adam(Adama) and Eve(Havyavati).—>
 
  
===Buddhism===
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In the context of the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness, the devil is interpreted as the human nature of Jesus. His human nature showed him what he could attain with his great powers, if he were to follow the ways of the world. However, the [[Holy Spirit]] within Christ refused to submit to the lower nature, choosing to do the Will of God instead.
A devil-like figure in Buddhism is [[Mara (demon)|Mara]]. He is a tempter, who also tempted [[Gautama Buddha]] by trying to seduce him with the vision of [[beauty|beautiful]] women who, in various legends, are often said to be Mara's daughters. Mara personifies unskillfulness, the "death" of the spiritual life. He tries to distract humans from practicing the spiritual life by making the mundane alluring or the negative seem positive. Another interpretation of Mara is that he is the desires that are present in ones own mind preventing the person from seeing the truth. So in a sense Mara is not an independent being but a part of one's own being that has to be defeated.
 
In daily life of the Buddha the role of devil has been given to [[Devadatta]].
 
  
===Ancient Egypt===
+
===Neopaganism===
{{main|Set (mythology)|Apep}}
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[[Image:Pan and Daphnis.jpg|thumb|[[Pan]] teaching the shepherd [[Daphnis]]. [[Neopagan]]s see the Devil as a Christian denigration of the "horned god" worshiped in [[pagan]] tradition.]]
In the Ausarian drama we find that Ausar (Greek: Osiris) is chopped into 13 pieces by Set. Auset (Isis) collects all of his pieces save his phallus. Horus, son of Ausar and Auset sets out to avenge the death and dismemberment of his father by confronting Set. Horus is victorious over Set and Ausar, being brought back from the dead becomes lord of the underworld. It is this drama that gives us the cosmic conflict between good and evil, evil being embodied by Set. This is not to say that Set was always seen as an evil character in Ancient Egyptian theology. There are many times in Ancient Egyptian history where conflicts between different "houses" lead to the depreciation of one god relative to another.
+
Christian tradition has frequently identified [[paganism|pagan]] religions and [[witchcraft]] with the influence of Satan. In the [[Middle Ages]], the Church accused alleged witches of consorting and conspiring with Satan. Several modern conservative Christian writers, such as [[Jack Chick]] and [[James Dobson]], have depicted today's [[neopagan]] and witchcraft religions as explicitly Satanic.
  
As in most [[polytheistic]] faiths, the characters involved differentiate themselves from the Western tradition of a devil in that all the gods are closely related. In this case, numerous historic texts suggest that Set is the Uncle or Brother of Horus and in the "defeat" of Set, we see another separation from the norm in the devouring/assimilation of Set into Horus with the result of Horus having depictions of both the falcon head and the (unknown animal) head of Set. This (like Buddhism) represents a dissolution of dichotomy.
+
Few neopagan traditions recognize [[Satan]] or the Devil outright. However, many neopagan groups worship some sort of [[Horned God]], for example, as a consort of the [[Great Goddess]] in [[Wicca]]. These gods usually reflect [[mythology|mythological]] figures such as [[Cernunnos]] or [[Pan (mythology)|Pan]], and any similarity they may have to the Christian Devil seems to date back only to the nineteenth century, when a Christian reaction to Pan's growing importance in literature and art resulted in his image being translated to that of the Devil.<ref>Ronald Hutton, p. 46.</ref>
  
