Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
rulers whom they secretly control.75
We know almost nothing about Tatian’s life or what this
conviction meant for him in practice; but we do know what it
meant to the young Egyptian Christian named Origen, who was
seventeen years old when he saw his beloved Christian father,
Leonides, arrested and summarily executed for refusing to
sacrifice to the gods. Thereafter Origen, later nicknamed
Adamantius (“the adamant,” or “the indomitable”), resolved to
be a warrior on God's side against the forces of Satan. From
childhood, as we shall see, Origen witnessed bitter conflict—and
then the most astounding series of shifts and reverses—in the
relationship between Christians and imperial power. He
remained wary of those in power all his life. Though he believed
that Christians benefited from the peace the Roman empire
provided, he became the first Christian to argue publicly that
people have an innate moral right to assassinate tyrants.
Born in the year 185 to a Roman father and an Egyptian
mother, both baptized Christians, Origen was seven years old
when the reigning emperor, Lucius Commodus, the sole
surviving son of Marcus Aurelius, was murdered in his bath.76
Rumor blamed a palace conspiracy involving Commodus’s
athletic trainer and Marcia, his concubine; but masses of people,
hearing that the emperor was dead, poured into the streets to
celebrate, for Commodus had rebelled against everything his
distinguished father stood for. By the time he was strangled,
Commodus was widely despised as a madman and a tyrant; he
had shocked his constituents by pretending to be a gladiator,
engaging in public combats in the arena, effectively abdicating
his imperial responsibilities by playing the role of a slave. He had
also neglected to persecute Christians: Marcia apparently favored
Christians and had encouraged Commodus to leave them alone.
The battles of succession lasted three years. Septimius Severus
emerged as victor, and seven years later, in 202 C.E., initiated
new
136 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
measures to purge his empire of Christians. It was then that Ori-
gen saw his father arrested along with others, charged with
professing Christianity, and sentenced to beheading; apparendy
he was protected by Roman citizenship, as Justin had been, from
slow torture and public execution.
While Leonides was in prison, Origen impulsively tried to
join the group of martyrs and escaped death, it was said, only
because his mother hid his clothes so that he could not leave the
house. But Origen passionately urged his father not to lose heart
out of concern for his wife and their seven children: “Be careful
not to change your mind because of us.”77 His father stood firm;
but his execution left the family destitute, since the state
confiscated his property as that of a condemned criminal. Origen
never forgot that imperial forces, however benign they later
seemed to many Christians, might at any moment show their
demonic origins.
Origen was rescued from destitution by the generosity of a
rich Christian, who invited him into her household and
supported him for several months while he continued studying
literature and philosophy. The following year, already
recognized, at the age of eighteen, for his brilliance and learning,
Origen began to teach on his own, supporting himself, his
mother, and her six younger children. The persecution that had
cost Leonides his life continued in Alexandria under several
changes of administration; several of Origen’s own students
were arrested and executed for professing Christianity, and he
himself lived under suspicion. More than once, angry crowds
threatened his life, especially when he ignored fears for his own
safety and publicly embraced a condemned friend, a man named
Plutarch, and attended his execution. So far, Origen himself
escaped arrest and interrogation, probably because Severus’s
persecution had targeted upper-class converts, especially Roman
citizens, like Origen’s father and many of his students. Origen
was protected, apparently, by having inherited from his
Egyptian mother the low status Roman law accorded to native
noncitizens.
When Origen was twenty-six, and still teaching, writing, and
interpreting the Scriptures, Septimius Severus died and was suc-
SATAN’S EARTHLY KINGDOM / 137
ceeded by two sons, one of whom, Caracalla, promptly
assassinated his brother Geta but left the Christians alone. For
the moment the government seemed almost benign. One day in
215, during Caracalla’s reign, soldiers arrived in Alexandria with
a letter from the governor of Arabia (present-day Jordan),
summoning Origen to appear at the palace. The governor had
heard of Origen’s brilliance and wanted to meet the young man;
and Origen agreed. But after Caracalla had ruled for six years, he
was assassinated by Macrinus, who reigned for only a year before
he, too, was killed. He was succeeded by Heliogabalus,
Caracalla’s cousin, a reclusive, fanatical young worshiper of the
sun god, a man whom many people regarded as insane.
Four years later, another cousin, Alexander Severus, replaced
Heliogabalus on the throne, and now, for the first time in Roman
history, members of the imperial house not only tolerated
Christians but even favored them. Severus's mother, the empress
Julia Mammea, who gathered many distinguished people at her
court, sent soldiers to invite Origen to join them; when he
arrived, she discussed with him, among other things, the
possibility of reconciling Christians to Roman civilization.
Christians of the time would have been astonished to hear a
rumor circulating in the empire—whether true or not—that the
emperor himself had set up statues of Abraham and Jesus along
with those of Socrates and other holy men in his private palace
sanctuary!
