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God as the Divine Scapegoat

By Jeremy Myers
12 Comments

God as the Divine Scapegoat

The biblical symbol of the scapegoat helps us understand what God was doing when He allowed (or inspired) Old Testament authors to attribute violence to Him.

God Scapegoat

When we understand that God Himself is the primary scapegoat in Scripture, it helps us see that God is not violent, but He allowed violent people to attribute violence to His name so that He could bear their shame and guilt.

โ€œGod Himself reuses the scapegoat mechanism, at his own expense, in order to subvert it.โ€ (Girard, One By Whom Scandal Comes, 43-4). To put it another way, God โ€œallowed himself to be expelled so as to make of his expulsion a revelation of what he is really like” (Alison, โ€œGirardโ€™s Breakthroughโ€).

God Takes On our Violence

Though innocent of all violence attributed to Him, God allowed the violence committed by others to be laid upon His head so that He might take the blame and thereby rescue and deliver mankind from most of the self-destructive consequences of their sin, and reveal Himself to mankind as a loving Father who takes our sin upon Himself for our deliverance from the consequences of sin and for the sake of our relationship with Him.

God โ€œis always ready to pay with his own person in order to spare men the terrible destiny that awaits them” (Girard, Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World, 208).

God Rescues Mankind from Violence

By being the scapegoat for natural and human violence, God thereby rescues, redeems, and delivers mankind from the disastrous consequences of owning up to what is truly in our hearts. If given a true and complete glimpse of the blackness that resides in our own hearts, some would fall into deep despair and depression from which there is no escape, while others would embrace the evil as a justification for further evil actions toward others. When men get an honest glimpse of the evil that resides in our hearts, we either sink down into death or seek to incarnate the evil even further. When faced with the depths of our own depravity, some die and some kill.

God wanted to rescue humanity from either possibility and so He actively allowed men to blame Him for the evil of their own hearts. He bears the burden that no human being can bear. He became the scapegoat for their sin, allowing humanity to lay their sins upon Him so that He might carry their sins away.

In order to achieve Godโ€™s purposes, God will in effect โ€œget his hands dirty.โ€ It is necessary for God to enter into compromising situations, and work with whatever potential there is, in order to move forward Godโ€™s salvific goals. But God, too, will suffer violence in such situations. God will not only absorb the effects of the human misuse of power, but will โ€œlook badโ€ in the eyes of those who think that Godโ€™s possibilities should not be so limited (see 1 Cor 1:26-31) (See Fretheim, The Suffering of God, 76).

God as the Scapegoat and Leviticus 16

God becomes a victim

The imagery of the scapegoat comes from the description in Leviticus 16 of the goat chosen on the Day of Atonement to carry the sins of Israel out into the wilderness. On the Day of Atonement, the priest would select two goats and present them before God, and then cast lots to see which would be chosen as the scapegoat.

The goat which was selected by lot was offered to God as a burnt offering, while the one which was rejected became the scapegoat (Lev 16:7-10). The priest was to lay his hands upon the scapegoat, symbolically passing all of Israelโ€™s sins upon the goat, and then the goat was to be sent away into the wilderness, where it (presumably) died, taking all the sins of Israel with it into the grave.

That God allows Himself to be the scapegoat for our sin is seen partly in the fact that the practice of โ€œscapegoatingโ€ is found, not just in Leviticus 16, but in all cultures and all religions throughout history. From sacrificial animals to human sacrifices, all societies sought, in one way or another, to alleviate their own guilt and shame by laying this guilt upon someone or something else.

While this often took the form of blood sacrifice, the practice of โ€œscapegoatingโ€ is also seen when a culture blames some person or people group within their society for all the woes that fall upon that society. This person or people group is then killed off, enslaved, or sent into exile, bearing the sins of society on their back. Those that remain are able to continue their lives as normal, thinking that the root cause of their problems has been eliminated.

The real problem, of course, is within each and every human being, and so it is only a matter of time before problems resurface and the quest for a new scapegoat must begin again.

The Scapegoat Mechanism

Sociologists, anthropologists, and psychologists have noticed this โ€œscapegoat mechanismโ€ in various societies and cultures around the world and have attributed it to an evolutionary necessity for the survival of human society. Humans need someone else to blame for their sin so that humanity can continue. The practice of blaming others for our behavior enables the survival of society (See Girard, The Scapegoat). 

