C. The Doctrine of Demons

(I) The Existence and Nature of Demons

1. Their Creation:

God created demons as part of the angelic realm originally (Col.1:16).

2. Their Fall:

(a) The evidence

It is clear that Satan has a following of like beings  (“Prince of the demons” – Matt.12:24; the Devil and his angels –  Matt.25:41).

Demons are described throughout the Scriptures (Dan.10:10-20; Matt.10:1; Eph.6:12).

(b) The Time

At the fall of Satan, many angels followed him in that rebellion (demons are fallen angels).  A third of the angelic host seem to have fallen with Satan (Rev.12:4 – the imagery of Satan as a “dragon” and angels/demons as “stars”).

3. Their Nature:

(a) Demons are by nature the same kind of spirit beings as angels.  They are personal, intelligent beings.

(b) Demons are morally wicked (“unclean spirits” – Matt.10:1; “evil” – Luke 7:21; “wickedness/darkness” – Eph.6:12).

(i) They are deceitful (1 Tim.4:1-3; 2 Cor.11:13-15).

(ii) They are immoral (Gen.6:4; Jude 6,7).

3.     Demons are invisible but also able to appear (Satan – Zech.3:1; Matt.4:9.10; Demons – Rev.9:7-10; 16:13-16).

4.     Demons have great intelligence.  They knew Christ’s identity and power (Mark 1:14,34; 5:6,7).  They know their own future judgment (Matt.8:28,29).  They can attempt to predict the future (Acts 16:16). Their knowledge is not infinite. They learned it through thousands of years of experience and observation.

5.     Demons have great strength (Mark 5:3; Acts 19:16; Rev.9:1-11).

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V. The Activity of Satan

Satan is seeking to oppose God’s plan by promoting evil in every way possible:

(1) Indirect Activity

He works indirectly through the world (in which he has great freedom and power – John 12:31; 1 John 5:19) and the flesh (Gal.5:19-21).  The world, the flesh and the devil are not three separate enemies of the Christian.  Rather Satan works through the evil world system (1 John 2:13-15) to exploit the fleshly nature that still wars within us (Rom.7:18; Gal.5:19-21).

(2) Direct Activity

He works directly by deception, temptation, attack and possession.

1. In Christ’s ministry:

(a) He tempted Christ (Matt.4:1-11).

(b) He attempted to thwart Christ’s work (John 8:44; Matt.16:23; Luke 22:31).

(c) He possessed Judas to accomplish the betrayal (John 13:27).

2. In unbelievers

(a) He blinds their minds to hinder their understanding of the gospel (2 Cor.4:4).

(b) When the gospel is heard or understood, he tries to hinder its effect (Luke 8:12).

(c) He uses persecution (Rev.2:10) and false religions (Rev.2:13) to hinder the effect of the gospel.

3. In believers

(a) He tempts believers (to pride – 1 Chron.21:1-8; to materialism – John 2:15; James 5:1-7; to immorality – 1 Cor.7:5; to lie – Acts 5:3; to discouragement – 1 Pet.5:6-10; to be unforgiving – 2 Cor.2:10,11 etc.).

(b) He hinders the ministries of believers (1 Thess.2:18; Rev.2:10).

(c) He promotes false teaching among believers (1 John 4:1-4).

(d) He promotes anger, bitterness and division (Eph.4:26,27; 2 Cor.2:5-11). Note:  See the supplement – “Satanic Activity and Spiritual Warfare” for more information on how Satan and his demons work and how we must respond.

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IV. The Fall of Satan

1. Key Passages – Ezekiel 28; Isaiah 14

2. Ezekiel 28:11-19 is a prophetic lamentation over the “King of Tyre” who is described in language that fits Satan’s fall and not a mere human king.  Satan is distinguished form the human ruler of Tyre in 28:2 (“prince/ruler”) and called a “king” in 28:12 (Not even Israel’s rulers were called “King”).  Though Tyre had a human “ruler”, Satan was the real “King” behind that wicked kingdom.

3. His attributes – Moral perfection (v.12) Sinless at his creation until his fall (v.15):

(a) His appearance – Perfect in beauty (v.12b,13).

(b) His privileges – Free access to the garden of Eden (v.12) and to God’s holy mountain (= God’s presence – v.14).

(c) His rank – “Cherub” (vs.14,16).

4. His judgment:

(a) Cast out of the mountain of God (v.16, cf. Rev12:4).

(b) Cast to the ground (v.17).

(c) Consumed by fire (v.18, cf. Rev.20:10).

