Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
catastrophe, or human brutality? Here Origen chooses to be
inconsistent. Such
SATAN’S EARTHLY KINGDOM / 141
difficult problems, he says, are insoluble, “matters of deepest
and most inexplicable insight into the whole administration of
the universe.”86 Unlike many later Christians, Origen refuses to
attribute the sufferings of the innocent simply to “God’s will,”
for, he says, “not everything that happens happens according to
God’s will, or according to divine providence.” Some things, he
says, are “accidental by-products” of the works of providence;
others occur when human beings—and, for that matter,
supernatural beings as well—violate the divinely ordered
administration of the universe and intentionally inflict harm.
Many instances of human evil, as well as certain seemingly
gratuitous natural catastrophes, like floods, volcanoes, and
earthquakes, are instigated by “evil
daimones
and evil angels.”87
Celsus would have found such suggestions profoundly
disturbing, for as a Platonist philosopher he claims to revere “the
one god who rules over all.” Here the pagan Celsus argues for
monotheism against what he sees—quite accurately—as the
Christians’ practical dualism:
If one accepts that all of nature, and everything in the
universe, operates according to the will of God, and that
nothing works contrary to his purposes, then one must also
accept that the angels and
daimones
, heroes—all things in the
universe—are subject to the will of the one God who rules
over all.88
Celsus urges Christians, too, to worship the one God and to
revere everything that providence brings as manifestations of his
goodness.
In advocating such monotheism, Celsus agrees not only with
other philosophically minded intellectuals like Marcus Aurelius,
but also with millions of people all over the empire—the vast
majority of them illiterate—who worshiped the gods. The
hymns that they heard intoned at the temples of Isis, the
liturgies celebrated at the great altars of Serapis, the incantations
chanted during processions honoring Helios or Zeus, and the
prayers intoned at the festivals of Hecateten often identified the
particular deity they had come to worship with the whole of the
divine
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being. By the time of Marcus Aurelius, the classicist Ramsay
MacMullen says, many took for granted the unity of all the gods
and
daimones
in one divine source.89
What divided pagans from Christians, then, was not so much
monotheism, since many pagans also tended toward
monotheism, as the pagans’ essential conservatism. Pagan
worship binds one to one’s place in the world, and asks the
worshiper to fulfill whatever obligations destiny, fate, or “the
gods” have decreed. As we have seen, Marcus continually
reminds himself that piety means taking a reverent attitude
toward his familial, social, and national responsibilities. Musing
on whether the gods concern themselves with individual
destiny, Marcus declares:
If the gods took counsel together about me, then their counsel
was good . . . and even if they have no special thought for me, at
least they took thought for the universe; and I ought to
welcome and accept everything that happens as a result. And
even if the gods care nothing for human concerns, my own
nature is a rational and political one; I have a city, and I have a
country; as Marcus I have Rome, and as a human being I have
the universe; consequently, whatever benefits these
communities is the only good I recognize.90
We have seen how hard Marcus struggled to accept his
obligations, aware as he was of his privileges and
responsibilities, but many of his contemporaries found less
incentive to do so. As the empire continued to expand and
pressures of inflation and war increased, the advantages Roman
citizenship had offered to millions of people diminished;
furthermore, an increasing number of people found themselves
excluded from its benefits while being enormously burdened by
taxes and conscription. Emperor Caracalla, in 213, issued an edict
that extended citizenship to all inhabitants of the empire, but
what actual effect this had is difficult to determine.
The Christian movement offered a radical alternative—
perhaps the only genuine alternative besides Judaism in the
Roman empire. What the Roman senator Tacitus complained of
in the Jews was doubly true of these breakaway sectarians:
SATAN’S EARTHLY KINGDOM / 143
The first thing they do when they get hold of people is to teach
them to despise their gods, neglect their cities, and hate their
families; everything that we know as piety they neglect.91
We have seen that Christians did teach converts not only that
the bonds of family, society, and nation are not sacred, but that
they are diabolic encumbrances designed to enslave people to
“Roman customs,” that is, to demons.
What makes the Christians’ message dangerous, Celsus
writes, is not that they believe in one God, but that they deviate
from monotheism by their “blasphemous” belief in the devil.
For all the “impious errors” the Christians commit, Celsus says,
they show their greatest ignorance in “making up a being
opposed to God, and calling him ‘devil,’ or, in the Hebrew
language, ‘Satan.’ ” All such ideas, Celsus declares, are nothing
but human inventions, sacrilegious even to repeat: “it is
blasphemy . . . to say that the greatest God . . . has an adversary
who constrains his capacity to do good.” Celsus is outraged that
the Christians, who claim to worship one God, “impiously
divide the kingdom of God, creating a rebellion in it, as if there
were opposing factions within the divine, including one that is
hostile to God!”92
Celsus accuses Christians of “inventing a rebellion” (
stasis
,
meaning “sedition”) in heaven to justify rebellion here on earth.
He accuses them of making a “statement of rebellion” by
refusing to worship the gods—but, he says, such rebellion is to
be expected “of those who have cut themselves off from the rest
of civilization. For in saying this, they are really projecting their
own feelings onto God.”93 Celsus ridicules Paul’s warning that
Christians must not eat food offered to the gods, lest they
“participate in communion with
daimones
” (1 Cor. 10:20-22).