Without the scapegoat mechanism, inter-personal violence only continues to escalate on an ever-increasing spiral of retribution and destruction until society collapses upon itself. By bringing blame upon a scapegoat, two warring enemies are able to put aside their differences and unite in the common goal of destroying the scapegoat. The scapegoat bears the blame for what was done, even though the scapegoat is usually innocent of the wrongdoing for which it receives blame.

Whether one accepts the evolutionary hypothesis or not, it cannot be denied that the scapegoat mechanism exists in all societies and cultures, and that God Himself used it to help rescue and deliver Israel from the disastrous consequences of her own sin.

Could it be that in using the scapegoat imagery, God was not only giving Israel a way of escape for their own violent tendencies, but was also revealing to them (and us) what He Himself was doing about the violence of Israel, and indeed, the violence of the whole world?

Could it be that the scapegoat imagery of Leviticus 16 that God wasnโ€™t just telling Israel that their sins were carried away into the wilderness by a goat, but that He Himself was bearing their sin on His own being, so that they might be delivered from the ever-increasing spiral of violence that threatened to consume them?

Yes, it seems entirely possible. When people wrote that God told them to kill and slaughter others, they were scapegoating God, but He was letting them do itโ€”even inspiring them to do so.

Why?

For their own deliverance.

The Deliverance of God

God knew that without the violence of the scapegoat mechanism, mankind would only spiral into ever-increasing violence, which ultimately would end in our complete destruction. Without an innocent victim on which to pour our wrath and guilt, mankind metes out its violence upon each other in an ever-increasing spiral of violence. God knew this in the Old Testament (and even today), and so allows people to blame Him for the most horrendous actions, not because He has done these things, and not because He has commanded that such things be done, but because He knows that if He does not act as the scapegoat, we will destroy ourselves.

God has chosen to bear the peopleโ€™s sins rather than deal with them on strictly legal terms. For God to assume such a burden, for God to continue to bear the brunt of Israelโ€™s rejection, meant continued life for the people (Fretheim, The Suffering of God, 148).

This is especially seen when we consider that much of the scapegoat imagery is carried over into the New Testament and applied to Jesus Christ on the cross. By teaching Israel about the scapegoat, and indeed, implanting the scapegoat mechanism into the hearts of people around the world, God was preparing people for the ultimate scapegoat of human historyโ€”Jesus Christ. Jesus, the innocent victim, bore our sins on His own body, taking them with Him into the grave, so that we might not fall into death but might experience the life God intended for His creation. We will look at Jesus as the divine scapegoat tomorrow.

Until then, have you ever heard of this “scapegoat mechanism” in studies outside of Scripture and how it serves to allow the survival of human society? What do you think of this idea? Where do you see it functioning in your culture today?

God of the Old Testament and JesusHow can a God who says "Love your enemies" (Matthew 5:44) be the same God who instructs His people in the Old Testament to kill their enemies?

These are the sorts of questions we discuss and (try to) answer in my online discipleship group. Members of the group can also take ALL of my online courses (Valued at over $1000) at no charge. Learn more here: Join the RedeemingGod.com Discipleship Group I can't wait to hear what you have to say, and how we can help you better understand God and learn to live like Him in this world!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, Leviticus 16, scapegoat, Theology of God, Theology of Sin, violence, When God Pled Guilty

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Why God Appears Violent in Scripture

By Jeremy Myers
21 Comments

Why God Appears Violent in Scripture

The reason that God appears so violent in Scripture (and in nature) is not because He is violent, but because He allows human and natural violence to be attributed to His name for our own sake. There are numerous reasons God allows violence to be attributed to His name, but we must begin by understanding the origin of violence itself.

The Origin of Violence

violent GodThroughout history and around the world, people have noticed that violence permeates everything. From birth to death, from galaxies down to sub-atomic particles, violence is omnipresent. Whenever people recognize this, they are left with only two basic options for the existence and origin of violence.

First, as I discuss in my book, (#AmazonAdLink) The Atonement of God, some people decided that violence and evil were eternal and that God was constantly at war against this violence and evil, but would never overcome it. This view has come to be known as dualism, and while dualism is prevalent in many Eastern religions and has attached itself in various ways to most Western religions (including Christianity), most Christians would not say that evil is eternally co-existent with God.