===The Devil in world folklore===
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===New Age movement===
In the Western Christian tradition, the Devil has entered popular [[folklore]], particularly in his role as a [[trickster]] figure. As such, he is found as a character in a wide number of traditional folktales and [[legend]]s from [[Ireland]], [[Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland]], [[Italy]] and the [[United Kingdom]], where he often attempts to trick or outwit other characters. In some of these tales, the Devil is portrayed as more of a folk villain than as the [[personification]] of evil. The Devil also features prominently in a number of [[hagiography|hagiographical]] tales, or tales of the saints such as the popular tale of St. [[Dunstan]], many of which may fall outside the authorized religious canon. The Devil is also a recurring feature in tales explaining the [[etymology]] of [[toponymy|geographical names]], lending his name to natural formations such as [[The Devil's Chimney]].
+
Participants in the [[New Age]] movement have widely varied views about Satan, the Devil, and so forth. In some forms of [[Esoteric Christianity]], Satan remains as a being of evil, or at least a metaphor for sin and materialism, but the most widespread tendency is to deny his existence altogether. [[Lucifer]], on the other hand, in the original [[Roman mythology|Roman]] sense of "light-bringer," occasionally appears in the literature of certain groups as a metaphorical figure quite distinct from Satan, and without any implications of evil. For example, [[Theosophy]] founder [[Madame Blavatsky]] named her journal ''Lucifer,'' since she intended it to be a "bringer of light."
  
==Other names for the Devil==
+
Many New Age schools of thought follow a [[Nondualism|nondualistic]] philosophy that does not recognize a primal force for evil. Even when a dualistic model is followed, this is more often akin to the [[Chinese philosophy|Chinese]] system of [[yin and yang]], in which good and evil are explicitly not a complementary duality. Schools of thought that do stress a spiritual war between good and evil or light and darkness include the philosophy of [[Rudolf Steiner]], [[Agni Yoga]], and the [[Church Universal and Triumphant]].
===Demons===
 
In some religions and traditions, these titles are separate demons; others identify these names as guises of The Devil. Even when thought of as individual demons, some are often thought of being under the Devil's direct control. This identifies only those thought of as the Devil; [[List of demons]] has a more general listing.
 
  
{{Column-start|num=2}}
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Satanism is a small group within the New Age movement that prefers Satan to God, seeing Satan as a being who promotes freedom and knowledge, while the Christian God is an oppressive tyrant. In effect, the roles of God and the Devil are reversed in this system.
*[[Abbadon]] ([[Biblical Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: אבדון ''Avaddon'') meaning "destruction"
 
*[[Baphomet]], a demon supposedly worshiped by the [[Knights Templar]]
 
*[[Beelzebub]], ba'al zevuv בעל זבוב (Hebrew): Master of the flies or [[Lord of the Flies]]
 
*[[Belial]], Beliar, Bheliar (Hebrew): without master, despicableness of the earth, Lord of Pride
 
{{Column}}
 
*[[Mastema]], a devil in the [[Book of Jubilees]]
 
*[[Mephistopheles]], Mephisto (Greek): that, which avoids the light
 
*[[Samael|Sammael]], Samiel, Sammael (Hebrew): "Poison of God"
 
{{Column-end}}
 
*[[Azazel]], Asael (Hebrew): King of Devils
 
*[[Chutriel]] (Hebrew): Punisher of Hell{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Demogorgon]]
 
*[[Uriel]]
 
  
===Titles===
+
==Notes==
These are all titles that almost always refer to the Devil himself.
+
<references/>
{{Columns-start|num=2}}
 
* 666 or 616, the [[Number of the Beast]]
 
*[[Angra Mainyu]], Ahriman: "malign spirit," "unholy spirit"
 
*[[Antichrist]], the coming of the Devil to the mortal world in Christianity
 
*Der Leibhaftige (German): "He Himself"{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*Diabolus, Diavolus (Greek): "downward flowing"
 
*[[Iblis]], the devil in Islam
 
*[[Underworld|Lord of the underworld]] / Lord of [[Hell]] / Lord of this World
 
*[[Lucifer]] / The Morning Star (Greek and Roman): bringer of light, illuminator; often believed to be Satan's name before he fell (the Planet [[Venus]])
 
{{Column}}
 
*[[Old Scratch]], The Stranger, [[Old Nick]]: a colloquialism for the devil, as indicated by the name of the character in the story ''[[The Devil and Tom Walker]]''
 
