Devil
|
A modern interpretation of the devil, in red with goat-like characteristics. |
The Devil is the name given to a
supernatural entity, who, in most
Western religions, is the central embodiment of
evil. This entity is commonly referred to by a variety of other names, including
Satan,
Asmodai,
Beelzebub,
Lucifer and/or
Mephistopheles. In classic
demonology, however, each of these alternate names refers to a specific supernatural entity.
Some scholars believe that the notion of a central supernatural embodiment of evil, as well as the notion of angels, first arose in Western
monotheism when
Judaism came into contact with the Persian religion of
Zoroastrianism. Much like classical monotheism, Zoroastrianism has one supreme
God, and an evil spirit who
chose to be evil, locked in a cosmic struggle where both are more or less evenly matched, though from the beginning
Ahura Mazda's triumph is foretold; making Zoroastrianism an
ethical dualism. Ahura Mazda ("Wise Lord"), also later known as
Ormazd in
Middle Persian, is the God of light, or Truth, and
Angra Mainyu ("Evil Spirit"), also later known as
Ahriman in Middle Persian, is the primeval Spirit of darkness, or the Lie. In a final battle between the forces of good and evil, human
souls will be judged in a fiery ordeal of molten metal where the good will pass through as if it were warm milk and those who chose evil will be purified and all will be reunited in the new perfected world. Accordingly, humans are urged to align themselves with Ormazd and his
Yazatas ("angels") and to shun His adversary who is the ruler of darkness and his demons, so that they may facilitate the final renovation (FrashÅ-kereti).
Christianity views Satan as an angel cast from heaven by
God, for being prideful, deceitful, and the tempter: all strikingly similar to the story of
Ahriman.
The
English word
devil derives via
Middle English devel and
Old English dÄ"ofol and
Latin Diábolus, from Late Greek
Diabolos, meaning,
slanderer, from
diaballein, to slander:
dia-, across +
ballein, to hurl.
Christianity
In
Christianity, the Devil is named
Satan, sometimes
Lucifer. He is a fallen
angel who rebeled against
God, and has been condemned to
Hell. In the
Bible, he is identified with the serpent in the
Garden of Eden, the Accuser of
Job, the tempter of the
Gospels, and the dragon in the
Book of Revelation. Many modern,
liberal Christians view the devil metaphorically[
1].
Islam
In Islam the Devil is referred to as
Iblis, which is Arabic for Lucifer, and is also called Satan (Arabic:
Shaitan) (a word referring to evil devil-like beings). According to the
Qur'an, God (called
Allah in Arabic) created the Devil out of "smokeless fire", while He created man out of clay. The primary characteristic of the Devil, besides
hubris, is that he has no power other than the power to cast evil suggestions into the heart of men.
According to the verses of the Qur'an, the Devil's mission until the
Qiyamah or Resurrection Day (
yaum-ul-qiyama) is to deceive Adam's children (mankind). After that, he will be put into the fires of Hell along with those whom he has deceived. The Devil is also referred to as one of the Djinns (genies), as they are all created from the smokeless fires. The Qur'an does not depict
Shaitan (English: Satan) as the enemy of God, for God is supreme over all his creations and Iblis is just one of his creations. Unlike the Zoroastrian beliefs, all good are from God Himself and only he can save humanity from the evils of his universe and His creations. All bad deeds are done by our choice. Satan's single enemy is humanity. He intends to discourage humans from obeying God. Thus, humankind is warned to struggle (
jihad) against the mischiefs of the Satan and temptations he puts them in. The ones who succeed in this are rewarded with Paradise (
jannath ul firdaus), attainable only by righteous conduct.
He was expelled from the grace of God when he failed to pay homage to Adam, the father of all mankind. He claimed to be superior to Adam, on the grounds that man was created of earth unlike himself. Even the other angels showed a degree of suspicion when God informed them about the creation of man as the regent (caliph) of all things on Earth, but they ultimately prostrated before Adam to show their homage. However, Iblis, adamant in his view that man is a worthless being, never bowed his head before any other than God. This caused him to be expelled by God, a fact that Iblis blamed on humanity. Initially, the Devil was successful in deceiving Adam, but once his intentions became clear,
Adam and Eve repented to God and were freed from their misdeeds and forgiven. God gave them a strong warning about Iblis and the fires of Hell and asked them and their children (humankind) to stay away from the deceptions of their senses caused by the Devil. (For a more detailed account, see (
Iblis or
Shaitan.)
Judaism
In
Hebrew, the biblical word
ha-satan means
adversary or
obstacle, or even "the
prosecutor" (recognizing that God is viewed as the ultimate
Judge).