The second option for the origin of violence is that somehow or another, violence and evil originated with God (or the gods). Though many in the ancient world had no problems with such an idea (just look at how the gods of Egyptian, Persian, Greek, Roman, and Egyptian mythology behave) such a suggestion is not acceptable to most people today. Ever since the time of Plato (and as a result of his ideas), the gods are supposed to behave in morally superior manner, and not simply be extreme manifestations of humanityโ€™s deepest emotions and desires.

God and the Origin of Violence

Since neither option for the origin of evil and violence appeals to most Christians, numerous theories have been proposed for how violence and evil can exist in Godโ€™s good creation while not being eternally existent with God nor having its origin in God.

Some say the violence came directly from God, while others said its origin was in evil spiritual beings who rebelled against God, or even in mankind ourselves, but such options beg the question about why God would create beings who were capable of such evil.

Others argue that violence and evil are not always identical, so that what is violent may not always be evil. Though this is true, the origin of violence and evil must still be considered.

Regardless of which view people today hold regarding the origin of evil and violence, it cannot be denied that civilizations of earlier eras believed that since all creation was violent, and since all creation came from God, that therefore, God also was violent. How else, they thought, could violence exist? If God did not will it, want it, or command it, violence would have no place in the world.

Such a view is not surprising, for many people today believe the exact same thing.

The Origin of our OWN Violence

But more than the origin of violence, people needed an object on which to blame their own violence. For while everybody hates violence in others, we always seek to justify the violence that we ourselves exhibit.

Whenever we ourselves commit violence, we almost always find some way to blame it as a necessary response to the actions of others against us. Sometimes, when our violence has no one else to blame, we place blame upon God.

God is not violent

If we deny that God is the source of our violence, then we are left with only two options: either we must call our violence โ€œgoodโ€ or we must accept that we ourselves are terribly and inherently violent.

Though some theologians take the first option and some warriors take the second, the vast majority of mankind prefers to blame their violence on God. The violent God of a violent creation is the perfect target for our own violence. The word โ€œtargetโ€ is used intentionally. When we blame God for the violence we ourselves commit, God becomes both the justification for our violence, and the victim of it.

So why does God appear violent in Scripture? Because we have blamed God for our own violence. (See my book, (#AmazonAdLink) The Atonement of God, for a longer explanation.)

God appears violent in the Bible because humans would rather blame God for our violence than admit that we ourselves are violent. And as we have seen in previous posts, and will see in future posts, God willingly accepts the blame (or responsibility) for our violence because He is seeking to rescue and deliver us from it.

God of the Old Testament and JesusHow can a God who says "Love your enemies" (Matthew 5:44) be the same God who instructs His people in the Old Testament to kill their enemies?

These are the sorts of questions we discuss and (try to) answer in my online discipleship group. Members of the group can also take ALL of my online courses (Valued at over $1000) at no charge. Learn more here: Join the RedeemingGod.com Discipleship Group I can't wait to hear what you have to say, and how we can help you better understand God and learn to live like Him in this world!

God is Redeeming Theology Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, evil, Theology of God, Theology of Sin, violence of God, When God Pled Guilty

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When God Pled Guilty

By Jeremy Myers
6 Comments

When God Pled Guilty

When God pled GuiltyI tend to write my books on my blog. I do this for various reasons, one of which is that I desire input, questions, and suggestions from readers. The following posts are from my book When God Pled Guilty, which is an examination of how to understand the violent actions of God in the Old Testament in light of Jesus Christ, and especially, Jesus Christ dying for His enemies on the cross.

So read through the posts below, and join the conversation on each post. Also, invite others to read these posts by using the sharing buttons at the bottom, because many people struggle with how to understand the violence of God in the Bible.

When God Pled Guilty

  • Introduction: God is Guilty

Theories on the Violence of God in the Old Testament

  • Common Solutions to the Problem of Violence in the Old Testament
  • God, Violence, and Atheism
  • Allegorical Genocide
  • Is God Bipolar?
  • God-Inspired Error
  • The Kingdom of God vs. The Kingdom of God
  • Divine Accommodation to Violence
  • Bible Violence is Exaggerated
  • Sometimes Death is Merciful