*Old Hob
 
*Prince of Darkness / [[Air (classical element)|Air]]
 
*[[Satan]] / The Adversary, Accuser, Prosecutor
 
*(The ancient/old/crooked/coiling) [[Serpent (symbolism)|Serpent]]
 
*[[Shaitan]], an Arabic name for Satan
 
*Kölski (Iceland){{Fact|date=March 2008}}
 
*[[Voland]] (medieval France)
 
{{Columns-end}}
 
  
===Other deities identified with The Devil===
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==References==
Mainstream Christianity and Islam often recognized the existence of other pagan deities, but considered them demons of hell. Some particularly major deities were considered analogues to The Devil himself in a different form. Deities considered as the Devil include:
+
* Forsyth, Neil. ''The Old Enemy: Satan & the Combat Myth'', Princeton Univ Pr, 1987. ISBN 978-0691014746
<!-- Please, just one person claiming that DeityX is the devil is not enough. This needs to be or have been a widespread belief. Please provide citations.-->
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* Hutton, Ronald. ''Triumph of the Moon, a History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. ISBN 978-0192854490
{{Columns-start|num=2}}
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* Pagels, Elaine. ''The Origin of Satan: How Christians Demonized Jews, Pagans, and Heretics.'' Vintage, 1996. ISBN 0679731180
*[[Angat]], a Madagascan devil{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
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* Rudwin, Maximilian Josef. ''The Devil in Legend and Literature.'' Ams Pr Inc, 1980. ISBN 978-0404054519
*[[Apep]]
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* Russell, Jeffrey Burton. ''The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity.'' Cornell University Press, 1987. ISBN 978-0801494093
*[[Arawn]], a Welsh god of the underworld
 
*[[Baal]], a Cannanite god
 
*[[Chernobog]], a Slavic name for the Devil, "black god"
 
*[[Dagon]], a Philistine sea god
 
*[[Dispater]]
 
*[[Hades]]
 
*[[Horned God]], a syncretic term of male nature gods, later converted to the devil
 
*[[Malek Taus]]
 
*[[Mammon]], an Aramaic God of prosperity and profit
 
*[[Mara (demon)|Mara]]
 
*[[Mot]]{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Nergal]]{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Orcus (mythology)|Orcus]]{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
{{Column}}
 
*[[Ördög]], a Hungarian entity of legend identified with the Devil
 
*[[Pan (mythology)|Pan]], Greek God of the desire, later converted to the devil
 
*[[Pazuzu]]
 
*[[Pwcca]], a Celtic counterpart of Satan{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Samnu]], a Central Asiatic devil{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Sedit]], a Native American devil{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Set (mythology)|Set]], an Egyptian god
 
*[[Supay]], Inka god of the underworld{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Surtr]]{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[T´An Mo]], Chinese counterpart to the devil, demand{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Typhon]]
 
*[[Yama]] (China){{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Yam (god)|Yam]]{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Vritra]], the main adversary in [[Historical Vedic religion|Vedic religion]]{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
{{Columns-end}}
 
<!--
 
*[[Loki]], Norse god of mischief{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Mortus]]
 
*[[Rahu]]{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
 
*[[Ragnara]]
 
*[[Toño]]
 
-->
 
  
==See also==
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==External links==
{{Columns-start|num=3}}
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All links retrieved January 29, 2024.
*[[Satan in literature]]
 
*[[Satan in popular culture]]
 
*[[The Devil (Tarot card)]]
 
{{Column}}
 
*[[Devil worship]]
 
*[[Hierarchy of devils]]
 
*[[Names of the demons]]
 
{{Column}}
 
*[[Hell]], [[Hades]], [[Underworld]]
 
*[[Pact with the Devil]]
 
*[[Number of the Beast]]
 