In the
book of Job (Iyov), ha-satan is the title, not the proper name, of an
angel submitted to God; he is the divine court's chief prosecutor. In Judaism ha-satan does not make evil, rather points out to God the evil inclinations and actions of humankind. In essence ha-satan has no power unless humans do evil things. After God points out
Job's piety, ha-satan asks for permission to test the faith of Job. The righteous man is afflicted with loss of family, property, and later, health, but he still stays faithful to God. At the conclusion of this book God appears as a
whirlwind, explaining to all that divine justice is inscrutable with human intellect. In the epilogue Job's possessions are restored and he has a second family to "replace" the one that died.
There is no evidence in
Torah, or in the books of the
Prophets and other writings, to suggest that God created an
evil being. In fact, the
Book of Isaiah, Job,
Ecclesiastes, and
Deuteronomy all have passages which God is credited for creating both the good and the evil of this world.
The Hebrew word for evil used above is usually translated as 'calamity', 'disaster' or 'chaos'.
Hinduism
In contrast to the Christian traditions and Islam,
Hinduism does not recognize any central evil force or entity such as the Devil opposing God but does recognize that different beings (e.g.,
asuras) and entities can perform evil acts and cause wordly sufferings. [
2] Prominent asura is
Rahu whose characteristics are similar to Devil's.
However, Hindus, and
Vaishnavites in particular, believe that
Vishnu incarnates to destroy evil when evil has reached its maximum. (see
avatar.) Additionally, the problem of evil is mostly explained by the concept of
Karma.To be more specific, hindu philosophy defines that the only existing thing (Truth) is the Almighty God. So, all these devils are very inferior cadre and mostly because of mental imagination. Asuras are also different people with bad motivations and intentions. Different species like siddha, gandharva, yaksha etc are defined in the hindu mythology which may not fall directly into mankind but treated as slightly superior to man , in one way.The main difference from other relegions to Hinduism is that no devil has enough power to face God.
Buddhism
A "devil"-like figure in Buddhism is
Mara. He is a tempter, who also tempted
Gautama Buddha by trying to seduce him with the vision of
beautiful women who, in various legends, are often said to be Mara's daughters. Mara personifies unskillfulness, the "death" of the
spiritual life. He tries to distract humans from practising the spiritual life by making the mundane alluring or the negative seem positive.Another interpretation of Mara is that he is the desires that are present in ones own mind preventing the person from seeing the truth.So in a sense Mara is not a independent being but a part of ones own being that has to be defeated.
Odu-Ifa
There is no Devil in Ifa. There is Esu or Elegba who is seen as a trickster. Christian missionaries attempted to equate the Devil with Esu. Odu Ifa teaches that "evil" as it were, is the result of the actions of people. Oldumare being omnipotent is capable of being good and evil. Thus in Ifa evil can be seen "relatively" to something else.
Khemet (Ancient Egypt)
Given that Christianity, Judaism and Islam can find many of their philosophical roots in Khemet it is not surprising that the devil concept can also be traced back there. While the term "devil" is not used in ancient Khemet the term Set, the name of Horus' "enemy" lends itself to the character known in the previously mentioned religions "Satan". In the Ausarian drama we find that Ausar (Greek: Osiris)is chopped into 13 peices by Set. Auset (Isis) collects all of his pieces save his phallus. Horus, son of Ausar and Auset sets out to avenge the death and dismemberment of his father by confronting Set. Horus is victorious over Set and Ausar, being brought back from the dead becomes lord of the underworld. It is this drama that gives us the cosmic conflict between good and evil, evil being embodied by Set. This is not to say that Set was always seen as an evil character in Khemetic theology. There are many times in Khemetic history where conflicts between different "houses" lead to the depreciation of one neter relative to another.
Syncreto-Paganism
In Neopagan religions that have assimilated aspects of Abrahamic mythology into their own pantheons, Satan, Lucifer, and Beelzebub are often seen as distinct and separate beings who perform necessary cosmic functions. In
Stregheria, the Lucifer/Satan connection is upheld just as in
Christian mythology. The Streghe see Lucifer (the name "Satan" is never used in Stregheria) as a kind and philanthropic deity who chose to disobey the tyrant-god of the Christians by appearing in the form of the
serpent to offer knowledge of good and evil to humans (presumably via the
Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, as this is an allusion to the Genesis myth) in order to expose the Abrahamic God for the evil being he truly was. Stregheria's
classical influence is apparent here, as in
Greek mythology the serpent was seen as a symbol of wisdom.