My Proposal for Understanding the Violence of God in the Old Testament

  • Descriptions of a Violent God are Inspired and Inerrant
  • Jesus Rules
  • Read the Bible Backwards
  • Jesus Reveals Israel
  • Why Did Jesus Come to Earth?
  • Destroy the Devil’s Work
  • Cruciform God
  • The Love and Horror of the Cross
  • Jesus Became Sin for Us
  • A Proposal About the Violence of God in the Old Testament
  • A Light at the End of the Theological Tunnel
  • All War in Holy War
  • Is God a Murderer?
  • Satan Casts out Satan
  • How Satan Uses Religion to Cast out Satan
  • In Killing Jesus, Satan Cast out Satan
  • Why God Appears Violent in Scripture
  • God as a Divine Scapegoat
  • Jesus as a Divine Scapegoat
  • When the Fullness of Time Had Come
  • God is Not Angry With You
  • Why I Would Have Killed Jesus
  • We are Of Our Father, the Devil
  • God Takes on Our Violence
  • God Pleads Guilty
  • God the Sin Bearer
  • God is NOT Violent
  • Is God Lying about Violence in the Old Testament?
  • Let the Condemned God Die
  • Violence of God and the Love of Jesus
  • God Asks for our Forgiveness

Theological Chaos Theory

  • Chaos Theory and Violent Scriptures
  • God’s Policy of Non-Intervention
  • God is Not Absent
  • Why Nature is Destructive
  • Storms are Not From God
  • Incarnation of God in the Old Testament
  • God Appears Guilty; Just Like Jesus
  • Incarnation of God in the Violence of Israel
  • Satan seeks only to Destroy
  • God Sometimes Withdraws Protection
  • Bloody Jesus

The Violence of the Flood

  • Is the Flood a Beautiful Story about Rainbows?
  • Translations of Genesis 6:13
  • Context of Genesis 6-8 and the flood
  • The Flood and ANE Cosmology
  • How Genesis 8:21 reveals God’s Purpose in the Flood
  • The Flood According to Job 22:15-18
  • The Flood According to Isaiah 54:7-9
  • The Flood According to Jesus (Matthew 24)
  • The Flood According to 2 Peter 2:5-7
  • God Takes Responsibility for the Flood

More Coming Soon! Subscribe to the Blog to Keep Updated!

Miscellaneous Posts on the Violence of God in Scripture

  • The Violence of God and Evil
  • Did Jesus Condemn People? No!
  • John Piper on the Violence of God
  • Is God Lying About His Involvement in Violence?
  • Comparing God with Hitler
  • Is God a Psychotic Mass Murderer who Drowns Babies?
  • Where is Jesus in “The Bible”?

God is Featured Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, free ebooks, violence, When God Pled Guilty

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In Killing Jesus, Satan Cast out Satan

By Jeremy Myers
15 Comments

In Killing Jesus, Satan Cast out Satan

killing JesusIn Part 1 and Part 2 of this 3-Part series on how Satan casts out Satan, we learned that Satan uses violent religion to attack and kill the messengers of God, and thus, appear to be “casting out Satan” while in reality, he is only solidifying his own power and influence in the world. 

In this post, we see how Jesus used this ploy of Satan to truly cast out Satan. 

Satan Cast out Satan 

In killing Jesus, Satan cast out Satan for real and his kingdom crumbled around him in ashes and ruin. The great victory of the cross is that in killing Jesus, Satan unwittingly handed the dominion over the earth back to Jesus.

In seeking to prey upon Jesus, Satan had fallen prey to the โ€œdeep magicโ€ which C. S. Lewis writes about in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. By refusing to retaliate, by refusing to resort to redemptive violence, by refusing to play the devilโ€™s game, Jesus beat the devil at his own game and revealed Satanโ€™s scheme to the entire world. Jesus showed that there is no power in violence, but only more slavery.

True power and true victory lie in love for your enemies, in self-sacrificial service, in infinite forgiveness, and in bearing sin and shame for the sake of others.

As Jesus shuddered and died, Satan watched in horror as his death blow upon Jesus also caused his own kingdom to collapse and crumble. All of Satanโ€™s power and Satanโ€™s lies fell to dust and ashes.

With the death and resurrection of Jesus, a new green shoot of a new Kingdom sprouted up from the midst of the ashes of Satanโ€™s kingdom, and has been growing ever since, even to this very day. This new Kingdom is the Kingdom of God, a Kingdom built upon forgiveness and mercy, grace and generosity, love and kindness, rather than a kingdom built upon blame, victimization, persecution, and violence toward others for selfish gain.

The Defeat of Satan in the Death of Jesus

The beauty and majesty of the cross is that just when Satan thought he had won his greatest victory, it is exactly then, as the last breath escaped from the lips of Jesus, that Satan realized to his complete horror what he had done. Satan had truly cast out Satan.

