Scripture teaches us that Satan set himself up in opposition to God. This does not mean that he is the opposite of God. God is Almighty, omnipotent (all powerful), omniscient (all knowing) and omnipresent (present everywhere at every moment and at any moment in time). Satan is none of those things.
1. Jesus's analogy to binding the strong man before his house could be broken into and his goods could be plundered has nothing to do with:
(A) a thousand years, or
(B) Satan's deception of the nations.
* In Genesis chapter 3, we read of how Satan appeared in the Garden of Eden and deceived mankind.
* Revelation 12:9 calls Satan "the great dragon" and "the old serpent called Devil, and Satan,
who deceives the whole world."
* The reason given for Satan being bound in Revelation 20:1-3 is that he should deceive the nations no more until the thousand years have expired.
If we look for statements in the New Testament implying that Satan was bound when Jesus died and rose again, all we will ever find is passages stating the opposite:
Jesus called Satan "the ruler of this world"; and the New Testament calls him "the prince of the power of the air who works in the sons of disobedience", who we are told will give the beast and false prophet his seat, power and great authority (Revelation Chapter 13).
The saints are warned to be weary of his wiles and to resist him, and to put on the full armor of God because "we do not wrestle against flesh and blood" (John 12:31; 1 Peter 5:8-9; Ephesians 6:11-12; Revelation 2:9-10 & Revelation 2:13; 1 Thessalonians 2:18; James 4:7 ).
Ephesians 2:2 tells us about Satan's influence over the societies of this world, this Age.
Revelation Chapters 12-13 portray this current status quo as spanning the entire present Age and culminating in the beast's war against the saints in Revelation Chapter 13 (see Revelation 13:7).
Christ destroying the works of Satan
Satan's works consist
primarily in the death that became part of human experience, and the sin that leads to death. The destruction of Satan's works will not last only for a thousand years and be "reversed" for a short period at the close of the thousand years (as though Satan's works were merely "bound" for a thousand years).
"Since then the children have partaken of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise partook of the same; that through death He might destroy him who had the power of death (that is, the Devil), and deliver those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage." Hebrews 2:14-15.
"And they overcame him (the devil) because of the blood of the Lamb, and because of the word of their testimony. And they did not love their soul to the death." Revelation 12:11.
The blood of the Lamb speaks of the death of Christ.
"He who practices sin is of the Devil, for the Devil sins from the beginning. For this purpose the Son of God was revealed, that He might undo the works of the Devil." 1 John 3:8
"For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh." Romans 8:3.
2. Jesus's analogy to binding the strong man before his house could be broken into and his goods could be plundered is not an "illustration" of the "binding Satan's ability to deceive the nations (Revelation 20:103) so that "the gospel could be spread" to the nations".
The Word of God was powerful enough to do so before Jesus delivered the man from demon possession: Abraham believed the Word of God, and God credited it to Abraham for righteousness. Noah believed the Word of God, and he built an ark as evidence of His faith in the Word of God.
Both men were called out from among the Gentiles.
Jesus had the power to deliver the man from demon-possession before He delivered the man.
To assert that Jesus' analogy and action was "an illustration" of Satan being "bound in terms of his ability to deceive the nations so that the gospel could be spread to the nations" is blasphemous
- because it implies that the Spirit of God would not have been "powerful enough" for the Word of God to be believed in the nations unless Satan's ability to deceive the nations (Revelation 20:-3) was removed for a limited period of time - a limited period of time which would be "reversed" for a brief period at the close of that period of time.
What has that got to do with Jesus's casting demons out of a man and the blasphemous assertion of the Pharisees that He did so by the power of "the prince of the demons" (Ba'alzebub, or Satan)?
The Holy Spirit was powerful enough to deliver the man from demon-possession BEFORE the man was delivered and WITHOUT Satan's ability to deceive the nations (Revelation 20:1-3) needing to be removed from Satan for a thousand years.
Satan has never been able to stop the spread of the truth:
"And the light shines in the darkness; and the darkness has not mastered it." (John 1:5).
Those who imply (by their assertion regarding Jesus's illustration and the meaning of Jesus's illustration) that the Holy Spirit would not have been powerful enough, working in the hearts and minds of human beings, for the Word of God to be believed in the nations (and the gospel to be spread among the nations) without Satan being bound for a thousand years in terms of his ability to deceive the nations (Revelation 20:1-3) probably do not even realize how blasphemous that assertion of theirs is, because of its implication.
It's not blasphemy against the Holy Spirit like that of the Pharisees - who stated that the Holy Spirit's power was the power of Satan - but it is blasphemous nonetheless: Satan only has power to deceive any human being through that human being giving Satan that power through choosing to believe Satan's lies when the Word of God exposes his lies - and that has been the case since Adam believed Satan's lies in the Garden of Eden - because they contradicted the Word of God and were uttered in opposition to the Word of God.
Satan has never been powerful enough to prevent the works of God in any way, shape or form - and that is the only thing that is implied by the false assertion that Jesus's analogy regarding the strong man and Jesus's casting demons out of a man was "an illustration" of "the binding of Satan for a thousand years".