Many Christians equate Satan with the Devil – and insist they are one and the same. But let’s assume for the sake of argument that this identification is correct:
That Satan, the Accuser, is also the Devil – the personification of evil.
Then the question becomes unavoidable:
If Satan is the Devil – and God is sovereign over Satan – isn’t God ultimately responsible for all the evil Satan causes?
You can’t have it both ways. Either:
God permits Satan’s actions and uses him as a tool (as seen in Job 1),
or
God is opposed to Satan but somehow powerless to stop him, which undermines divine sovereignty.
Most orthodox positions choose the first: God is in control, and Satan operates only with divine permission. But that leads to an unsettling conclusion:
> All suffering, deception, war, and religious strife are part of a divine script – a cosmic drama where Satan plays his role under God’s direction.
If that’s the case, then:
Human suffering becomes a prewritten element of God’s plan.
Religious wars, mass delusion, genocide, and even the “end times” become part of a divine performance.
Human dignity, free will, and the meaning of moral choice are reduced to scripted reactions in a play authored by God.
Is this really consistent with the God revealed by Jesus?
A God who:
Weeps with the brokenhearted (John 11:35)
Wishes that none should perish (2 Peter 3:9)
Warns against religious pride (Matthew 23)
Calls us to love even our enemies (Matthew 5:44)
How can such a God deliberately authorize a supernatural evil force to mislead, destroy, and cause misery?
This theological trap stems largely from a medieval synthesis of biblical and extra-biblical tradition. In the Hebrew Bible, haSatan is not the devil – he is God’s prosecutor, not his opponent. The devil, as a figure of ultimate rebellion and chaos, developed later and was merged with Satan.
If we don’t distinguish between Satan (God’s tester) and the Devil (false god, deceiver), we end up with a theology where:
Evil is part of God’s plan.
People are judged for roles they were assigned.
And the Gospel becomes a rescue from God himself – not from sin or injustice.
The dignity of human life suffers under this view.
It becomes a divine chess game, where our pain serves some “higher purpose” we can never challenge – because Satan is doing God’s will.
So I ask:
If Satan is the Devil, and God is his master, how do we avoid making God the author of all evil?
And if we can’t… isn’t it time to revisit the assumptions?
That Satan, the Accuser, is also the Devil – the personification of evil.
Then the question becomes unavoidable:
If Satan is the Devil – and God is sovereign over Satan – isn’t God ultimately responsible for all the evil Satan causes?
You can’t have it both ways. Either:
God permits Satan’s actions and uses him as a tool (as seen in Job 1),
or
God is opposed to Satan but somehow powerless to stop him, which undermines divine sovereignty.
Most orthodox positions choose the first: God is in control, and Satan operates only with divine permission. But that leads to an unsettling conclusion:
> All suffering, deception, war, and religious strife are part of a divine script – a cosmic drama where Satan plays his role under God’s direction.
If that’s the case, then:
Human suffering becomes a prewritten element of God’s plan.
Religious wars, mass delusion, genocide, and even the “end times” become part of a divine performance.
Human dignity, free will, and the meaning of moral choice are reduced to scripted reactions in a play authored by God.
Is this really consistent with the God revealed by Jesus?
A God who:
Weeps with the brokenhearted (John 11:35)
Wishes that none should perish (2 Peter 3:9)
Warns against religious pride (Matthew 23)
Calls us to love even our enemies (Matthew 5:44)
How can such a God deliberately authorize a supernatural evil force to mislead, destroy, and cause misery?
This theological trap stems largely from a medieval synthesis of biblical and extra-biblical tradition. In the Hebrew Bible, haSatan is not the devil – he is God’s prosecutor, not his opponent. The devil, as a figure of ultimate rebellion and chaos, developed later and was merged with Satan.
If we don’t distinguish between Satan (God’s tester) and the Devil (false god, deceiver), we end up with a theology where:
Evil is part of God’s plan.
People are judged for roles they were assigned.
And the Gospel becomes a rescue from God himself – not from sin or injustice.
The dignity of human life suffers under this view.
It becomes a divine chess game, where our pain serves some “higher purpose” we can never challenge – because Satan is doing God’s will.
So I ask:
If Satan is the Devil, and God is his master, how do we avoid making God the author of all evil?
And if we can’t… isn’t it time to revisit the assumptions?