How DID it all begin? Why IS there sin
anyway? Here is one of the most sweeping chapters in this entire book of
the ages. Read that most amazing of stories—how sin began.
Although surrounded by continual selflessness, something
happened. What could turn an angel of light into a devil—and do it right
in the middle of heaven? This is something you will want to read. It
will tell you why God had to wait—and the wonderful future in store for
His children—because He did.
To many minds the origin of sin and the reason for
its existence are a source of great perplexity. In their interest in
these questions, the truths plainly revealed in God’s word and essential
to salvation are neglected; and the fact that the Scriptures furnish no
explanation, is seized upon as an excuse for rejecting the words of Holy
Writ.
It is impossible to explain the origin of sin, or to
give a reason for its existence. It is an intruder, for whose existence
no reason can be given. It is mysterious, unaccountable; to excuse it,
is to defend it. Could it be excused, could a cause be shown for its
existence, it would cease to be sin. Our only definition of sin is that
given in the word of God; it is "the transgression of the law."
Sin originated with him, who, next to Christ, stood highest in the
favor of God, and highest in power and glory among the inhabitants of
Heaven. Before his fall, Lucifer was the covering cherub, holy and
undefiled. The prophet of God declares, "Thou wast perfect in thy ways
from the day that thou wast created, till iniquity was found in thee."
Ezekiel 28:15. Peace and joy, in perfect submission to the will of
Heaven, existed throughout the angelic host. Love to God was supreme,
love for one another impartial. Such was the condition that existed for
ages before the entrance of sin.
But over this happy state there came a change. Says
the prophet, addressing the prince of evil, "Thine heart was lifted up
because of thy beauty, thou hast corrupted thy wisdom by reason of thy
brightness." Ezekiel 28:17. Though God had created Lucifer noble and
beautiful, and had exalted him to high honor among the angelic host, yet
he had not placed him beyond the possibility of evil. It was in Satan’s
power, did he choose to do so, to pervert these gifts. He might have
remained in favor with God, beloved and honored by all the angelic
throng, presiding in his exalted position with generous, unselfish care,
exercising his noble powers to bless others and to glorify his Maker.
But, little by little, he began to seek his own honor, and to employ his
powers to attract attention and win praise to himself. He also gradually
led the angels over whom he ruled to do him service, instead of devoting
all their powers to the service of their Creator. This course perverted
his own imagination, and perverted those who yielded implicitly to his
authority.
The heavenly councils admonished Lucifer to change
his course. The Son of God warned and entreated him not to venture thus
to dishonor his Maker, and bring ruin upon himself. But instead of
yielding, Satan represented to those who loved him, that he had been
wrongly judged, that his dignity was not respected, and that his liberty
was to be abridged.
That Christ should regard him as needing to be
corrected, and should presume to take the position of a superior,
aroused in him a spirit of resistance, and he charged the Son of God
with a design to humble him before the angels. By misrepresentation of
the words of Christ, by prevarication and direct falsehood, Satan
secured the sympathy of the angels under his control, and they united
with him in revolt against Heaven’s authority.
To the last, he refused to acknowledge his own course
to be deserving of censure. When the consequence of his disaffection
became apparent, and it was decreed that with all his sympathizers he
must be forever banished from the abode of bliss, the arch-deceiver
threw the blame wholly upon Christ. With one accord, Satan and his hosts
declared that had they not been reproved, the rebellion would never have
occurred, thus making Christ responsible for their course. Thus stubborn
and defiant in their disloyalty, seeking vainly to overthrow the
government of God, yet blasphemously claiming to be themselves the
innocent victims of oppressive power, the arch-rebel and all his
sympathizers were at last banished from Heaven.
The rebellion in Heaven was prompted by the same
spirit which inspires rebellion on earth. Satan has continued with men
the same policy which he pursued with the angels. His spirit now reigns
in the children of disobedience. There is a constant hatred of reproof,
and a disposition to rebel against it. When God sends to wrong-doers a
message of warning or correction, Satan leads them to justify
themselves, and to seek the sympathy of others. Instead of changing
their wrong course, they manifest great indignation against the reprover,
as if he were the sole cause of difficulty. From the days of righteous
Abel to our own time, such is the spirit which has been displayed toward
those who dare to condemn sin.
Satan had excited sympathy in his favor by
representing that God had dealt unjustly with him in bestowing supreme
honor upon Christ. Before he was sentenced to banishment from Heaven,
his course was with convincing clearness shown to be wrong, and he was
granted an opportunity to confess his sin, and submit to God’s authority
as just and righteous. But he chose to carry his points at all hazards.
To sustain his charge of God’s injustice toward him, he resorted to
misrepresentation, even of the words and acts of the Creator.
Here, for a time, Satan had the advantage; and he
exulted in his arrogated superiority, in this one respect, to the angels
of Heaven, and even to God himself. While Satan can employ fraud and
sophistry to accomplish his objects, God cannot lie; while Lucifer, like
the serpent, can choose a tortuous course, turning, twisting, gliding,
to conceal himself, God moves only in a direct, straight-forward line.
Satan had disguised himself in a cloak of falsehood, and for a time it
was impossible to tear off the covering, so that the hideous deformity
of his character could be seen. He must be left to reveal himself in his
cruel, artful, wicked works.