{{Columns-end}}
 
  
==Footnotes==
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* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04764a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia] ''www.newadvent.org''
{{reflist}}
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* [http://www.topical-bible-studies.org/17-0014.htm Children of the Devil] ''www.topical-bible-studies.org''
  
==References==
 
<div class="references-small">
 
* ''The Origin of Satan'', by [[Elaine Pagels]] (Vintage Books, New York 1995) explores the development, the "demonization" of the character of Satan against the background of the bitter struggle between the early [[Church]] and the [[Synagogue]] to be the legitimate heir of ancient [[Hebrews|Hebrew]] religious tradition. She discusses how Satan becomes a figure that reflects our own hatreds and prejudices, and the struggle between our loving selves and our fearful, combative selves.
 
* ''The Old Enemy: Satan & the Combat Myth'', by Neil Forsyth ([[Princeton, New Jersey|Princeton]], [[New Jersey]], 1987) seeks to show how Satan emerged from ancient mythological traditions and is best understood not as a principle of evil, but as a narrative character in the context of "the Combat Myth." Forsyth tells the Devil's story from the Epic of [[Gilgamesh]] through to the writings of [[Augustine of Hippo|St. Augustine]].
 
* ''The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity'', by Jeffrey Burton Russell ([[Meridian (publishers)|Meridian]], New York 1977) is "a history of the personification of evil" which, to make things clear, he calls "the Devil." Accessible and engaging, full of photographs illustrating the text, this is the first of a four volume series on the history of the concept of the Devil. The following volumes are, Satan: The Early Christian Tradition, Lucifer: The Devil in the Middle Ages, and Mephistopheles: The Devil in the Modern World.
 
* ''The Devil in Legend and Literature'', by Maximilian Rudwin ([[Open Court]], [[La Salle, Illinois]], 1931, 1959) is a compendium of "the secular and sacred adventures of Satan." Engaging, wide-ranging and good-humored (and out-of-print for thirty years), this "classic" was re-printed in 1989.</div>
 
  
==External links==
 
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04764a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia]
 
* [http://www.topical-bible-studies.org/17-0014.htm Children of the Devil]
 
* [http://www.atheistfoundation.org.au/devil.htm The Devil - Unjustly Maligned]
 
* [http://www.biblicaluniversalist.com/OriginOfSatan.html Origin and Fate of Satan]
 
  
[[Category:religion]]
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[[Category:religion]][[category:mythology]][[category:history]]
 
{{Credit|210808441}}
 
{{Credit|210808441}}

Latest revision as of 10:16, 29 January 2024

The Devil as Baphomet

The Devil is the title given to the supernatural being who is believed to be a powerful, evil entity and the tempter of humankind. The name "Devil" derives from the Greek word diabolos, which means "accuser." In Christianity, God and the Devil are usually portrayed as competing over the souls of humans, with the Devil seeking to lure people away from God and into Hell. The Devil commands a force of lesser evil spirits, commonly known as demons.

The Hebrew Bible does not assign this level of personification to the Devil. Instead, the adversary (ha-satan) is a servant of God whose job is to test humankind. However, in the Jewish apocrypha and rabbinical tradition, the Devil took on many of the characteristics inherited by Christianity.

The Devil is referred to by a variety of names, including Abbadon, Angra Mainyu, Satan, Asmodeus, Beelzebub, Lucifer, Belial, and Iblis. Many other religions have figures similar to the Devil.

The Devil is commonly associated with heretics, infidels, and witches. Modern conceptions of the Devil include the idea that he symbolizes humanity's own lower nature or sinfulness, or is a projection of unconscious human energies. In some traditions, believers gain power over the Devil through their faith, righteousness, or knowledge of the truth, and thus come to prosecute him before God, rather than the other way around.

The Devil in Abrahamic religions

Judaism

In the Hebrew Bible, the concept of the Devil is not highly developed, and Satan is only mentioned a few times. The idea took form in later Jewish writings, however, and was further elaborated in the rabbinical tradition.

