by jimwalton » Wed May 18, 2022 8:58 am
> Satan and the other demons can therefore probably appear physically, in visions, in other forms much like holy angels can
The problem with this position is that there is no biblical evidence or support for it. For all intents and purposes, you're making it up. There is also no biblical support for the position that Satan or demons are the same kind of spirit beings that angels are. Satan is never identified as an angel, nor are the demons.
> regarding Satan/Lucifer, you must have not believed that passages like Ezekiel 28:12–18, Isaiah 14:1–32 were symbolic interpretations of Satan.
Correct. I do not. Isaiah 14 and Ezk 28 are about the kings of Tyre and Babylon. The passages are quite clear that's who it's about. To read Satan into them is unwarranted. There's no reason to take the whole chapter except those verses in the middle to be about the kings, and that the writer suddenly switches focus and referent for a few verses to talk about Satan, especially when the OT writers had no concept of Satan as we do since the ministry of Jesus.
> Satan is an angelic-type creature with a close connection. to the angels
There is no biblical evidence of this. We have to go by what the Bible teaches. We are not free to add to it. Satan is obviously a spirit-type being, but he is never identified as an angelic-type creature with a close connection to the angels. We can't just put things into the Bible that aren't there.
> It is a consistently biblical interpretation so I believe Lucifer to be Satan.
Lucifer allegedly appears only once in the Bible: Isa. 14.12, but he doesn't even appear there. The Hebrew term is helel, translated "morning star," a reference to Venus. This text is the only one in Scripture that uses this term, so there's no "consistently biblical interpretation" about it. It's a one-shot.
Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the OT: "Lucifer, as a name given to the devil, was derived from this passage, which the Fathers interpreted, without any warrant whatever, as relating to the apostasy and punishment of the angelic leaders. The appellation is a perfectly appropriate one for the king of Babylon, which reached back far into human history and was a prominently astrological culture."
Walton, Matthews, and Chavalas, in the IVP Bible Background Commentary: "The Hebrew word behind this translation, helel, is not used anywhere else in the OT. Many interpreters ancient and modern see it as a designation of Venus, the morning star. It is this interpretation that was behind the early Greek translation of the term, as well as the Latin Vulgate’s luciferus (= shining one, i.e., Venus). Most modern interpreters believe that Isaiah is using a well-known mythological tale as an analogy to the failure and consequences of the king of Babylon’s rebellion and arrogance."
John Walton, in the Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary: "This “Shining one” probably refers to Venus and is found also in Ugaritic mythology, with mention of “daughters of the morning star.” The Vulgate translators rendered this as “luciferus,” also the morning star, Venus. This led English interpreters to associate this passage with Satan, though it is not he who is the subject under discussion, but rather the Babylonian king."
John Oswalt, the New International Commentary on the Old Testament: "The scene shifts from the underworld to heaven and illuminates the pretense of human pride. That pride refuses to brook any rival, even God himself, insisting that all his prerogatives will be its own. While some church fathers took this text to refer to the fall of Satan, the great expositors of the Reformation were unanimous in arguing that the context does not support such an interpretation."
> Satan and the other demons can therefore probably appear physically, in visions, in other forms much like holy angels can
The problem with this position is that there is no biblical evidence or support for it. For all intents and purposes, you're making it up. There is also no biblical support for the position that Satan or demons are the same kind of spirit beings that angels are. Satan is never identified as an angel, nor are the demons.
> regarding Satan/Lucifer, you must have not believed that passages like Ezekiel 28:12–18, Isaiah 14:1–32 were symbolic interpretations of Satan.
Correct. I do not. Isaiah 14 and Ezk 28 are about the kings of Tyre and Babylon. The passages are quite clear that's who it's about. To read Satan into them is unwarranted. There's no reason to take the whole chapter except those verses in the middle to be about the kings, and that the writer suddenly switches focus and referent for a few verses to talk about Satan, especially when the OT writers had no concept of Satan as we do since the ministry of Jesus.
> Satan is an angelic-type creature with a close connection. to the angels
There is no biblical evidence of this. We have to go by what the Bible teaches. We are not free to add to it. Satan is obviously a spirit-type being, but he is never identified as an angelic-type creature with a close connection to the angels. We can't just put things into the Bible that aren't there.
> It is a consistently biblical interpretation so I believe Lucifer to be Satan.
Lucifer allegedly appears only once in the Bible: Isa. 14.12, but he doesn't even appear there. The Hebrew term is helel, translated "morning star," a reference to Venus. This text is the only one in Scripture that uses this term, so there's no "consistently biblical interpretation" about it. It's a one-shot.
Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the OT: "Lucifer, as a name given to the devil, was derived from this passage, which the Fathers interpreted, without any warrant whatever, as relating to the apostasy and punishment of the angelic leaders. The appellation is a perfectly appropriate one for the king of Babylon, which reached back far into human history and was a prominently astrological culture."
Walton, Matthews, and Chavalas, in the IVP Bible Background Commentary: "The Hebrew word behind this translation, helel, is not used anywhere else in the OT. Many interpreters ancient and modern see it as a designation of Venus, the morning star. It is this interpretation that was behind the early Greek translation of the term, as well as the Latin Vulgate’s luciferus (= shining one, i.e., Venus). Most modern interpreters believe that Isaiah is using a well-known mythological tale as an analogy to the failure and consequences of the king of Babylon’s rebellion and arrogance."
John Walton, in the Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary: "This “Shining one” probably refers to Venus and is found also in Ugaritic mythology, with mention of “daughters of the morning star.” The Vulgate translators rendered this as “luciferus,” also the morning star, Venus. This led English interpreters to associate this passage with Satan, though it is not he who is the subject under discussion, but rather the Babylonian king."
John Oswalt, the New International Commentary on the Old Testament: "The scene shifts from the underworld to heaven and illuminates the pretense of human pride. That pride refuses to brook any rival, even God himself, insisting that all his prerogatives will be its own. While some church fathers took this text to refer to the fall of Satan, the great expositors of the Reformation were unanimous in arguing that the context does not support such an interpretation."