Though with every previous charade, Satan had erected a false Satan and then used society, culture, government, and religion to โ€œcast out Satan,โ€ when Satan turned that same ploy upon Jesus, it truly was Satan himself who got cast out, and as a result, his kingdom crumbled. โ€œChristโ€™s death represents the loss of Satanโ€™s kingdom: the Satanic circle is broken, and the truth and grace of Jesus can now descend on those who are not afraid of accepting itโ€ (Girard, The One by Whom Scandal Comes, 62, cf. also p. 40, 53 ).

satan cast out satanUp until the crucifixion of Jesus, and even in the minds of most today, humanity believed the essential lie of the devil, that if someone was attacking you, you attack back. If someone was threatening you, you strike first and strike hard.

But Jesus did none of these things. He did not defend Himself. He raised no objection. He brought forth no weapon. He did not resort to violence or to blame in the least little way. He died.

But most shockingly of all, in dying, Jesus won!

In this way, Jesus revealed the emptiness of Satanโ€™s power, the futility of Satanโ€™s lies, and the falseness of his claims. By killing Jesus, Satan cast out Satan, and his power over the earth was seen to be no power at all.

Jesus launched a full-out assault on the gates of hell and prevailed against them by dying at hellโ€™s door. But much to hellโ€™s surprise, when they opened their doors to drag his body in so that they might parade it through their bloody streets, Jesus rode through the wide-open gates as a victor over a defeated city. His robe, stained in His own blood, swept through the streets, and washed them white as snow.

Jesus died at hell’s gates so that He might ride through them in victory.

The poor were given good news, the brokenhearted were given hope, the captives were set free, the blind were restored their sight, and the oppressed were granted liberty. The first year of Godโ€™s favor had begun. โ€œMankind, thanks to the Cross, for the first time in its history, is no longer in bondage to Satanโ€ (Girard, The Girard Reader, 206).

This again shows why God allows humanity to blame Him for the violence of the world. Throughout the ages, Satan thought that by turning God into a devil, Satan was defeating God. But on the cross, God finally revealed what had truly been going on all along. It was so that He could defeat sin, death, and devil by taking all the violence upon Himself without retaliating in any way, but forgiving and reconciling instead, thus showing the powerlessness and emptiness of the way of violence. 

God of the Old Testament and JesusHow can a God who says "Love your enemies" (Matthew 5:44) be the same God who instructs His people in the Old Testament to kill their enemies?

These are the sorts of questions we discuss and (try to) answer in my online discipleship group. Members of the group can also take ALL of my online courses (Valued at over $1000) at no charge. Learn more here: Join the RedeemingGod.com Discipleship Group I can't wait to hear what you have to say, and how we can help you better understand God and learn to live like Him in this world!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, cross, crucifixion, death of Jesus, satan, satan cast out satan, Theology of Angels, Theology of Jesus, When God Pled Guilty

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How Satan Uses Religion to Cast out Satan

By Jeremy Myers
8 Comments

How Satan Uses Religion to Cast out Satan

violence and religionIn Part 1 of this short series called “Satan Casts out Satan” we saw that although Satan stole dominion over the earth from Adam and Eve, Satan loves nothing more than to use violence to get rid of violence, and in so doing, consolidate and amplify his own power over the earth. One way he does this is through violent religion. This post looks a little more at this topic. 

God’s Activity in Satan’s Dominion

God was not inactive during this endless cycle of Satan using religion to “cast out Satan.” He constantly sent messengers, individuals, people, and even nations in an attempt to spread light and love in this dark world. But it is in these instances where Satanโ€™s power really worked. Satan loved nothing more than to use redemptive violence against those whom God had sent so that Godโ€™s messengers were killed in Godโ€™s name (Matt 21:33-46, 23:34-37). How did Satan do this? Through religion.

Godโ€™s message to the world has always been a message of grace, love, mercy, forgiveness, and acceptance. But Satan has always taken Godโ€™s message and perverted it so that it becomes a twisted set of rules, regulations, sacrifices, and laws by which mankind seeks to regain Godโ€™s love and favor.

But whenever God sent messengers and prophets to proclaim grace to the world, religion reared up to condemn Godโ€™s message of grace as false, heretical, contrary to Godโ€™s will, and of the devil. Then, having used religion to convert Godโ€™s messenger into a messenger of Satan, Satan used religious redemptive violence to kill and destroy Godโ€™s messenger in the name of God.

