Thursday, November 9, 2023

Gospel Doctrine Sunday School Lessons (1940) on the Reality of Satan

  

Lesson Thirty-nine

 

THE PERSONAL HISTORY OF THE DEVIL

 

(Read from the Doctrine and Covenants: 1:35; 10:12, 27; 29:36-40; 76:44, 87; 88:110-114; 121:10; 123:10; 128:20; 129:8. From Book of Moses, 1:12-22.)

 

 

 

1. Purpose of this Lesson: Latter-day Saints are often ridiculed for their belief in a personal devil, and made to feel that they are behind the times in their religion. For nowadays comparatively few educated Christians, let alone the non-Christians, accept the teachings and inferences of the Gospels as to the identity of a spirit-being known there as Satan or Devil.

 

Which view is the more tenable, and on what foundation does each rest?

 

Now that this lesson will argue the point. Arguments never settle anything. All that will be attempted here will be (a) to clear the two conceptions and (b) to state clearly the view held by the Latter-day Saints.

 

2. Grounds of the New View: There was a time when Christians everywhere believed in a personal devil. Just how did they lose that belief?

 

Like a good many other alterations in the religion of Jesus, the change came about through a misunderstanding of a set of simple ideas in the New Testament by believers in the ages following Christ.

 

In a period of Christian history when a broken leg could be sooner mended than a cold could be cured, human ailments, from a sore finger to a deformed spine, were attributed to Satanic influence. There had to be a cause, and this was the cause. (See Shailer Matthews’ The Gospel and the Modern Man, p. 37) So many fantastic details grew around the idea of the Devil that an Italian author, in 1931, was able to write a three-hundred-page book about him. (Arturo Graf, The Story of the Devil) To our Christian ancestors the Devil was a great deal more real than was God. They knew his size, his form, his looks, his loves, his offspring, his deceptive ways of working against man; and they knew how to exorcise him by magical means.

 

These notions were so fantastic, so absurd, so grounded in superstition that they reacted to the mind of the modern most unfavorable. No one who lived in the atmosphere created by the modern scientific spirit could accept such grotesque beliefs. And so they disappeared. But in the process of eliminating the errors, as so often happens, the truth went with the errors. It is as if one were to strip a clown of his mask and bizarre clothing only to deny that there is a clown. This is to go to the other extreme.

 

If there is a personal devil, as the Gospels assure us there is, then he is a spiritual being, and if he is a spiritual being, how can he be investigated by the same processes that we use when we study a plant, a star, or the human body? Obviously he cannot be. Hence the scholar, even though he be a theological scholar, is ruled out as an authority on the subject. The scholar may, indeed, study manifestations, or phenomena, and he may ascertain their causes; but that is all; he can tell us nothing about the Devil, if he be the cause. That is to say, he may inform us about the diseases and trace the cause of them not to the Devil as did the ancients, but to germs. In other words, his fight is not with the disease, but with the ancient explanations of disease. What he says about Satan, therefore, is not to be taken authoritative.

 

3. Is There a Devil? Mormonism answers this question in the affirmative. There is a Devil, but not the sort of Devil that the Christian of Joseph Smith’s time had in mind.

 

Satan, like all men in the flesh, is a spirit-child of God. He is a brother to man and to Jesus. The only difference between him and the rest of God’s children on the earth is that he does not have a body, and we do. And like the children of men, Satan was in the pre-earth world of the spirit, and he took part in the discussion of the “plan of life and salvation” designed for man on the newly-created planet, the Earth. God’s plan involved freedom to act; his force, compulsion. He was, therefore, Goethe’s “spirit that denies.” His plan was rejected, he rebelled with his followers, he was thrust out of heaven, and thereafter he was to be bodiless. All this was the necessary effects of his scheme.

 

The Devil and his angels exert undoubted influence upon mankind individually—in what way we have never been informed. It is, however, optional with man as to whether or not he is influenced by the evil power. Every man, every woman, has a personal responsibility in the situation. “Satan is generally blamed for the evils which we do,” says Joseph Smith, (Cited in Introduction to Volume IV of the History of the Church (Documentary), p. XLI) but if he were the cause of all our wickedness, men could not be condemned. The Devil cannot compel mankind to do evil. All is voluntary. Those who resist the Spirit of God, will be liable to be led into temptation. God will not exert any compulsory means and the Devil can not. Such ideas are as entertained on this subject by many are absurd.”

 

4. The Devil in Mormon Literature: Anyone who expects to find in the teachings of Joseph Smith the notions that prevailed in his time and before among Christians, will be disappointed. Diseases, bodily afflictions, and mental derangements are ascribed to him to natural causes, just as they are by intelligent men and women outside the Faith, and they are to be treated, as a rule, in the same manner. Nevertheless, as already suggested, he teaches that there is a personal Devil and that he has power over men. Latter-day Saints accept the authenticated findings of science respecting bodily and mental diseases, as within its undisputed province, and they make use of specialists to the same extent as do others. But the Devil exists. He is a person. His power is felt by men for unrighteousness.

 

The work known as the Book of Moses, in the Pearl of Great Price, is a peculiarly Mormon document. It is Joseph Smith’s version of the early chapters of Genesis—an inspired revelation. There Moses has a contest with Satan. The prophet is about to undertake a decisive work among his people, and the Devil attempts to deceive him with respect to that work. Satan appears to the prophet as an actual being, but without the dazzling glory that envelops Jehovah. It is intended, evidently, as the record of an actual not an imaginary, even. Moses was not asleep. (Chapter I, verses 12-24)

 

Thousands of years later, in the woods on the Smith farm in Western New York State, Joseph Smith is about to open up a new dispensation. Accordingly Satan makes another famous appearance. There is a struggle for mastery. The evil power, Joseph assures us, was not “an imaginary, but an actual, being from the unseen world.” Again the description was intended as the record of an actual, not an invented, incident in his life—not a mental struggle.”

 

The Doctrine and Covenants abounds in references to the Devil. Indeed, the existence of Satan is postulated in the New Movement. Here we learn of his origin, his nature and disposition, his aims, his designs, and the end of his power over man. We read that he was “thrust down” to earth after his plan failed; (Doc. & Cov., 29:36) that he “tempted Adam;” (Doc. & Cov., 29:40) that he “goeth to and fro on the earth, seeking to destroy;” (Doc. & Cov., 10:27) that it is necessary for men to be tempted by him, as a test of their “free agency” (Doc. & Cov., 29:39) that he is to be bound for a thousand years, during the millennial reign of Christ on the earth; (Doc. & Cov., 88:110) and that it is possible to “detect” him in his wiles and to resist his allurements. (Doc. & Cov., 129:8)

 

5. Inevitability of Satan’s Exit: Wherever and whenever in Christian thought, human reasoning has taken the place of divine revelation, the spiritual hierarchy has made an inglorious fadeout. For one naturally follows the other. If there is no personal God, there is no personal Satan; if there are no personal God and personal Devil, then there is no human spirit in the biblical sense. In the New Theology, of which we hear so much nowadays, there is no Devil, and God is “the mysterious Power which is finding expression in the universe, and which is present in every tiniest atom of the wondrous whole.” (The New Theology, Campbell, New York, 1907, pp. 1, 18. The entire chapter is enlightening) In other words, impersonal, the “uncaused Cause.”

 

Thus Satan has been betrayed in the house of his friends. But that would probably not displease him, for always he has preferred to travel about incognito. (Gospel Doctrine Sunday School Lessons For The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: Lessons for 1940 [Salt Lake City: Deseret Sunday School Union Board, 1940], 104-7)

 

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