Neopaganism
Christian tradition has frequently identified
pagan religions and
witchcraft with the influence of Satan. In the
Middle Ages, the Church accused alleged witches of consorting and conspiring with Satan. Several modern conservative Christian writers, such as
Jack Chick and
James Dobson, have depicted today's
neopagan and witchcraft religions as explicitly Satanic.
In fact few neopagan traditions recognize Satan or the Devil per se. However, many neopagan groups worship some sort of
Horned God, for example as a consort of the
Great Goddess in
Wicca. These gods usually reflect mythological figures such as
Cernunnos or
Pan, and any similarity they may have to the Christian Devil seems to date back only to the
19th century, when a Christian reaction to Pan's growing importance in literature and art resulted in his image being translated to that of the Devil.
New Age movement
Participants in the
New Age movement have widely varied views about Satan, the Devil, and so forth. In some forms of
Esoteric Christianity Satan remains as a being of evil, or at least a metaphor for sin and materialism, but the most widespread tendency is to deny his existence altogether.
Lucifer, on the other hand, in the original
Roman sense of "light-bringer", occasionally appears in the literature of certain groups as a metaphorical figure quite distinct from Satan, and without any implications of evil. For example,
Theosophy founder
Madame Blavatsky named her journal
Lucifer since she intended it to be a "bringer of light. Many New Age schools of thought follow a
nondualistic philosophy that does not recognise a primal force for evil. Even when a dualistic model is followed, this is more often akin to the
Chinese system of
yin and yang, in which good and evil are explicitly not a complementary duality. Schools of thought that do stress a spiritual war between good and evil or light and darkness include the philosophy of
Rudolf Steiner,
Agni Yoga, and the
Church Universal and Triumphant.
People put the concept of the Devil to use in social and political conflicts.
Demonize enemies
People sometimes link their enemies to the Devil. Here are some examples.
Against the Roman Papacy, an Institution of the Devil: a pamphlet written by
Martin Luther in 1545. Luther likewise was portrayed by the Roman Catholic Church as a disciple of the Devil. [
3]
The concept of
reason was referred by Martin Luther as "The Devil's whore".
white devil: a term used by the
Nation of Islam to refer to white Americans
Great Satan: a term used by
Iran to refer to the US.
Explain others' beliefs
One can use the concept of the Devil to explain why others hold beliefs that one considers to be false and ungodly. Here are some examples.
In 2002, Rev. Jerry Vines referred to
Muhammad as "a demon-possessed pedophile." [
4]
Fundamentalist pamphleteer
Jack Chick portrays Satan as influencing or even controlling the
Roman Catholic Church.
Dr. Henry Morris wrote that Satan originated the concept of
evolution. [
5]
Many writers have incorporated the character of Satan into their works. Among the most famous are:
*
Dante Alighieri's
Inferno (1321)
*
Christopher Marlowe's
Doctor Faustus (1604)
*
Joost van den Vondel's
Lucifer (1654)
*
John Milton's
Paradise Lost (1667)
*
Johann Wolfgang Goethe's
Faust (Part 1, 1808; Part 2, 1832)
*
Nathaniel Hawthorne's
The Scarlet Letter (1850)
*
Henrik Ibsen's
Peer Gynt (1867)
*
Fyodor Dostoevsky's
Brothers Karamazov (1880)
*
Mark Twain's
The Mysterious Stranger (1916)
*
Robert Louis Stevenson's
Markheim (1925)
*
William Blake's
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell*
Giosuè Carducci's
Hymn to Satan (1865)
*
Charles Baudelaire's
Litanies of Satan*
Steven Vincent Benét's
The Devil and Daniel Webster (1937)
*
Thomas Mann's
Doktor Faustus (1947)
*
William Golding's
The Lord of the Flies (1954)
*
Philip Pullman's
His Dark Materials*
Mikhail Bulgakov's
The Master and Margarita (1967)
*
Piers Anthony's
Incarnations of Immortality series (1983-1990)
*
Robert A. Heinlein's
(1984)
Isaac Asimov's Magical Worlds of Fantasy #8: Devils, an anthology of 18 fantasy short stories
edited by
Isaac Asimov, Martin Greenburg, and Charles Waugh (1987)
*
Tim LaHaye and
Jerry B. Jenkins's
Left Behind series (1995-present)
*
Anne Rice's
Memnoch the Devil (1996)
*
Eoin Colfer's
The Wish List (2000)
A few songs that make reference to the Devil are:
*
Lucifer by
The Alan Parsons Project*
Devils Never Cry by
Coal Chamber (main theme of Devil May Cry 3)
*
Morningstar by
AFI*
