Faith on the Fringe
The word "devil" doesn't appear once in the Hebrew Bible. Not once. What happened between the Old and New Testaments changed everything. When 70 Jewish scholars translated their scriptures into Greek for the Septuagint, they made a choice - "ha-satan" became "ho diabolos." The neutral Hebrew title "the accuser" picked up a moral charge it never carried before. A job description became an identity. In Part 2B of our Enemy series, we trace how the New Testament writers inherited this Greek translation and what they did with it. We walk through 1 John and John 8 that confirm a personal being with agency, then follow the thread to Revelation 12:9 where four names collapse into one. The Dead Sea Scrolls show us that Second Temple Judaism understood this hierarchy, the divine council, the Watchers, the kingdom of darkness operating with structure and strategy. What the Western church flattened into "the devil made me do it" was once a far more layered and dangerous reality. This is the origin of evil traced through translation choices that shaped 2,000 years of spiritual warfare theology, and the spiritual deception that followed when the Hebrew context was lost. > "The devil you think you've been reading about your whole life got handed to you by a translation team." > > -Leah Steele Barnett Key Takeaways * The word "devil" never appears in the Hebrew Bible. It entered through the Septuagint, when translators rendered ha-satan, the neutral "accuser," as ho diabolos, the "slanderer," adding a moral charge the Hebrew never carried. * Jesus is the most prolific speaker about the adversary in Scripture, roughly 35 to 40 references across the four Gospels, and he uses the terms three ways: a specific personal being, a functional role, and human beings opposing God. * Jesus calls Peter "Satan" in Matthew 16:23 and Judas "a devil" in John 6:70. Neither was possessed. Both were named for the adversary role they were playing in that moment. * Two Greek grammar proofs, ho poneros (the evil one, masculine singular) in 1 John 5:18-19 and the personal-agent language of John 8:44, confirm a real personal being with agency rather than a metaphor for evil. What the grammar does not settle is how many. * Revelation 12:9 collapses four names, dragon, ancient serpent, devil, and Satan, into one being, and Lucifer is absent, confirming it was never part of the New Testament's vocabulary for the adversary. Featured Scripture > Revelation 12:9 > > "And the great dragon was thrown down, that ancient serpent, who is called the devil and Satan, the deceiver of the whole world. He was thrown down to the earth, and his angels with him." Application: four names collapse into one being here, and Lucifer is conspicuously missing. If it had been a real biblical name for the adversary, John would have included it alongside every other one. Timestamps 00:48 No word for 'devil' in Hebrew text 03:24 Greek bridge text between covenants 06:43 'Slanderer': the moral charge in Greek 12:52 NT writers quoting the Greek translation 16:35 Legal opponent & hostile enemy in Greek 20:14 Is the enemy a real being or a concept? 24:18 John 8:44: Jesus' biography of the enemy 29:12 Luke 10:18: 'the accuser' is still a title 34:26 Jesus' 3 categories for naming the enemy 35:45 Peter called out as the opposer 38:08 Judas named an accuser in John 6:70 42:24 Four names, one being: Revelation 12:9 Resources and Connect Some links below are affiliate links. We may earn a small commission at no cost to you. Books mentioned (the Book of Enoch, which Malaine reads from on-air), in the Exploring Faith & Jesus section of Leah's Amazon shop: https://amzn.to/3WscgNe [https://amzn.to/3WscgNe] The Fringe on Facebook (the growing research document for this series lives here): https://www.facebook.com/groups/thefringeonfb [https://www.facebook.com/groups/thefringeonfb] Faith on the Fringe: Substack: https://faithonthefringe.substack.com [https://faithonthefringe.substack.com] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/faithonthefringepodcast [https://www.instagram.com/faithonthefringepodcast] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/faithonthefringepodcast [https://www.facebook.com/faithonthefringepodcast] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@FaithontheFringe [https://www.youtube.com/@FaithontheFringe] Email: help@faithonthefringepodcast.com [help@faithonthefringepodcast.com] People and Texts Referenced The Septuagint (LXX). The Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible made by about 70 scholars in the third to second centuries BC. The version Jesus and the apostles most often read and quoted, and the text that first rendered ha-satan as ho diabolos. Ho diabolos. The Greek word behind "devil," meaning slanderer or false accuser, from a verb root meaning to throw across. It carries a moral charge the Hebrew ha-satan did not. The four Greek terms for the adversary. Diabolos (slanderer), antidikos (legal opponent, 1 Peter 5:8), ho antikeimenos (the one who opposes, 1 Timothy 5:14), and echthros (hostile enemy, Matthew 13). Ho poneros. The masculine singular "evil one" in 1 John 5:18-19, distinct from the neuter to poneron, which would mean abstract evil. Jerome and the Latin Vulgate (around 400 AD). Dropped the definite article from "the Satan," which is where Satan hardened into a proper name in the West. Book of Enoch. Read from on-air, including the passage on wisdom and iniquity as beings, evidence of a fuller divine-council world. John Milton (next episode). The poet who gave Christians the pitchfork, horns, and hellfire image of Satan, none of which is in the Bible. Augustine of Hippo (next episode). The bishop who systemized the privation theory of evil, pushed Enoch out of the Western canon, and promoted the Sethite reading of Genesis 6. Scriptures for Further Study Zechariah 3:1. In Hebrew ha-satan, but the Septuagint renders it ho diabolos, "the devil" standing at Joshua's right hand. 1 Peter 5:8. Your adversary (antidikos) the devil (diabolos) prowls like a roaring lion. 1 Timothy 5:14. Give the adversary (ho antikeimenos) no occasion for slander. Matthew 13:24-39. In the parable of the weeds, the enemy (echthros) who sowed them is the devil. 1 John 5:18-19. The whole world lies in the power of the evil one, ho poneros, a personal being. John 8:44. Jesus' fullest description of the adversary, a father, a murderer from the beginning, a liar. Luke 10:18. I saw the Satan (tan satanan, with the article, still a title) fall like lightning. Matthew 16:23 and Mark 8:33. Jesus calls Peter "Satan," the vocative satana, adversary. John 6:70. One of you is a devil (diabolos, no article), spoken of Judas. John 13:27. Later, Satan enters Judas, showing role and indwelling as separate things. Revelation 12:9. Dragon, ancient serpent, devil, and Satan collapse into one being. Revelation 1:18. I am the living one. I have the keys of death and Hades. The verdict that does not move. Hosea 4:6. My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge, the show's standing anchor. Romans 8:19-22. Creation groans, waiting for the revealing of the sons of God. Deuteronomy 28. Blessings and curses set before the people, with heaven and earth as witness. 2 Timothy 1:7. God gave us a spirit of power, love, and a sound mind. Ephesians 6:10-18. The full armor of God for standing in spiritual warfare. Jonah 3. God sends Jonah to Nineveh to offer them an option before judgment. Call to Action Get into your prayer closet, not on your keyboard. Open your Bible and read 1 John 5, John 8:44, Matthew 16:23 where Jesus calls Peter Satan, and Revelation 12:9 where Lucifer is nowhere to be found. Sit with it, then get closer to Jesus. #FaithOnTheFringe #SupernaturalBiblicalTheology #KingdomTheology #TheDevil #Septuagint #OriginOfEvil #SpiritualWarfare See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.
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