Friday, November 21, 2025

Daniel G. Reid on Romans 16:20, Genesis 3:15, and "Satan as Conquered Enemy"

  

Satan As Conquered Enemy

 

In Romans 16:20 Paul expresses his victorious confidence that “the God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.” The influence of Genesis 3:15 is clearly to be seen here. But whereas Genesis 3:15 speaks of the seed of the woman striking the head of the seed of the serpent, Paul speaks of “the God of peace,” not Christ, who will defeat the enemy. In speaking of God as the subject and Satan “under your feet,” Paul seems to be blending Genesis 3:15 with Psalm 110:1 and/or Psalm 8:6. The latter is the more likely text being echoed here, since it speaks of God placing the created order under the superintendence of humankind. On this reading Paul would be saying that in defeating Satan, who leads and epitomizes creation in rebellion, God will be restoring to the children of the Last Adam (the “seed of the woman”) their role of dominion and eschatological shalom. That this will happen “soon” (en tachei) may be an indication of Paul’s confidence in the coming triumph of God. But it may also arise from his confidence that believers in Rome will soon experience divine victory over the present threat of “those who cause dissensions and offenses” and “deceive the hearts of the simple-minded” (Rom 16:17–19).

 

While the Gospels point to the defeat of Satan in the cross and resurrection (cf., e.g., Lk 22:1–6, 53; Jn 12:31; 14:30; 16:11), Paul looks back to Christ’s triumph at the cross over the “principalities and powers” (Col 2:15; cf. 1 Cor 2:6–8). It is difficult to imagine that Paul would not have affirmed a proleptic triumph over Satan at the cross, for he speaks confidently of the defeat at the cross of the personified powers of sin, death, flesh and even the Law (see Triumph). Moreover, texts such as Galatians 1:4 (“he delivered us from the present evil age”) and Colossians 1:12 (“he has rescued us from the power of darkness”) imply a defeat of Satanic power reminiscent of God’s victory in the Exodus.

 

But this defeat, though real, is only provisional. Satan is still a potent and aggressive force of evil seeking to thwart and upset the work of God in Christ. In the present Paul encourages his churches to look forward to the final crushing of Satan (Rom 16:20) and to rely on divine faithfulness and power, for “he will strengthen you and guard you from the evil one” (2 Thess 3:3). In Ephesians 6 the theme of divine weaponry, an image also employed in 1 Thessalonians 5:8 and Romans 13:12, is developed in memorable fashion (see Arnold). Paul points out that the enemy of the church does not consist of “flesh and blood” enemies (like those of the old Israel). God’s people are now engaged with enemies in the form of principalities, powers and “the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” (Eph 6:12). These powers are under the direction of their leader “the devil,” whose schemes (methodeiai) they carry out against the church. While Israel was organized and regulated as the army of God in the wilderness, dependent on the victorious power of Yahweh, the church is outfitted in spiritual weaponry and finds her strength in the Lord and in the power of his might (Eph 6:10). With the “shield of faith” believers can “quench all the flaming arrows of the evil one” (Eph 6:16). (Daniel G. Reid, “Satan, Devil,” in Dictionary of Paul and HIs Letters, ed. Gerald F. Hawthorne, Ralph P. Martin, and Daniel G. Reid [Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1993], 866)