Devil's Trill Sonata by
Giuseppe Tartini*
Black Sabbath (song) by
Black Sabbath*
N.I.B. by
Black Sabbath*
War Pigs by
Black Sabbath*
Father Lucifer by
Tori Amos*
The Number of the Beast by Iron Maiden
* Sympathy for the Devil by The Rolling Stones
* Devil's Dance by Metallica
* The Devil Went Down to Georgia by the Charlie Daniels Band
* Lucifer Over London by Current 93
* Friend of the Devil by The Grateful Dead
* Dance with the devil by Immortal Technique
* Lord Of The Flies by Iron Maiden
* Draconian Trilogy by Therion
* Sanctus Diavolos by Rotting Christ
* The Scapegoat by Tiamat
* Clouds by Tiamat
* Expostulation by Draconian
* Spanish Train by Chris De Burgh
* Worship Him by Samael
* Devil's Path by Dimmu Borgir
* Spellbound by the Devil by Dimmu Borgir
* Inno a Satana by Emperor
* As flittermice as Satan's spys by Darkthrone
* Prince Of Darkness by Megadeth
* Running With The Devil by Van Halen
* Devil's Dance Floor by Flogging Molly
* Titties And Beer by Frank Zappa
* Tribute by Tenacious D
* The Future by Leonard Cohen
* Back To Hell by Alkaline Trio
* Hell Yes by Alkaline Trio
* The Devil Is Bad by The W's
* Devil In A Midnight Mass by Billy Talent
* Get Behind Me Satan by The White Stripes (Album)
* Devil Is A Loser by Lordi
* Fuckin Wit Dis Click by Three 6 Mafia
* Bridge of Death by Manowar
* The Dan Jones Experience by Deadline
* Shout at the Devil by Mötley Crüe
* Bad Devil by Devin Townsend
* Beelz by
Stephen Lynch*
Devils hair cut by
BeckThe Devil is a common theme in an extreme form of underground music known as
black metal.
The musical interval of an Augmented 4th is sometimes known as "The Devil In Music", a name given to it circa. 1400, given its unusual sound. Composers were encouraged to stay away from the interval, and whilst it is sometimes found in non-religious music of the time, it was never used in religious music until the existing system of keys came into use.
Many films and television programs have portrayed the Devil in one form or another. Among these are:
Häxan (
1922)
Angel on My Shoulder (
1946)
The Twilight Zone in such episodes as "
The Howling Man" "
Of Late I think of Cliffordville" and "
Printer's Devil."
Rosemary's Baby (1968)Bedazzled (1967, remade in 2000)
*The Exorcist (1973)
*The Joker's Wild (1972-1986), the "Face The Devil" bonus round – a contestant that spun the Devil during play would loose the game and any cash accumulated during the round
*The Omen (1976, remade in 2006)
*Petey Wheatstraw (1978)
*The Devil and Max Devlin 1981
*Oh, God! You Devil (1984)
*Legend (1985)
*Crossroads (1986 film) (1986)
*Angel Heart (1987)
*The Last Temptation of Christ (1988)
*Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey (1991)
*The Simpsons in the Treehouse of Horror IV short "The Devil and Homer Simpson", ironically taking the form of Ned Flanders.
*The Prophecy (1995)
*Tales from the Hood (1995)
*The Devil's Advocate (1997)
*Brimstone featured the devil as a regular character.
*The Collector has a different charecter playing the devil in each episode.
|
The Red Guy from Cow & Chicken |
Cow and Chicken (1997-1999) and
I Am Weasel both have a character called the
Red Guy, who looks very much like Satan.
End of Days (
1999)
*
18th Angel (
1998)
South Park features The Devil as a recurring character in the series as well as in the film
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (
1999)
The Ninth Gate (
1999)
God, the Devil and Bob (
2000) saw the Devil as one of the lead characters.
Little Nicky (
2000)
The Hire: Beat The Devil (2002)
*The Passion of the Christ (2004)
*Constantine (2005)
* Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist (2005)
* The Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005)
* Hellboy (2004)
*Doctor Who The Impossible Planet-The Satan Pit episodes 8-9 2006 season
*Charmed (1998-2005), the Source of All Evil appears as the embodiment of evil.
*Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003), the First Evil has many characteristics in common with the Devil.
*Futurama'' The Robot Devil is featured several times, starting with the Episode where Bender finds and loses religion (
1999-2003)
As with films, the Devil (or some nearly identical character) has appeared in numerous
video games. A few of them are:
Devil May CryDiabloDiablo IIDoom Trilogy (you don't see him, but you can hear him)
Ghosts 'n GoblinsGhouls 'n GhostsTekkenIt should also be noted that the main villain of
Shadow the Hedgehog, called
Black Doom, has a final form called
Devil Doom.
