The Shrewd Deceiver
ANGELIC POWER

Since we know nothing about the precise nature of angelic or heavenly beings we cannot say how much or how little power they have by nature, that is, simply because they are angels. It might not be surprising to learn that some angels are inherently stronger than others are, in the way some humans are physically stronger than others are. But we cannot be sure of that.

We do read in Revelation 12:7-8 (NIV) that Satan was not strong enough to win against Michael and his army, but it is not clear what that means. For example, we do not know if it means Michael was inherently stronger than Satan was, or if at that moment God gave Michael superior strength, or if it was the fault of the satanic army that he was not strong enough. We are not even sure, since we are in an apocalyptic book, if we are to think in terms of an actual battle and spiritual muscles.

How do angels “fight”? Is it a clash of minds and wills rather than bone and muscle? It is difficult not to imagine how they might fight, but perhaps it is not important to come to conclusions on this or even to spend much time on it. The word “fight” which generates images of actual collision or killing, may fool us. Paul speaks of us “wrestling” against spiritual enemies or “running a race” or “fighting a good fight” but none of these phrases mean we actually run or fight or wrestle. They are metaphors for living. Angels may war with or withstand one another simply by living to God’s glory or doing the reverse (See also Dan. 10:20-11:1).

We may be tempted to think that the differing degrees of position among heavenly beings must speak of superior “strength”. Michael is an “arch” angel and is said to be a “chief” (Dan. 10:13; Jude 9) but there is no way of knowing if this is because he is stronger than others are (that he has more spiritual muscles and could out-fight everybody). It may mean he is more glorious in some “non-power” way or more devoted to God, or some such thing. That Satan is seen as a leader among the hostile spiritual forces does not prove he has more “coercive” power than all others do. It might be he gained notoriety because of his rebellion against God and became the unspoken leader (Al Capone, Hitler and Stalin come to mind as illustrations of people not physically strong but ruthless and shrewd and so gained a following. Maybe something like that is the case with Satan).

Angels are supernatural beings and there is that interesting text that says humans were made “a little lower” than the angels. But we are not told what that means, so we can only offer guesses, some better than others. Angels do not belong to the “natural” realm but does that mean, for example, that they can create things? Can they work miracles? Can they read the minds of people? Can they simply will people to become ill, or can they kill them if and when it pleases them?

What Some Angels Did
We know angelic beings blinded sinners in Sodom, made a doubtful priest dumb for about nine months, slew a God-despising king and such like (see Gen. 19:1-11, Luke 1:19-20 and Acts 12:21-23) , but do these events tell us anything about the power angels have as angels? In the cases above (and others like them) the angels are commissioned by God to do a job for Him so why shouldn’t we think He gave them the power needed to complete the job? In addition to that, these afflictions were judgments by good angels on crass sin or slowness of heart to believe. Are they enough for us to build a theology of satanic angelic power that is outside of God’s control? Do any of these illustrations tell us anything about the power angels have as angels? Do any of them tell us that satanic angels can exercise such coercive (in such cases, miraculous) power?

Ways in Which God Has Given Power
If and when God gives power, there are at least two ways He might do it. He might build it into the creature as a permanent part of that creature’s makeup or He might give it on certain occasions only for a limited period. What physical strength we might have is structured into each of us; it is connected with our physical equipment. Is that how it is with an angel or someone like Satan?

An illustration might help here. In Judges 13-17 we have the story of Samson whose strength is legendary. The text does not suggest that Samson was incredibly strong because of how he was built. The power was not resident in his muscles. He was strong beyond ordinary humans when the Spirit of the Lord came on him (14:6 illustrates the point). It seems that Samson became strong when it suited God’s purposes, rather than God depositing the strength in him as a resident quality.

In the Gospels we see Christ empowering the seventy to work miracles as they go preaching (see Matt. 10:1-8 and parallels). This power is not resident in them (that is, it is not part of their human equipment). It seems they were gifted for the special occasions and it was super-human power that was given to them.