In the Bible, "Satan" is not so much a proper name but an office: "The satan." In Hebrew, the word ha-satan (שָׂטָן) means "the adversary" or even "the prosecutor" or accuser. In the Book of Job, ha-satan is the title of an angel, one of the "sons of God" who comes to report to God. After God proudly points out Job's piety, ha-satan asks for permission to test the faith of Job. God grants ha-satan this power, and the righteous man is afflicted with loss of family, property, and, finally, his health. However, the book is clear in its view that none of this happens outside of God's sovereign will.

The idea of Satan as the accuser is retained in Zech. 3:1-2, where he is described as the adversary of the high priest Joshua. In the book of 1 Chronicles 21:1, ha-satan acts as the more traditional Devil when he incites David to an unlawful census. However, the earlier version of this story in 2 Samuel 24:1 portrays God himself, moved by anger, as leading David to this sinful act. The Book of Isaiah, Job, Ecclesiastes, and Deuteronomy all have passages in which God is credited for exercising sovereign control over both good and evil.

In the Jewish apocrypha, however, Satan's role came to resemble more closely the character normally associated with the Devil. In the Book of Wisdom 2:24 he is represented as the author of all evil, who brought death into the world. He was the seducer and the paramour of Eve, and was hurled from heaven together with other angels because of his iniquity (Second Book of Enoch 24). Since that time he has been called "Satan," although previously he had been termed "Satanel" (ib. 32:3). Satan rules over an entire host of angels (Martyrdom of Isaiah 2:2; Life of Adam and Eve 16). It was Mastema, another name for Satan (Book of Jubilees, 17:18), who induced God to test Abraham through the sacrifice of Isaac. In the Book of Tobit, Asmodeus is likewise identified with Satan, especially in view of his licentiousness. As the lord of other devils, he sometimes bears the special name Samael. In the New Testament, the opponents of Jesus accuse him of being an agent of Beelzebub, and this may be an accurate reflection of popular Jewish attitudes of the time regarding the Devil's work with sorcerers and witches.

The worship of the golden calf.

Talmudic Judaism reflected these popular concepts of the Devil. Samael, the lord of the satans, was formerly a mighty prince of angels in heaven (Gen. R. xix.). Like all celestial beings, he flies through the air (Gen. R. xix.) and can assume any form, as of a bird (Sanh. 107a), a stag (ib. 95a), a woman (Ḳid. 81a), a beggar (ib.), or a young man (Tan., Wayera). He is said to "skip" (Pes. 112b; Meg. 11b), in allusion to his appearance in the form of a goat. He is the incarnation of all evil, and his thoughts and activities are devoted to the destruction of humanity. Satan, the impulse to evil ("yetzer ha-ra'"), and the angel of death are one and the same personality.

Satan the serpent was an active agent in the human fall (Pirḳe R. El. xiii) and was even the father of Cain (ib. xxi). He was also instrumental in the death of Moses (Deut. R. xiii. 9) and in David's sin with Bathsheba (Sanh. 95a). If Satan does not attain his purpose, as was the case in his temptation of Job, he feels great sorrow (B. B. 16a). It was a terrible blow to him that the Torah should be given to Israel. He endeavored to overthrow it, and finally led the people to make the golden calf (Shab. 89a). He also appeared as a tempter to Rabbi Akiba (Ḳid. 81a).

Satan kindles the evil impulse to impurity (Ex. R. xx). In the hour of birth, he brings his accusation against the mother (Eccl. R. iii. 2). As the incarnation of evil, Satan is the arch-enemy of the Messiah: He is the Antichrist.

Christianity

Saint Wolfgang and the Devil by Michael Pacher).

