{"id":515,"date":"2018-12-14T10:40:53","date_gmt":"2018-12-14T16:40:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/?p=515"},"modified":"2018-12-14T10:40:53","modified_gmt":"2018-12-14T16:40:53","slug":"who-are-demons","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/12\/14\/who-are-demons\/","title":{"rendered":"Who are Demons?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-516\" src=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/37\/2018\/12\/Christ20Healing20Demoniacs20email.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"480\" height=\"359\" \/>In the <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/12\/05\/who-is-the-devil\/\">previous<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/12\/10\/the-angels-who-left-their-former-estate\/\">posts<\/a> of the present series, the Devil and a group of fallen angels were discussed.\u00a0 The former was cast down into Sheol, or Hades, to devour and rule over the dead.\u00a0 The latter were confined in chains in the Abyss for their crimes until the end of the world.\u00a0 In another previous <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/10\/03\/genesis-and-the-fall\/\">post<\/a>, the angelic beings to whom the nations were assigned at the tower of Babel, who later became corrupt and sought the worship of the nations they were to govern were described.\u00a0 These beings did not fall as the others and remain in the heavenly places according to St. Paul (Eph 6:12), though they are judged at the resurrection of Christ (Ps 82) and their reign is undone as the Gospel proceeds to all of the nations.\u00a0 All authority in heaven and on earth is now given to Christ following his victory and so all of the nations are called to become his disciples<span style=\"float: none;background-color: transparent;color: #333333;cursor: text;font-family: Georgia,'Times New Roman','Bitstream Charter',Times,serif;font-size: 16px;font-style: normal;font-variant: normal;font-weight: 400;letter-spacing: normal;text-align: left;text-decoration: none;text-indent: 0px\"> (Matt 28:18-20)<\/span>.\u00a0 St. Gregory the Dialogist says that this is why the angels of God, his divine council, are said to stand on his right and his left.\u00a0 Those on the right are the elect angels (1 Tim 5:21) and those on the left are the wicked angelic beings who will receive their full judgment on the last day by Christ through the saints (1 Cor 6:3).<\/p>\n<p>None of these wicked angelic figures, with the possible exception of the Devil (see next week&#8217;s post), are described as roaming the earth.\u00a0 Further, as was common ancient belief, confirmed by St. Paul (1 Cor 15:40-41), angelic beings have bodies, albeit bodies of an entirely different sort than the earthly, terrestrial bodies of humans.\u00a0 In early Jewish thinking, anything created has, or at least had, a body.\u00a0 At a few points in the Old Testament, however, we are confronted by &#8216;unclean spirits&#8217; which are bodiless and come to dwell in the bodies of others.\u00a0 Likewise, the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles are replete with references to &#8216;demons&#8217; who take possession of the bodies of humans, animals, and idols.\u00a0 Despite the major part which demonic possession and exorcism plays in the ministry of Christ and his apostles, the origin of these demons and the phenomenon of possession are never in the NT narrated or described.\u00a0 The phenomena is merely presumed by the New Testament writers as something about which readers would have common knowledge.\u00a0 What, then, was the understanding of these demons in the Greco-Roman pagan and the Jewish worlds of the 1st century AD?<\/p>\n<p>The word from which &#8216;demon&#8217; is transliterated into English, &#8216;daimonion&#8217; was used flexibly in Classical Greek sources.\u00a0 It generally referred to divine beings of a lower tier or more recently the object of worship.\u00a0 The word is therefore frequently used of figures whom we would refer to as Greek and Roman gods, including occasionally Zeus.\u00a0 The word was also used to refer to the spirits of deceased ancestors, particularly notable ancestors such as heroes and kings.\u00a0 The connective tissue of these usages comes on two sides.\u00a0 First, both these divinities and ancestral spirits were objects of worship in the Greek and Roman worlds.\u00a0 This crossover can also be observed in Canaanite religion, for example in the witch of Endor&#8217;s identification of the spirit of Samuel as a &#8216;god&#8217; (1 Sam 28:13).\u00a0 Second, within certain classical authors was still retained the knowledge that the spirits now worshipped as gods had once been ancient figures of renown.\u00a0 Zeus, for example, is still occasionally identified with an ancient king on the island of Crete, Asterion the father of Minos.\u00a0 Though it has obviously become a pejorative term for a specifically evil spirit in modern usage, in ancient usage, outside of Jewish and Christian sources, it carries no such association.