Hopes for a new age of tolerance were shattered, however,
when Maximinus, a rough peasant from Thrace, assassinated
Severus, took over the throne, and immediately renewed the
persecution of the Christians. Origen followed with great
concern the threatened arrest of several of his close friends and
associates, including Ambrose, his rich and influential patron
and friend, and the priest Protoctetus. Origen, who was not
arrested, wrote to them in a passionate “exhortation to
martyrdom,” warning them not to waver, nor to be deceived by
apparently genuine pleas to renounce their faith in order to save
their lives. To give in, he said, would be to capitulate to Satan;
for those arrested for Christ’s sake, only death brings victory.78
138 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
In the struggle for the throne that followed Maximinus’ death,
the young emperor Gordian III prevailed, and he, too, left
Christians alone. Assassinated by his own soldiers after ruling
for four years, he was succeeded by his own chief general. The
newly acclaimed emperor, Philip, the first Arab to achieve that
position, immediately secured his rule by killing Gordian’s
young son.
Philip the Arabian may have been the first Christian emperor.
At least three witnesses attest that he performed public penance
for that murder in view of the astonished congregation, during
the huge gatherings that attended the Easter vigil the following
spring—penance imposed on the emperor by the Christian
bishop of Antioch. During Philip’s reign, thousands of new
converts filled the churches. Now Origen complained in a
sermon that conversion had become so common and even
fashionable that it was no longer dangerous.
But Origen’s suspicions of government power were confirmed
when Decius killed Philip, seized power, and initiated a new and
more aggressive persecution of Christians. This time, however,
Origen, now in his mid-sixties and more renowned than ever,
was arrested and brutally tortured; the governor hoped to gain a
useful recantation from his most famous prisoner, but the
attempt failed.
Origen knew that pagan opposition to Christianity was often
based on more than superstition and prejudice. Years before his
arrest, Origen had read a tract, “The True Word,” which charged
that Christian “atheism” masked a rebellion against everything
society and government upheld. Only a few years before his
arrest, Origen had decided to respond to these charges, for this
was one of the most incisive and devastating attacks on
Christians ever written.79
Celsus, who wrote the tract around 180 C.E., was a religiously
inclined Platonic philosopher. He begins by charging that “the
cult of Christians is a secret society, whose members hide
together in corners for fear of being brought to trial and
punishment.” Citing their refusal of the magistrates’ orders to
sacrifice to the gods, Celsus says that if everyone adopted the
Christians’ attitude, there would be no rule of law.80 Celsus lived
at a time
SATAN’S EARTHLY KINGDOM / 139
when the Christian movement was growing rapidly, especially
among the illiterate. He writes that the Christians' refusal to
obey certain laws and to cooperate with local or imperial officials
threatens to “destroy legitimate authority, and return the world
to chaos and barbarians”—even to “bring down the empire, and
the emperor with it.”
Origen’s defiant reply opens by challenging the moral
legitimacy of imperial rule:
It is not irrational to form associations contrary to the existing
laws, if it is done for the sake of the truth. For just as those
people would do well who enter a secret association in order to
kill a tyrant who had seized the liberties of a state, so
Christians also, when tyrannized . . . by the devil, form
associations contrary to the devil’s laws, against his power, to
protect those whom they succeed in persuading to revolt
against a government which is barbaric and despotic.81
Origen stops short of identifying imperial law directly with
the devil, and elsewhere he even praises the pax Romana for
having providentially kept the peace during Jesus' lifetime.
Nevertheless Origen characterizes as demon-inspired all laws
and persons hostile to Christians. Christians, however, will
triumph over their enemies; Jesus died, he explains, “to destroy
a great
daimon
—in fact, the ruler of
daimones
, who held in
subjection the souls of humanity.”82 Whoever considers
empirical evidence will have to admit, he says, that the spread of
Christianity, although unanimously opposed by human
authorities, governmental and military, proves that some
enormous, previously unknown power is now at work in the
world:
Anyone who examines the matter will see that Jesus attempted
and successfully accomplished works beyond the range of
human capacity. For everything opposed the spread of his
teaching in the world—including the rulers in each period, and
their chief military leaders and generals, everyone—everyone,
to speak generally—who possessed even the slightest
influence,
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and in addition to these, the rulers of all the various cities, and
the armies, and the people.83
Origen admits that the astounding success of the Christian
movement has occurred principally among the poor and
illiterate, but only because “the illiterate necessarily outnumber
the educated.” Yet “some persons of intelligence and education”
—he might have mentioned Justin, Tatian, even himself—have
committed their lives to the Christian faith. So, against all odds,
Origen continues,
our Jesus, despised for being born in a rural village—not even a
Greek [that is, civilized] one, nor belonging to any nation
widely respected; and being despised as the son of a poor
laboring woman, [nevertheless] has been able to shake the
whole civilized world.84
Jesus’ impact surpasses that of “even Pythagoras or Plato, let
alone that of any ruler or military leader in the world.”
Astonishing turns of events in world history offer empirical
proof that God’s spirit, acting in Jesus, is conquering Satan.
Origen agrees with Matthew and Luke that
one fact which proves that Jesus is something divine and sacred
is this: that the Jews have suffered because of him for a very
long time such terrible catastrophes. . . . For what nation is
exiled from its own capital city, and from the place sacred to
the worship of its ancestors, except the Jews alone? . . . It was
fitting, then, that the city where Jesus underwent sufferings
should utterly perish, and the Jewish nation be overthrown. . . .
And we can say with confidence it never will be restored to its
former condition.85
If the suffering of the Jews proves that God is punishing
them, what does that say about the suffering of Christians? And
what about those innocent people who suffer disease,