In mainstream Christianity, the Devil is likewise known as Satan and is identified as the fallen archangel, Lucifer. In the Gospels, the Devil and his kingdom are regarded as encompassing the entire world, and are factors in all the events of daily life. He bears many names, being called "Satan" (Matt. 4:10, Mark 1:30, Luke 10:18, etc.), "devil" (Matt. 4:1 et passim), "adversary" (1 Peter 5:8, 1 Tim. 5:14), "enemy" (Matt. 13:39), "accuser" (Rev. 12:10), "ancient serpent" (Rev. 20:2), "great dragon" (Rev 12:9), Beelzebub (Matt. 10:25), and Belial. He is the author of all evil, who beguiled Eve (2 Cor. 11:3), and who brought death into the world (Heb. 2:13). He is ever the tempter (1 Thess. 3:5, 1 Peter 5:8), and was even able to tempt Jesus (Matt. 4). The Devil is identified with the serpent in the Garden of Eden and the dragon in the Book of Revelation. He is described as hating all humanity, opposing God, spreading lies and wreaking havoc on the souls of humankind.

In medieval Christian theology, the Devil was once the archangel Lucifer, but rebelled against God and has consequently been condemned to the Lake of Fire. Historically, he is thought to have inspired heretics, infidels, and all of those who oppose God and the Church. He is also strongly active in the life of many great saints, tormenting them and trying with all of this strength to tempt them to sin. As Baphomet, he allegedly seduced the Knights Templar to worship him. As Beelzebub, he caused untold evil through the works of witches. As the Antichrist, he is destined to deceive the majority of humankind, causing them to receive his mark of 666 on their foreheads. However, he and his followers will ultimately be defeated at the Second Coming of Christ, and will be thrown forever into the Lake of Fire.

Today, some Christians consider the Devil to refer figuratively to human sin and temptation, and to any human system in opposition to God. Some hold that the Devil, though admittedly a powerful force in human affairs, is actually the psychological projection of unconscious human energies.

Islam

In Islam, the Devil is referred to as Iblis. According to the Qur'an, God created Iblis out of "smokeless fire" (along with all of the other jinn) and created man out of clay. His great influence is due to his power to cast evil suggestions into the heart of men and women.

According to Muslim tradition, Iblis was expelled from the grace of Allah when he disobeyed God by choosing not to pay homage to Adam, the father of all mankind. He claimed to be superior to Adam, on the grounds that man was created of mere earth while he, Iblis, was created of fire. The angels dutifully prostrated themselves before Adam to show their obedience to God. However, Iblis—being unlike the angels in his ability to choose—decided not to bow. This caused him to be expelled by God, a fact that Iblis blamed on humanity. He therefore determined to bring mankind into disobedience as well. Initially, the Devil was successful in deceiving Adam and Eve, causing them to sin. However, they soon repented and were forgiven by God. Adam went on to become the world's first prophet and never sinned again. God gave the couple a strong warning about Iblis and the fires of Hell, commanding them and their children to stay away from the deceptions caused by the Devil.

The Qur’an teaches that the Devil's role, until the Resurrection Day, is to attempt to deceive Adam's children (mankind). After that, he will be put into the fires of Hell along with those whom he has deceived. The Qur'an depicts God as supremely sovereign over all his creations, and thus Iblis does not technically act outside of God's will. Iblis's single enemy is humanity. Thus, humankind is warned to struggle (jihad) against the mischief of the Devil. The ones who succeed in this are rewarded with Paradise, attainable only by righteous conduct.

The Devil in folklore

The Temptation of Saint Anthony the Great, by Paul Cézanne.

In the Western Christian and Jewish tradition, the Devil has entered popular folklore, particularly in his role as a trickster figure. He is found, for example, as a character in a large number of traditional folktales and legends from Ireland, Newfoundland, Italy, and the United Kingdom, where he often attempts to trick or outwit other characters. Similar tales exist in Jewish and Christian tradition in Eastern Europe. In some of these tales, the Devil is portrayed as more of a folk villain than as the personification of evil. In other popular stories, several of which have been made into Hollywood films, the Devil offers people power, wealth, and irresistibility to the opposite sex, in exchange for their souls.

