When the Adam and Eve yielded to Satan and surrendered their God-given
authority over the earth and animal kingdom (Gen 3), Satan became “the god of
this world” (2 Cor. 4:4), the “ruler of the world” (Jn. 12:32; 14:31) and the
“principality and power of the air” (Eph. 2:2) who “has power over the whole
world” (1 Jn. 5:19).
Satan is first and foremost a judger. Throughout the Bible we find him
bringing judgments against God and humans (The book of Job makes this most
clear.) For good reason the Bible labels him “the Accuser” (Rev. 12:10). Not
surprisingly, when Adam and Eve opened up their lives to this, they first
accepted Satan’s accusation that God is a petty deity who is threatened by their
access to the forbidden tree. Once they act on this false picture of God by
violating the prohibition, they then judge God to be unmerciful as they hide
from him in fear (Gen. 3:8).
When questioned by God, Adam blamed God as well as Eve for his misdeed. “The
woman you put here with me – she gave me some fruit from the tree, and
I ate it” (Gen. 3:12, emphasis added). Eve in turn also refused to own up to her
sin and instead placed all the blame on the serpent (Gen. 3:12).
Though the couple was created to bear God’s image, the Accuser succeeded in
getting them to take on something of his image, reflecting his ugly, accusatory
character. The couple and all their descendants had become a rebel race of
accusers, co-opted into the rebellion of the Powers against the
Creator.
Instead of receiving and reflecting God’s life and love toward on another, we
now tend to view others through the eyes of our hungry soul and our assumed
“knowledge of good and evil.” In our rebellious condition, we tend to “love”
those who contribute in some way to our idolatrous sense of fullness of Life—the
“good” people—and we tend to despise those we judge to be detracting from our
idolatrous sense of fullness of Life—the “bad” people. We judge some as worth
loving and others worth hating when we’re under the influence of the Accuser and
our stolen “knowledge of good and evil.”
As a result, the human community has become fragmented and filled with
violence. The history of humanity has largely been a history of horrific
brutality.
Our inability to refrain from violence, despite our remarkable intelligence
in some areas and despite our best intentions to avoid it, is arguably the
single greatest sign of our subjection to the one whom Jesus says “was a
murderer from the beginning” (Jn. 8:44). When people are subjected to the
Accuser and filled with judgments, violence is never far away.
The biblical record bears witness to our violent tendencies as a race of
accusers. No sooner had the first couple been expelled from the Garden than
their first child murdered their second, judging that Abel was in competition
with him for God’s approval (Gen 4). As violence always does, this first act of
violence set off a chain reaction of violence, to the point that Lamech, a
descendent of Cain, boasted that his thirst for vengeance was ten times
great than what God had threatened (vs. 24)!
Violence under the reign of the Accuser continued to escalate to the point
that, within a couple millennia the world had become so “full of violence” the
Lord had to stoop still further and start the whole creation project over again
by sending a flood (Gen 6). Had he not done this, all indications are that God’s
plan for the human race would have been hopelessly derailed. It was God’s only
hope of rescuing the human race from irreversible destruction.
Yet, as drastic as it was, this measure did not put an end to the reign of
the destructive Powers. Nor did it reform our fallen accusatory nature.
Consequently, sin and violence began to encroach back into the world soon after
the flood. Indeed, the rest of the biblical narrative and the whole of human
history is one, long, tragic testimony to the truth that, so long as we’re
separated from God, we can’t help but separate ourselves from one another. Until
we are free from our bondage to the Accuser, we simply can’t stop accusing,
which invariably results in some people judging that their enemies don’t
deserve to live.
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