5. Isaiah 14:12-15 also seems to describe Satan’s fall.  Satan is manifest here by the king of Babylon.  As in Ezekiel 28, Satan is pictured here as the real “king” behind the wicked human kingdom of Babylon:

(a) The imagery of a “star” and “falling from heaven” (v.12) suggests a supernatural fulfilment.  “Stars” (v.12,13) are symbolic of the angelic realm elsewhere (Job 38:6,7; Rev.12:4).

(b) The five “I will’s” of vss. 13 & 14 are literally true of Satan and only metaphorically true of Babylon’s king.  This ultimate form of pride (“I will be like the Most High” – v.14) fits the New Testament description of Satan’s fall 1 Tim.3:6.

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III. The Nature of Satan

1. He is a created angelic being. He was created as part of the angelic realm (Eph.6:11,12; Ezek.24:18) and was the highest in rank of them all (Ezek.28:12-14).

2. He is an enemy of righteousness. He is a murderer (John 8:44), a liar (John 8:44), and accuser (Rev.12:10) and our adversary (1 Pet.5:8).

3. He is a limited creature. He is limited by God (Job.1:12).  He is not God’s equal (1 John 4:4).  He is not omniscient, omnipotent or infinite in any way.  Believers with God’s help can resist him (James 4:7).

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II. Personality and Names of Satan

1. Personality: He has intellect (2 Cor.11:3), emotions (Rev.12:17) and will (2 Tim.2:26).

2. Names: He is called Satan, the Devil (slanderer), Lucifer (son of the morning), Beelzebub (Lord of the flies – Matt.12:24), and Belial (lawless – 2 Cor.6:15), the evil one (1 John 5:19), the tempter (1 Thess.3:5), the prince of this world (John 12:31), the god of this age (2 Cor.4:4), the prince of the power of the air (Eph.2:2), the accuser of the brethren (Rev.12:10), and angel of light (false light – 2 Cor.11:14), a serpent (Rev.12:9), and a dragon (Rev.12:3).

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III.  The Ministries of Angels

1. They worship God. Angels are continually involved in praising God (Rev.4:6-11) through describing His attributes (Is.6:3) and singing praises (Rev.5:8,9).

2. They ministered to Christ. Angels announced His birth (Luke 1:26-33; 2:13), protected Him  (Matt.2:13), strengthened Him (Matt.4:11; Luke 22:43), and explained to men His resurrection (Matt.28:6) and ascension (Acts 1:10,11).

3. They carry out God’s government. Angels are God’s servants (Ps.103:20; Heb.1:7) and messengers (Luke 1:19; 2:8-14).  They can be involved in controlling nature (Rev.7:1; 16:3,8,9), nations (2 Kings 19:35), and Satan and demons (Dan.10:13,21; 12:1).  They will perform future judgment for God (Matt.13:3a; Rev.15:1; 16:1-21).

4. They protect God’s people. Angels are sent to serve believers (Heb.1:14).  They protect the godly (Ps.34:7; Dan.6:20,23), oppose our enemies (Ps.35:4,5) and are specifically assigned as guardians of individuals (Matt.18:10).  They are God’s agents in answering prayer (Acts 12:7) even bringing physical provisions (Gen.21:17-20; 1 Kings 19:5-7).

5. They assist believers at death (Luke 16:22; Jude 9).

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A Prayer of Release of Anxiety and Fear

Lord, I come to You right now with my fear and anxiety. I confess that my fear/anxiety is keeping me from Your peace.

I know that You call me to peace. I choose to cast my fear on You right now. I know that Your almighty hands can hold my burdens. I choose to take Your peace in place of these.

I release my fear/anxiety to You. Fill me with peace that transcends all understanding. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

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How to Discern, Test and Judge Rightly

In running a web site with over 900+ articles, thousands of hits per month from all over the world, and hundreds of e-mails per week, I have come to realize, with time, that there is a terrible problem in Christendom today. The problem stems from an existential subjective view of the world that has filtered into the church from secular society, but also from the teachings of heretical wolves who have taught an entire generation of churchgoers completely unbiblical methods of discernment or to get rid of any discernment altogether.

Let me start out this chapter by telling you what methods are being used for “discernment” today that don’t have biblical support, then I will move on to the ways in which the Bible does tell us to test teaching, prophecy and actions.

The following criteria are what many people who call themselves Christians are using to test reality and truth today:

(1) Experiences, manifestations

(2) Feelings, emotions

(3) Numbers of followers

(4) Numbers of people who claim to be saved

(5) The size of a church or movement

(6) Signs and wonders, purported miracles (whether real or false)

(7) Subjective testimonies

(8) Hearsay and rumors

(9) How successful and rich a teacher is

(10) If a person speaks with authority

(11) The atmosphere of a meeting

None of the above criteria being used by many churchgoers today are cited in the Bible as ways we are to test, discern and judge rightly.

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