The Devil also features prominently in a number of hagiographical tales, where he tempts the saints by adopting various disguises and torments them in graphic, often sexually suggestive, detail. Some of these tales, such as the popular legend of St. Dunstan, fall outside the authorized religious canon.

The Devil is also a recurring feature in tales explaining the etymology of geographical names, lending his name to natural formations, such as The Devil's Chimney. He also plays a role in folk music, such as the American fiddle songs "Devil's Dream" and "Up Jumped the Devil." In the blues tradition, the Devil supposedly gave certain players, such as notably Robert Johnson, great musical and spiritual power in a deal made at the crossroads at midnight.

In contemporary culture, the Devil figures prominently in popular fiction and film, such as The Exorcist, Rosemary's Baby, and many others.

The Devil in other religions

Hinduism

In contrast to Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Zoroastrianism, Hinduism does not recognize any central evil force or entity, such as the Devil, opposing God. However, evil beings (for example, asuras) do sometimes oppose the will of the gods and cause human suffering.

A prominent asura is Rahu, whose characteristics are in some ways similar to those of the Devil. In Hindu mythology, Rahu is a snake that swallows the sun or the moon, causing eclipses. According to legend, Rahu drank some of the divine nectar of immortality. But before the nectar could pass his throat, Mohini (the female avatar of Vishnu) cut off his head. Rahu's head, however, remained immortal. Rahu also appears in Buddhist writings and art as one of the terror-inspiring deities.

In Hindu philosophy, the asuras are not nearly so powerful as in the Abrahamic tradition. Their powers are inferior and exist as illusions in the mind. Asuras may also be human beings in whom bad motivations and intentions have temporarily outweighed the good ones.

The demon Kali—not to be confused with the goddess Kālī—may also be mentioned. According to the Vishnu Purana, he is a negative manifestation of Vishnu who, along with his extended evil family, perpetually operates as a cause of the destruction of this world. In Ayyavazhi, the Satan-like figure, Kroni is a ravenous demon with multitudinous limbs each the size of a mountain, Kroni is the primordial manifestation of evil who appears in various forms—Ravana, Duryodhana, and so on—in different ages or yugas. Kroni is said to be virtually omnipresent in this age.

Buddhism

A devil-like figure in Buddhism is Mara. He is a tempter, who also tempted Gautama Buddha by trying to seduce him with the vision of beautiful women who are often said to be Mara's daughters. Mara personifies unskillfulness and the "death" of the spiritual life. He tries to distract humans from practicing spirituality by making the mundane alluring or the negative seem positive. Another interpretation of Mara is that he actually is the desires that are present in one's own mind, preventing the person from seeing the truth. So in a sense Mara is not an independent being but a part of one's own being that has to be defeated.

In the daily life of the Buddha, the role of the Devil has been given to Devadatta, his cousin and jealous fellow monk who attempted to kill him and caused a schism in the monastic community.

Zoroastrianism

In Zoroastrianism, the adversary of the God of goodness is called Angra Mainyu. In the Gathas, the oldest texts of the Zoroastrian Avesta, the poet does not mention a manifest adversary of God. Here Ahura Mazda's creation is "truth," asha. The "lie" (druj) is manifest only as decay or chaos, not a personal entity. In classical Zoroastrianism, however, the good God Ahura Mazda, and his evil counterpart, Angra Mainyu, are the "twin" offspring of Zurvan, "Time." This concept of the struggle between personified good and evil is thought by many scholars to have influenced the concept of Satan as the Devil in Judaism during the Babylonian captivity, thus explaining why earlier Hebrew scriptures do not mention the Devil.

Today, the Parsis of India largely accept the nineteenth century interpretation that Angra Mainyu is the "Destructive Emanation" of Ahura Mazda. Instead of struggling against Mazda himself, Angra Mainyu battles Spenta Mainyu, Mazda's "Creative Emanation."