Is that how it is with angels, good or satanic? It is clear that in Job chapters 1 & 2 God commissioned Satan to carry out His (God’s) will (Note especially 1:11 and 2:5 along with 1:21 and 2:10). In the Job text we have no reason to believe that Satan had power over Job independent of God’s commission. On the contrary, if we take the text as it sits it was God who commissioned him to do the job and it was God’s fire that burned Job’s fields (1:16) and it was God who brought calamity on him (42:11).

We need to remember that any power that Satan has he got from God. His very existence and continued existence is the work of God. If Satan uses his life and power for evil purposes or in a spirit of malice that is his sin and when God uses Satan’s malice for His holy and loving agenda that is God’s glory.

There Is Power and Power
For discussion purposes we would like to isolate two general forms of power: persuasive and coercive. According to the mayor of River City (in the movie “The Music Man”) the con-man Professor Harold Hill was a “spellbinder”. This was certainly true because Hill made a living out of talking people into things that up to then they had no desire to get into. That is power. The winsome and lovely life of John McKay’s wife (in Mark Rutherford’s book “Deliverance”) finally transformed him from being an insensitive clod of a man into a generous and warm human being. That is power, too. These are complex processes but when we discuss them the word “influence” often crops up. The power involved in accomplishing the results aimed at depends in part on those who are changed. The change-agents do not physically (or otherwise) overwhelm or coerce those who are changed. There is the element of “persuasion” in it all. This power is not irresistible or coercive.

There is another form of power. John 2 tells us Christ willed it so and water became wine. On another occasion He spoke a word to a storm and it ceased. The very nature of the cases says there is no persuasion here; there is no attempt at wooing. This is naked, creative power that “makes it so”. For convenience sake we are going to call it coercive power. In the two instances given, it is irresistible as well as coercive (non-persuasive), it has the nature of “creative” power. Humans exercise coercive power (within human limits). Put a gun to a man’s head and say, “Do this or I’ll kill you!” We rightly call this coercive power, but it is not irresistible. We have known or heard of people who refused to live rather than do what was demanded under threat. This is not coercion of the same order as changing water to wine with a wish or making a tornado so we can wreck a house and kill the children (as in the book of Job). These last two go far beyond unaided human ability and there is no resisting the power.

Let us say it again; if you have influence “over someone” then to some degree you will be able to get that person to do what you want them to do. That is truly power, but you need that person’s co-operation if you are going to get what you want. The other kind of power we are calling coercive. By that we mean power that gains its objective without co-operation from anyone or anything else. Bearing in mind that since we exist and continue to exist because it pleases God (Rev. 4:11; Heb. 1:3; Col. 1:17) we continue to derive our power, coercive or persuasive, from Him. So it is with Satan.

Richard Horsley and his colleagues have reminded us that the definition and exercise of power is more complex than the usual idea of “force” or persuasion. They have reminded us (see, for example, “Paul and Empire”) that power is gained, seen and exercised via structures that shape the culture, thinking and practice of people. We need to bear this in mind when we talk of “power”. Rome’s power had much to do with her exploiting the feelings, needs, convictions and wants of her subject nations. So it is with Satan.

Let me summarize at this point. We do not know how much “power” angels have simply because they are angels. Some good angels have exercised miraculous and thus creative power but they were doing a job God sent them on and it might be that that is the only reason they could exercise that kind of power. Satan exercised creative power in Job but he was carrying out God’s commission. We have no reason to believe that angels, because they are "angels", can help or harm humans in the human realm. We have no reason to believe that they can read minds, burn houses, give lovely girls ill health and embolisms, or anything like that. Whatever power anyone has, he or she gets it from God. If he or she intends to use it for evil ends that is his or her sin but God accomplishes His purpose through it in spite of them. He then holds them responsible for their evil intention.


    
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