"Better to Reign in Hell, than Serve in Heaven": Satan's Transition From a Heavenly Council member to the Ruler of Pandaemonium
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Abstract
In this thesis, I argue that Satan was not perceived as a universal malevolent deity,
the embodiment of evil, or the “ruler of Pandaemonium” within first century Christian
literature or even within second and third century Christian discourses as some scholars
have insisted. Instead, for early “Christian” authors, Satan represented a pejorative term
used to describe terrestrial, tangible, and concrete social realities, perceived of as
adversaries. To reach this conclusion, I explore the narrative character of Satan
selectively within the Hebrew Bible, intertestamental literature, Mark, Matthew, Luke, Q,
the Book of Revelation, the Nag Hammadi texts, and the Ante-Nicene fathers.
I argue that certain scholars’ such as Jeffrey Burton Russell, Miguel A. De La
Torre, Albert Hernandez, Peter Stanford, Paul Carus, and Gerd Theissen, homogenized
reconstructions of the “New Testament Satan” as the universalized incarnation of evil and
that God’s absolute cosmic enemy is absent from early Christian orthodox literature, such
as Mark, Matthew, Luke, Q, the Book of Revelation, and certain writings from the Ante-
Nicene Fathers. Using Jonathan Z. Smith’s essay Here, There, and Anywhere, I suggest
that the cosmic dualist approach to Satan as God’s absolute cosmic enemy resulted from
the changing social topography of the early fourth century where Christian “insider” and
“outsider” adversaries were diminishing. With these threats fading, early Christians
universalized a perceived chaotic cosmic enemy, namely Satan, being influenced by the
Gnostic demiurge, who disrupts God’s terrestrial and cosmic order. Therefore, Satan
transitioned from a “here,” “insider,” and “there,” “outsider,” threat to a universal
“anywhere” threat.