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"float: none;background-color: transparent;color: #333333;cursor: text;font-family: Georgia,'Times New Roman','Bitstream Charter',Times,serif;font-size: 16px;font-style: normal;font-variant: normal;font-weight: 400;letter-spacing: normal;text-align: left;text-decoration: none;text-indent: 0px\"> Plato describes the origin of demons in the <em>Cratylus<\/em>, &#8220;It is principally because demons are wise and knowing, I think, that Hesiod says they are named &#8216;demons.&#8217;\u00a0 In our older Attic dialect, we actually find the word &#8216;daemones.&#8217;\u00a0 So, Hesiod and many other poets speak well when they say that when a great man dies, he has a great destiny and a great honor and becomes a &#8216;demon,&#8217; which is a name given to him because it accords with wisdom.\u00a0 And I myself assert, indeed, that every great man, whether alive or dead, is demonic, and is correctly called a &#8216;demon'&#8221; (397c-398c).<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Because these spirits were (at least currently) without bodies, in order to interact with them, they needed to be provided with bodies.\u00a0 This took place in two primary ways.\u00a0 The first was through the crafting of images which the spirit could possess in order to receive worship and offerings.\u00a0 It is for this reason that an image of a god or goddess was the centerpiece of Greek and Roman temples.\u00a0 The spirit was believed to inhabit the image as a new body.\u00a0 For this reason, it is common in Jewish literature in the Greek language from this period to refer to the idol itself as &#8216;daimonion&#8217;.\u00a0 The second mode of interaction with these spirits was through their possession of a human body.\u00a0 In the Greek and Roman worlds, the most prominent form of this was the institution of oracles, human priests or priestesses who would be possessed by a &#8216;daimonion&#8217; which would speak wisdom through them.\u00a0 The most prominent of these was the famed oracle of Delphi, where the Pythia was believed to be possessed by Apollo.\u00a0 This was seen as a positive and beneficial phenomenon in the Roman world despite the counter-understanding by Jewish and Christian communities (cf. Acts 16:16-24).<\/p>\n<p>Another mode of demonic possession understood in the Greco-Roman world was more subtle.\u00a0 It was believed that great men, rulers and those of great accomplishment in various cultural fields, were possessed by these divine spirits who inspired and animated them.\u00a0 The Roman term for one of these beings was a &#8216;genius&#8217; and it is ultimately from this that our modern usage of that term is derived.\u00a0 So, when early Christians were commanded to participate in worship of the Roman emperor, it was actually to the genius of the emperor that they were commanded to offer incense or sacrifice.\u00a0 Likely the most famous ancient figure who actively claimed to be demon possessed as part of his defense of himself, however, is Socrates.\u00a0 In Plato&#8217;s <em>Republic<\/em>, Socrates states, &#8220;Finally, my own case is hardly worth mentioning, my demonic sign, because it has happened to no one before me, or to only a very few&#8221; (496c).\u00a0 In the Apology, he describes his experience further:\u00a0 &#8220;I have a divine or spiritual sign which Meletus has ridiculed in his deposition.\u00a0 This began when I was a child.\u00a0 It is a voice, and whenever it speaks it turns me away from something I am about to do, but it never encourages me to do anything&#8221; (31d).<\/p>\n<p>This phenomenon was also known within the ancient Jewish world, but was interpreted very differently.\u00a0 Ancient Judaism <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/10\/09\/here-there-be-giants\/\">understood<\/a> the great heroes and kings of the surrounding pagan nations as being not heroes but giants, tyrants, thugs, and bullies.\u00a0 They understood the proposed mixture of human and divine parentage of these heroes as being their origin in demonic fornication for which the offending spirits were punished and the progeny eradicated by God.\u00a0 It was therefore natural for their religious outlook to similarly interpret the phenomena of demons, that they were the disembodied spirits of dead giants.\u00a0 This understanding is reflected in a variety of Second Temple Jewish sources, such as 1 Enoch 15:8-9.\u00a0 1 Enoch and many of the Dead Sea Scrolls refer to these spirits as being of illegitimate birth referring back to their origin.\u00a0 This is in harmony with the identification of these beings as &#8216;unclean spirits.&#8217;\u00a0 The Torah distinguishes clearly between evil and unclean as separate categories, and so to call something unclean is not to indicate that it is evil per se, though these spirits are also called &#8216;evil spirits&#8217; in other places.\u00a0 Uncleanness is commonly associated with being of a mixed origin, and the Torah contains countless examples, from sewing a garment from two different kinds of cloth to sewing multiple types of seed in the same field (Lev 19:19; 22:9-11).