Satan turns Godโ€™s messenger into โ€œSatan,โ€ and then uses violent religion to destroy this newly minted โ€œSatan.โ€ It is in this way that Satan โ€œcasts out Satan,” and once again, protects and consolidates his own power in the world.

religion-facts-christianity-joan-of-arcSo by causing violence to be ascribed to God, and by using violent religion to โ€œcast out Satan,โ€ Satan had developed the perfect cycle of violence from which there seemed to be no escape. When bad things happened, it was Godโ€™s fault. And when God sent messengers to proclaim His truth and love, Satan vilified them until they too were killed in the name of God. This beautiful lie was perpetrated upon the world and carried out in plain view over and over and over since time began.

Satan Turned Religion against Jesus

But when Jesus arrived, He began to unmask the lie and pull back the curtains on Satanโ€™s scheme. He told people what God was really like. He invited people to turn away from violence, and live in love and forgiveness. He set people free from sin, from darkness, from slavery, and from hate. He called people to a new way of living.

This, of course, was not something Satan could allow. It was not something Satan could permit. And so he resorted to the same ploy that had worked millions of times before. Every previous time that God had sent a messenger, Satan raised up religion to kill Godโ€™s messenger in Godโ€™s name. Satan did the same thing with Jesus, believing that such a plan would work as it always had before. He got religion to condemn Jesus as a son of Beelzebub, a blasphemer, an idolater, as one who was opposed to God and Godโ€™s Word. And then Satan got religion to kill Jesus in the name of God. Satan used religion to turn Jesus into a โ€œSatanโ€ so that religion could then kill Jesus in the name of God. Once again, Satan sought to โ€œcast out Satan,โ€ and thus solidify and consolidate his power even further.

And just as it had always done before, the plan worked beautifully.

Almost too beautifully.

One can almost feel the confusion of Satan in the end the Gospel accounts as Jesus, who has struggled and taught and healed against all the death and destruction and lies of the devil throughout His entire three years of ministry, now goes silently to the cross, like a lamb to the slaughter. Satan does not see the trap until it is too late.

satan defeated at the crossFor all of human history, Satan cast out Satan so that he might continually reinforce his own power, and reinsert himself into human structures and institutions, forever consolidating and expanding his own power and dominion over Godโ€™s creation. But when he tried it with Jesus, he failed to recognize that he was snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

Jesus Beat Satan at his own Game

Jesus, of course, knew what Satan was about. This is why He asked earlier in His ministry: โ€œHow can Satan cast out Satan?โ€ (Mark 3:23). Jesus asks this question, but never answers it. Why? Because the answer was the key to His victory over Satan. The initial answer to Jesusโ€™ question seems to be that โ€œSatan would not cast out himself. It would be foolish to do so. For if Satan cast out Satan, then his kingdom would crumble, his house would fall, and his power would come to an end.โ€ But Jesus knew, as did Satan, that the key to Satanโ€™s power was that Satan had been casting out Satan since the beginning of time, but blaming his violent overthrow upon God.

But in the crucifixion of Jesus, when Satan tries once again to use violent religion to โ€œcast out Satan,โ€ this time in the scapegoat of Jesus Christ, Satan did not realize that his plan would backfire.

When Satan attacked Jesus through the crucifixion, Satan believed he was conquering over Jesus and casting Jesus out of this world once and for all. But little did he know that Jesus, by submitting Himself as the willing scapegoat for all the violence, enmity, hatred, and evil of the world, was unmasking the power and dominion of Satan, and thus, defeating Satan even as Satan thought he was striking the victorious blow. 

What do you think of this idea of Satan using religion to cast out Satan, which in reality, is nothing more than Satan using violence in the name of God to solidify his own power in this world? Include your own ideas in the comments below!

God of the Old Testament and JesusHow can a God who says "Love your enemies" (Matthew 5:44) be the same God who instructs His people in the Old Testament to kill their enemies?

These are the sorts of questions we discuss and (try to) answer in my online discipleship group. Members of the group can also take ALL of my online courses (Valued at over $1000) at no charge. Learn more here: Join the RedeemingGod.com Discipleship Group I can't wait to hear what you have to say, and how we can help you better understand God and learn to live like Him in this world!

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Books by Jeremy Myers, power, religion, satan casts out satan, Theology of Jesus, Theology of the Church, violence, When God Pled Guilty

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