Since
daimones
are the forces that energize all natural processes,
Celsus argues, Christians really cannot eat anything at all—or
even survive—without participating in communion with
daimones
. Celsus declares that
whenever they eat bread, or drink wine, or touch fruit, do they
not receive these things—as well as the water they drink and
the air they breathe—from certain various elements of
nature?94
144 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
Therefore, he adds,
we must either not live, and indeed, not come into this life at
all, or we must do so on condition that we give thanks and
offerings and prayers to
daimones
who have been set over the
administration of the universe; and we must do so as long as
we live, so that they may be well disposed toward us.95
Celsus warns Christians that just as human administrators,
whether Roman or Persian, take action against subjects who
despise their rule, so these ruling
daimones
will surely punish
those who prove insubordinate. Celsus ironically agrees, then,
with Christians who complain that the
daimones
instigate
persecution; he argues that they have good reason to do so:
Don't you see, my excellent sir, that anyone who “witnesses” to
your [Jesus] not only blasphemes him, and banishes him from
every city, but that you yourself, who are, as it were, an image
dedicated to him, are arrested and led to punishment, and
bound to a stake, while he whom you call “Son of God” takes
no vengeance at all upon the evildoer?96
Origen admits that this is true and concedes that at such
moments one might imagine that the evil powers have won. “It is
true,” he says, “that the souls of those who condemn Christians,
and those who betray them and enjoy persecuting them, are
filled with evil,” being driven on by
daimones
?97 Yet for martyrs,
suffering and death are not the catastrophic defeat they seem. On
the contrary,
when the souls of those who die for the Christian faith depart
from the body with great glory, they destroy the power of the
demons, and frustrate their conspiracy against humankind.98
The demons themselves, perceiving this, sometimes retreat,
afraid to kill Christians, lest they thereby ensure their own
destruction. It is for this reason, Origen says, that persecution
SATAN’S EARTHLY KINGDOM / 145
occurs only intermittently. But when the
daimones
recover their
boldness and rage again at Christians, “then again the souls of
the pious will destroy the army of the evil one.” The
daimones’
awareness that Christians win by dying manifests itself, Origen
declares, in the attitudes and actions of human judges
who are distressed by those who endure the outrages and
tortures, but glad when a Christian is overcome [and yields].
And it is not from any philanthropic impulse that this occurs.99
Origen had experienced this firsthand when he was arrested at
Caesarea during Decius’s persecution in 251. When he refused
the judge’s demands to renounce his faith, Origen endured
repeated torture. He was chained in a dark cell. His torturers first
wrenched his limbs apart and chained him into stocks; at other
times they burned him and threatened him with terrible forms
of execution. One of his grieved companions, moved by the old
man’s courage, writes that Origen’s ordeal ended only after “the
judge had tried him every way at all costs to avoid sentencing
him to death,”100 not out of compassion, but hoping to get him to
publicly recant his faith. Failing this, the judge released him; but
the torture and exposure Origen suffered in prison hastened his
death.
Celsus warns that the “insanity” that impels Christians to
“refuse their religious obligations, and rush headlong to offend
the emperor and governors,”101 actually may ruin the empire,
eclipse the rule of law, and plunge the world into anarchy. Celsus
demands that Christians do instead what all pious and patriotic
citizens should,
namely, help the emperor in his effort to provide for the
common good, and cooperate with him in what is right, and
fight for him, if it becomes necessary.102
Origen dismisses such suggestions with contempt. He
answers that Christians
do
help the emperor through their
prayers, which “conquer all
daimones
who stir up war and . . .
disturb
146 / THE ORIGIN OF SATAN
the peace . . . so, although we do not believe in being fellow
soldiers with him, we do fight on behalf of the emperor.”103
(Tertullian, writing in North Africa, declares that many
Christians
do
serve in the army; such practices varied,
apparently, from one circumstance to another.)104 As for taking
public office, Origen says, “we recognize in every land the
existence of another national organization”—God’s church.
Origen knows that he is fighting over souls to help diminish the
power of Satan; and he ends his polemic against Celsus by
saluting his patron Ambrose, who ten years earlier had stood
trial and endured prison and torture.
Persecuted Christians like Origen forged a radical tradition
that undermined religious sanction for the state, claiming it
instead for the religious conscience—a tradition that would
enormously influence subsequent Western government and
politics. Baptism opened access to vast new dimensions of
reality—to the Kingdom of God, where God's people find their
true home, and to the dominion of Satan, perceived as the
ultimate moral reality underlying “this present evil age.”
Although unbelievers like Celsus ridiculed Christians for
believing absurd and childish fantasies, many converts found in
their vision of God’s kingdom a place to stand, and new
perspectives on the world into which they had been born.
This does not mean that Christians were the seditious
conspirators that Celsus imagined. Justin and others staunchly
insisted that most Christians were good citizens, most of whom,
no doubt, wanted to avoid confrontation with the authorities,
and attempted to follow the precepts expressed in New
Testament letters like First Peter, which translates into Christian
terms ancient conventions of civic virtue:
For the sake of the Lord, accept the authority of every human
institution, whether of the emperor, as supreme, or of