by Kata Plasma » Fri Mar 27, 2020 1:10 pm
The New Testament shows no interest in equating Eden's serpent with Satan
Thesis: There is too little evidence to posit that the earliest Christians understood the serpent who deceived Eve to have been Satan. Much of what is said about Satan in the New Testament that has been traditionally understood in reference to the Edenic serpent can be better explained by other intertexts.
1. The serpent of the Apocalypse
The author of Revelation refers to Satan as "the dragon... that ancient serpent... the deceiver of the whole world" (12:9). While Christians have traditionally taken this in reference to Eden's snake, the data can be satisfactorily explained with reference to Leviathan. Like the Satan of Revelation, Leviathan is called a dragon, a serpent, many-headed, and violent (LXX Psalm 74:13-14, Isaiah 27:1). Leviathan is likewise a monster of old, defeated by God long ago (Isaiah 51:9).
That Revelation's Satan "deceives" is not necessarily in reference to the Edenic serpent either. The serpent of Eden "deceives" (ἀπατάω, LXX Genesis 3:13) while the Satan of Revelation "leads astray" (πλανάω). In spite of English translations, different words are in fact used.
These acts of deception also serve different purposes. The former act of deception brings Adam and Eve to ruin, the latter, on the other hand, conscripts the nations of the world (through pagan worship) to persecute God's people, the churches (Revelation 20:3-8, cf. 12:9-12, 13:13-15, 18:21-24). It is therefore probably the visionary passages of the book of Daniel, not the Genesis 3 narrative, that provides the background for the beastly deception in Revelation: through the agency of idolatrous kings and kingdoms, monstrous beasts wage war upon the saints of the most high (cf. Daniel 7-11, Revelation 13).
2. Satan as murderer and liar
In John 8:44 Jesus accuses the Devil (aka Satan) of being a "murderer from the beginning" and "the father of lies." Christians have traditionally seen this as a reference to the serpent in Eden who lied to Eve and thus brought about her death.
While the serpent may have in fact lied to Eve in some sense, the Genesis 3 story does not characterize him as a murderer. It is God who punishes man, woman, and snake for their transgressions. Further, neither God nor the snake cut short Adam's life through violence. God rather limits man's life.
A better literary background for Jesus' words can be found in the popular Jewish myth of the rebellious angels. The idea that Satan was a fallen angel, a commander of evil angels and spirits, prevails in the New Testament (cf. 2 Corinthians 11:14, Matthew 25:41, Mark 3:22, Luke 10:18, 13:10-17, Revelation 12:7-9, 16:13, Jude 6, 2 Peter 2:4, etc.) while no explicit equation of Satan with the Edenic serpent is made. The most important source for the myth of the rebellious comes in 1 Enoch. There, the leader of the rebel angels, Azazel, teaches mankind how to make the weapons of war. The result is widespread bloodshed (1 Enoch 8:1-9, 9:1-10, 10:12). There is so much bloodshed, in fact, that God decides to annihilate Creation via the Flood. In this story Azazel is surely a murderer from the beginning—having introduced murder to humanity on a systematic scale. His deceit, giving man the wisdom and power he so desires, leads to the destruction of God's creation. In this sense he is also a father of lies.
Since Jesus was well-aware of this myth for the origin of Satan, it makes sense that he would refer to the Devil in these ways. There is simply no need then to posit a belief in the Satan-serpent connection in earliest Christianity.
The New Testament shows no interest in equating Eden's serpent with Satan
Thesis: There is too little evidence to posit that the earliest Christians understood the serpent who deceived Eve to have been Satan. Much of what is said about Satan in the New Testament that has been traditionally understood in reference to the Edenic serpent can be better explained by other intertexts.
[b]1. The serpent of the Apocalypse[/b]
The author of Revelation refers to Satan as "the dragon... that ancient serpent... the deceiver of the whole world" (12:9). While Christians have traditionally taken this in reference to Eden's snake, the data can be satisfactorily explained with reference to Leviathan. Like the Satan of Revelation, Leviathan is called a dragon, a serpent, many-headed, and violent (LXX Psalm 74:13-14, Isaiah 27:1). Leviathan is likewise a monster of old, defeated by God long ago (Isaiah 51:9).
That Revelation's Satan "deceives" is not necessarily in reference to the Edenic serpent either. The serpent of Eden "deceives" (ἀπατάω, LXX Genesis 3:13) while the Satan of Revelation "leads astray" (πλανάω). In spite of English translations, different words are in fact used.
These acts of deception also serve different purposes. The former act of deception brings Adam and Eve to ruin, the latter, on the other hand, conscripts the nations of the world (through pagan worship) to persecute God's people, the churches (Revelation 20:3-8, cf. 12:9-12, 13:13-15, 18:21-24). It is therefore probably the visionary passages of the book of Daniel, not the Genesis 3 narrative, that provides the background for the beastly deception in Revelation: through the agency of idolatrous kings and kingdoms, monstrous beasts wage war upon the saints of the most high (cf. Daniel 7-11, Revelation 13).
[b]2. Satan as murderer and liar[/b]
In John 8:44 Jesus accuses the Devil (aka Satan) of being a "murderer from the beginning" and "the father of lies." Christians have traditionally seen this as a reference to the serpent in Eden who lied to Eve and thus brought about her death.
While the serpent may have in fact lied to Eve in some sense, the Genesis 3 story does not characterize him as a murderer. It is God who punishes man, woman, and snake for their transgressions. Further, neither God nor the snake cut short Adam's life through violence. God rather limits man's life.
A better literary background for Jesus' words can be found in the popular Jewish myth of the rebellious angels. The idea that Satan was a fallen angel, a commander of evil angels and spirits, prevails in the New Testament (cf. 2 Corinthians 11:14, Matthew 25:41, Mark 3:22, Luke 10:18, 13:10-17, Revelation 12:7-9, 16:13, Jude 6, 2 Peter 2:4, etc.) while no explicit equation of Satan with the Edenic serpent is made. The most important source for the myth of the rebellious comes in 1 Enoch. There, the leader of the rebel angels, Azazel, teaches mankind how to make the weapons of war. The result is widespread bloodshed (1 Enoch 8:1-9, 9:1-10, 10:12). There is so much bloodshed, in fact, that God decides to annihilate Creation via the Flood. In this story Azazel is surely a murderer from the beginning—having introduced murder to humanity on a systematic scale. His deceit, giving man the wisdom and power he so desires, leads to the destruction of God's creation. In this sense he is also a father of lies.
Since Jesus was well-aware of this myth for the origin of Satan, it makes sense that he would refer to the Devil in these ways. There is simply no need then to posit a belief in the Satan-serpent connection in earliest Christianity.