*
The Origin of Satan, by
Elaine Pagels (Vintage Books, New York 1995) explores the development, the "demonization" of the character of Satan against the background of the bitter struggle between the early
Church and the
Synagogue to be the legitimate heir of ancient
Hebrew religious tradition. She discusses how Satan becomes a figure that reflects our own hatreds and prejudices, and the struggle between our loving selves and our fearful, combative selves.
*
The Old Enemy: Satan & the Combat Myth, by Neil Forsyth (
Princeton,
New Jersey, 1987) seeks to show how Satan emerged from ancient mythological traditions and is best understood not as a principle of evil, but as a narrative character in the context of "the Combat Myth". Forsyth tells the Devil's story from the Epic of
Gilgamesh through to the writings of
St. Augustine.
*
The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity, by Jeffrey Burton Russell (
Meridian, New York 1977) is "a history of the personification of evil" which, to make things clear, he calls "the Devil". Accessible and engaging, full of photographs illustrating the text, this is the first of a four volume series on the history of the concept of the Devil. The following volumes are, Satan: The Early Christian Tradition, Lucifer: The Devil in the Middle Ages, and Mephistopheles: The Devil in the Modern World.
*
The Devil in Legend and Literature, by Maximilian Rudwin (
Open Court,
La Salle, Illinois, 1931, 1959) is a compendium of "the secular and sacred adventures of Satan". Engaging, wide-ranging and good-humored (and out-of-print for thirty years), this "classic" was re-printed in 1989.
* 616, : Marking / Name / Number of the Beast (Thought to not be referring to the Devil by many)Ahriman, Ahryman: Mazdaic "evil ghost" *Angat, Madagascan devil *Antichrist: Son of Satan (adversary of the son of God Christ) *Apep *Azazel, Asael (Hebrew): King of Devils *Baal *Baphomet: supposedly worshiped by the Knights Templar *Beelzebub, Beelsebul (Hebrew): Master of the flies *Belial, Beliar, Bheliar (Hebrew): without master, despicableness of the earth *Chernobog *Chutriel (Hebrew): Punisher of Hell *Dagon: Philistian revenge devil of the sea *Dark Angel *Demon *Devil *Diabolus, Diavolus (Greek): "downward flowing", also used as adverb diabolic *Dispater *Evil *Father of Lies and Deceit *Iblis (Islamic devil) *Ishtar: Babylonian goddess of the fertility
| *Der Leibhaftige (German): "He Himself" *Leviathan (Hebrew): the queue from the depths *Lilith (Hebrew): female devil *Loki: Norse god of mischief *Lotan *Lord of the Underworld *Lucifer (Roman): bringer of light, illuminator *Mammon: Aramaic God of prosperity and profit *Mara *Mark Stoffels *Melkor *Mephistopheles, Mephisto (Greek): that, which avoids the light *Moloch: Phonetian and Canaan devil *Mortus *Mot *Negeos (Negagandolus) *Nergal *Old Scratch a colloquialism for the devil, as indicated by the name of the character in the Stephen Vincent Benét short story, "The Devil and Daniel Webster" *O Yama: Japanese name for Satan *Orcus *Pan: Greek God of the desire, later converted to the devil *Pazuzu *Plutus
| *Prince of Darkness *Pwcca: Celtic name for Satan *Ragnara *Rahu *Satan, Schaitan (Hebrew): adversary, prosecutor *Sammael, Samiel, Sammael (Hebrew): "Poison of God" *Samnu: centralasiatic devil *Sebul *Sedit: Native American devil *Serpent *Set: Egyptian devil *Shaitan: Arab name for Satan *Sokar *Supay: Inka God of the underworld *T´An Mo: Chinese counterpart to the devil, demand *Tchort: Russian name for Satan, "black God" *Tezcatlipoca: Aztec God of hell *Thanatos *Typhon *Toño *Urian *Voland (mideval France) *Yaldabaoth: the Gnostic devil, though not explicitly evil. *Yam
|
*
The Devil (Tarot card)*
Devil worship*
Hierarchy of devils*
Names of the demons*
Fiend (Dungeons & Dragons)*
Robert the Devil*
Satanic Ritual Abuse*
Afterlife*
Exorcism*
Hell,
Hades,
Underworld*
Inquisition*
Satanism*
Witchcraft*
New Jersey Devils*
The Devil - Unjustly Maligned*
What About The Devil?