He was not immediately dethroned when he first ventured to indulge
the spirit of discontent and insubordination, nor even when he began to
present his false claim and lying representations before the loyal
angels. Long was he retained in Heaven. Again and again was he offered
pardon on condition of repentance and submission. Such efforts as God
alone could make, were made to convince him of his error, and restore
him to the path of rectitude. God would preserve the order of the
heavens, and had Lucifer been willing to return to his allegiance,
humble and obedient, he would have been re-established in his office as
covering cherub. But as he stubbornly justified his course, and
maintained that he had no need of repentance, it became necessary for
the Lord of Heaven to vindicate his justice and the honor of his throne;
and Satan and all who sympathized with him were cast out.
By the same misrepresentation of the character of God
as he had practiced in Heaven, causing him to be regarded as severe and
tyrannical, Satan induced man to sin. And having succeeded thus far, he
declared that God’s unjust restrictions had led to man’s fall, as they
had led to his own rebellion.
But the Eternal One himself proclaims his character:
"The Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in
goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and
transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty."
Exodus 34:6, 7.
In the banishment of Satan from Heaven, God declared
his justice, and maintained the honor of his throne. But when man had
sinned through yielding to the deceptions of this apostate spirit, God
gave an evidence of his love by yielding up his only begotten Son to die
for the fallen race. In the atonement the character of God stands
revealed. The mighty argument of the cross demonstrates to the whole
universe that God was in no wise responsible for the course of sin that
Lucifer had chosen; that it was no arbitrary withdrawal of divine grace,
no deficiency in the divine government, which inspired in him the spirit
of rebellion.
In the contest between Christ and Satan, during the
Saviour’s earthly ministry, the character of the great deceiver was
unmasked. Nothing could so effectually have uprooted Satan from the
minds and affections of the heavenly angels and the whole loyal universe
as did his cruel warfare upon the world’s Redeemer. The daring blasphemy
of his demand that Christ should pay him homage, his presumptuous
boldness in bearing him to the mountain summit and the pinnacle of the
temple, the malicious intent betrayed in urging him to cast himself down
from the dizzy height, the unsleeping malice that hunted him from place
to place, inspiring the hearts of priests and people to reject his love,
and at the last to raise the cry "Crucify him! crucify him!"—all this
excited the amazement and indignation of the universe.
It was Satan that prompted the world’s rejection of
Christ. The prince of evil exerted all his power and cunning to destroy
Jesus; for he saw that the Saviour’s mercy and love, his compassion and
pitying tenderness, were representing to the world the character of God.
Satan contested every claim put forth by the Son of God, and employed
men as his agents to fill the Saviour’s life with suffering and sorrow.
The sophistry and falsehood by which he had sought to hinder the work of
Jesus, the hatred manifested through the children of disobedience, his
cruel accusations against Him whose life was one of unexampled goodness,
all sprang from deep-seated revenge. The pent-up fires of envy and
malice, hatred and revenge, burst forth on Calvary against the Son of
God, while all Heaven gazed upon the scene in silent horror.
When the great sacrifice had been consummated, Christ
ascended on high, refusing the adoration of angels until he had
preferred the request, "I will that they also whom thou hast given me,
be with me where I am." John 17:24. Then with inexpressible love and
power came forth the answer from the Father’s throne, "Let all the
angels of God worship him." Hebrews 1:6. Not a stain rested upon Jesus.
His humiliation ended, his sacrifice completed, there was given unto him
a name that is above every name.
Now the guilt of Satan stood forth without excuse.
His lying charges against the divine character and government appeared
in their true light. He had accused God of seeking merely the exaltation
of himself in requiring submission and obedience from his creatures, and
had declared that while the Creator exacted self-denial from all others,
he himself practiced no self-denial, and made no sacrifice. Now it was
seen that for the salvation of a fallen and sinful race, the Ruler of
the universe had made the greatest sacrifice which God could make. It
was seen, also, that while Lucifer had opened the door for the entrance
of sin, by his desire for honor and supremacy, Christ had, in order to
destroy sin, humbled himself, and become obedient unto death.
God had manifested his abhorrence of the principles of rebellion. All
Heaven saw his justice revealed, both in the condemnation of Satan and
in the redemption of man. Lucifer had declared God’s law to be of such a
character that its penalty could not be remitted, and therefore every
transgressor must be forever debarred from the Creator’s favor. He had
claimed that the sinful race were placed beyond redemption, and were
therefore his rightful prey. But the death of Christ was an argument in
man’s behalf that could not be turned aside. He suffered the penalty of
the law. God was just in permitting his wrath to fall upon Him who was
equal with himself, and man was set free to accept the righteousness of
Christ, and by a life of penitence and humiliation to triumph as the Son
of God had triumphed over the power of Satan.
God’s law stands fully vindicated. He is just, and
yet the justifier of all who believe in Jesus. Nothing less than this
plan of atonement could convince the whole universe of God’s justice.
In the final execution of the judgment it will be seen that no cause
for sin exists. When the Judge of all the earth shall demand of Satan,
"Why hast thou rebelled against me, and robbed me of the subjects of my
kingdom?" the originator of evil can render no excuse. Every mouth will
be stopped, and all the hosts of rebellion will be speechless before the
great tribunal.