New ideas bout the Devil

Bahá'í Faith

In the Bahá'í Writings, "devil" or "satanic" can have a number of meanings. Sometimes it is used to refer to the Bahá'í interpretation of Satan. Other times it refers to people who are ruled by their own lower nature. In this sense, the Bahá'ís consider certain evil people to be devils incarnate, not in the sense of being ruled by an external evil force, but by their own selfish desires. The Báb referred to His persecutors as "the followers of the devil."[1]

The Bahá'í Faith teaches that Satan is also a metaphor for the "insistent self" or "lower self" which is a self-serving inclination within each individual. This tendency is often referred to in the Bahá'í Writings as "the Evil One."

In the context of the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness, the devil is interpreted as the human nature of Jesus. His human nature showed him what he could attain with his great powers, if he were to follow the ways of the world. However, the Holy Spirit within Christ refused to submit to the lower nature, choosing to do the Will of God instead.

Neopaganism

Pan teaching the shepherd Daphnis. Neopagans see the Devil as a Christian denigration of the "horned god" worshiped in pagan tradition.

Christian tradition has frequently identified pagan religions and witchcraft with the influence of Satan. In the Middle Ages, the Church accused alleged witches of consorting and conspiring with Satan. Several modern conservative Christian writers, such as Jack Chick and James Dobson, have depicted today's neopagan and witchcraft religions as explicitly Satanic.

Few neopagan traditions recognize Satan or the Devil outright. However, many neopagan groups worship some sort of Horned God, for example, as a consort of the Great Goddess in Wicca. These gods usually reflect mythological figures such as Cernunnos or Pan, and any similarity they may have to the Christian Devil seems to date back only to the nineteenth century, when a Christian reaction to Pan's growing importance in literature and art resulted in his image being translated to that of the Devil.[2]

New Age movement

Participants in the New Age movement have widely varied views about Satan, the Devil, and so forth. In some forms of Esoteric Christianity, Satan remains as a being of evil, or at least a metaphor for sin and materialism, but the most widespread tendency is to deny his existence altogether. Lucifer, on the other hand, in the original Roman sense of "light-bringer," occasionally appears in the literature of certain groups as a metaphorical figure quite distinct from Satan, and without any implications of evil. For example, Theosophy founder Madame Blavatsky named her journal Lucifer, since she intended it to be a "bringer of light."

Many New Age schools of thought follow a nondualistic philosophy that does not recognize a primal force for evil. Even when a dualistic model is followed, this is more often akin to the Chinese system of yin and yang, in which good and evil are explicitly not a complementary duality. Schools of thought that do stress a spiritual war between good and evil or light and darkness include the philosophy of Rudolf Steiner, Agni Yoga, and the Church Universal and Triumphant.

Satanism is a small group within the New Age movement that prefers Satan to God, seeing Satan as a being who promotes freedom and knowledge, while the Christian God is an oppressive tyrant. In effect, the roles of God and the Devil are reversed in this system.

Notes

  1. bahai.org, Selections From the Writings of the Báb. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  2. Ronald Hutton, p. 46.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Forsyth, Neil. The Old Enemy: Satan & the Combat Myth, Princeton Univ Pr, 1987. ISBN 978-0691014746
  • Hutton, Ronald. Triumph of the Moon, a History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. ISBN 978-0192854490
  • Pagels, Elaine. The Origin of Satan: How Christians Demonized Jews, Pagans, and Heretics. Vintage, 1996. ISBN 0679731180
  • Rudwin, Maximilian Josef. The Devil in Legend and Literature. Ams Pr Inc, 1980. ISBN 978-0404054519
  • Russell, Jeffrey Burton. The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity. Cornell University Press, 1987. ISBN 978-0801494093

External links

All links retrieved January 29, 2024.

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