<\/p>\n<p>This understanding created a certain logical difficulty, however, in that the spirits of the slain giants were seen to have been punished along with their parents.\u00a0 The spirits of the Rephaim, the giant line which included Og of Bashan, for example, are inhabitants of Sheol according to the scriptures (Is 14:9; 26:14; Ps 88:10; Prov 2:18; 9:18; 21:16; Job 26:5-6).\u00a0 How then are there still these demonic spirits present in the world?\u00a0 The Book of Jubilees is a Jewish text which enjoyed immense popularity in the 1st century AD and retells the stories of Genesis including many Jewish traditions surrounding the text.\u00a0 It answers this question through the figure of Mastema, a leader among the giants, who at the time of their impending destruction bargained with God to allow himself and one tenth of the demonic spirits to remain in the world in order to test humanity and afflict those in whom wickedness is found (Jub 10:8).\u00a0 God consents to allow this because he intends to use the evil spirits, who had been a part of the corruption of humanity, to bring human persons to repentance.\u00a0 This is how the evil spirit who came &#8216;from God&#8217; to afflict Saul is understood (1 Sam 16:14-16, 23; 18:10; 19:9).\u00a0 This understanding of demonic activity also lies behind St. Paul&#8217;s references to handing someone over to Satan through excommunication for the purpose of bringing repentance (1 Cor 5:5; 1 Tim 1:20).<\/p>\n<p>The bargain struck by Mastema with God, however, has an expiration date when, at the last judgment, these spirits will be punished for eternity in the Abyss.\u00a0 This idea underlies many of the confrontations that take place in the Gospels between Christ and various demonic entities.\u00a0 In Mark 1:23-26, the demon&#8217;s recognition of who Jesus Christ is leads to the immediate question as to whether Christ has come to destroy the demons (i.e. they associate the arrival of Christ with the time of the end).\u00a0 In his confrontation with the Gerasene demoniac, St. Matthew records the demons asking if Christ has come to torment them &#8216;before the time&#8217; (Matt 8:29).\u00a0 St. Mark records that the demons pleaded with Christ not to send them out of the land (Mark 5:10).\u00a0 St. Luke makes clear that the alternative to them continuing to dwell in the land is confinement in the abyss (Luke 8:31).\u00a0 The Abyss was seen to be in the depths of the sea, and though they are cast into the swine, this is where they meet their end (Matt 8:32; Mark 5:13; Luke 8:33).\u00a0 Because the activity of these demonic spirits was seen as being strictly limited by God himself, the fact that Christ is able to command and punish them is prominent in the Gospels precisely as evidence of his identity as Yahweh, the God of Israel.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In the previous posts of the present series, the Devil and a group of fallen angels were discussed.\u00a0 The former was cast down into Sheol, or Hades, to devour and rule over the dead.\u00a0 The latter were confined in chains in the Abyss for their crimes until the end of the world.\u00a0 In another previous post, the angelic beings to whom the nations were assigned at the tower of Babel, who later became corrupt and sought the worship of the nations they were to govern were described.\u00a0 These beings did not fall as the others and remain in the heavenly places according to St. Paul (Eph 6:12), though they are judged at the resurrection of Christ (Ps 82) and their\u2026 <a class=\"moretag\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/12\/14\/who-are-demons\/\">  <i class=\"fa fa-arrow-circle-right\"><\/i> <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-515","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<title>Who are Demons? - The Whole Counsel Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/12\/14\/who-are-demons\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Who are Demons? - The Whole Counsel Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In the previous posts of the present series, the Devil and a group of fallen angels were discussed.\u00a0 The former was cast down into Sheol, or Hades, to devour and rule over the dead.\u00a0 The latter were confined in chains in the Abyss for their crimes until the end of the world.\u00a0 In another previous post, the angelic beings to whom the nations were assigned at the tower of Babel, who later became corrupt and sought the worship of the nations they were to govern were described.\u00a0 These beings did not fall as the others and remain in the heavenly places according to St. Paul (Eph 6:12), though they are judged at the resurrection of Christ (Ps 82) and their\u2026\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/12\/14\/who-are-demons\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"The Whole Counsel Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2018-12-14T16:40:53+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/37\/2018\/12\/Christ20Healing20Demoniacs20email.jpg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"Fr. 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