Our Adversary the
Devil

Fall of the Rebel Angels - by GIORDANO, Luca - from
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

One
of the Church’s greatest needs is to be
defended against the evil we call the Devil.
Pope Paul VI

Our Adversary the Devil

by Father Paul A. Duffner O.P.

On November 15, 1972 Pope Paul VI began his general
audience with these words:
"What are the church’s greatest needs at the
present time? Don’t be surprised at our answer, and don’t write it off
as simplistic or even superstitious: one of the Church’s greatest needs
is to be defended against the evil we call the Devil".
The Kingdom of Satan
We recall from the Book of Genesis that when
God created the various things that
He brought into being (e.g. the light,
the waters and dry land, the vegetation, etc.), after each one the
Scripture
says "He saw that it was good". And after creating
man to His own
image, and giving him dominion over all that
He had made, the text
concludes: "God looked on everything He had made, and He found it very
good" (Genesis 1:31)
This being so, how do we explain the existence of so much
evil in the world, so much
suffering ... so much
moral evil especially. Did
something go wrong that
God did not count on?
God made
man to His
own image, i.e. with intelligence and
free will, so that
he was free to accept or reject the
will of the Creator. And
we know that our first parents rejected it, and in doing so (since in them
the whole human race was on
trial), caused our
will to be weakened, and our
judgment to be obscured, so that we can
reject
God’s will even more easily
than they. Our first parents rejected God’s will - not because their
will
was weak, or their judgment
obscured, or because they were inclined to
evil
as we are - but solely because of the deception of Satan,
who himself had
rejected God and was
condemned eternally. And what is more, in bringing
Adam
and Eve to fall in this
special trial, the
Devil gained a certain dominion
over them and their descendants. With that fall,
the Kingdom of Satan was established on
earth.
The Kingdom of God
The reason why Christ
became Man was precisely to deliver us from this
domination of Satan, to conquer
him and his kingdom,
and to establish on earth the Kingdom of God.
Even though Christ, by
His passion and
death has conquered Satan, and the ultimate
destruction of
his kingdom is
certain, the Evil One is still allowed
to roam about the world with a certain freedom to tempt
souls. And if he
lost the battle in his encounter with
Christ, he has not lost any of
his
superhuman powers - his intelligence
far superior to that of man . . .
his
cleverness . . . his
hatred and envy of
man, and
his desire for our
eternal
damnation. As Saint Peter warns in his Epistle:
"Your adversary the Devil prowls around like a
roaring lion, seeking someone to devour. Resist him, firm in your faith,
realizing that the brotherhood of believers is undergoing the same
suffering throughout the world." (5:8)
The Fall of the Angels
The Scriptures tell us quite a bit about the fall of man,
but very little about the fall of Satan and the other
angels who rebelled
with him. Saint Peter tells us that
they sinned and were cast into
Hell (2Peter 2:4), but the Scriptures reveal nothing about the nature of
their fall.
However, some of the Fathers of the Church believe that some angels
rebelled
when they were given to know that they would have to pay homage to a
divine
Person (Jesus Christ),
Who would assume a nature (human) inferior to
theirs;
or perhaps that they would have to pay homage to a
human person (Mary),
who
by grace, would be raised above
them as their
Queen.
It must be especially humiliating to
Satan, that one who is inferior to the
angels as to their natural powers, has been raised so far above them, and
has become more powerful than they - through her sharing in the
power of
God.
The Arch-Enemy of Christ
Satan is the
arch-enemy of Christ, confirmed in
hatred of
Him, his whole being dedicated to preventing
His work of redemption. And
just as there are countless numbers of fallen angels,
Satan’s collaborators
in this war against Christ; so too, unfortunately,
he has been able to
deceive great numbers of human beings so that
they are actually working for
his cause.
We read in the Scriptures how
Satan tempted Christ
Himself in the desert; and we know how completely
he was defeated in that
encounter. However, if he sought to deceive
Christ in His physical body and
was humiliated by
his defeat, you can be sure he will seek to
tempt and
deceive members of His Mystical Body - the
Church. And if he did not
hesitate to tempt the very
Head of that Mystical Body, a
Divine Person, he
will certainly seek to tempt and
deceive those in high positions in the
Church, those in positions of influence over others, whether
Bishops,
Priests, Sisters, theologians, educators, artists, etc.... that through them
he might deceive and win over others.
Sister Lucia, the sole survivor of the three
children who received the message of Our Lady at
Fatima, wrote in a letter to Father Fuentes in
1957, then the Postulator of the beatification of
Jacinta and Francisco:
"The Most Holy Virgin has told me that the
Devil is about to engage in a decisive battle against the Virgin . . .
and as the Devil knows what most offends God, and what will make him
gain the most souls in the shortest possible time, he does everything to
win consecrated souls from God, for in this manner he will succeed in
leaving the souls of the faithful defenseless, and so he will lay hold
of them more easily." (THIRD SECRET OF FATIMA, Bro. Michael
of the H. Trinity, p. 25)
We know, however, that in spite of the
divisions within
the Church,
Christ has promised that "the gates of
Hell will never prevail
against it" (Matthew 16:18). Yet, from the beginning the
Evil One has sought
to deceive and win over those in positions of influence. Of the original 12
Apostles, Saint Luke tells us that he entered into the heart of
Judas. (22:3)
The Smoke of Satan
On June 29, 1972 Pope Paul warned that especially
since the second Vatican Council the Devil
has increased his attacks on the Church:
"We thought that after the Council there would be a day of sunshine
for the history of the Church, and instead we found storms. How did this
happen? We will confide this thought to you . . . There was an adverse
power, the Devil, whom the Gospel calls the mysterious enemy of man,
something preternatural - which comes to suffocate the fruits of the
ecumenical Council.
"One could say that from some fissure - the smoke of Satan entered
into the temple of God. There is doubt, there is uncertainty, there is
the problematical, disquiet, dissatisfaction....there is confrontation"
The Holy Father refers to "fissures"
(like cracks in the wall) - through which the Devil gains entrance, gains
control over certain members of the Church, members who were freed from the
dominion of Satan through
Baptism, but later
fell back under his dominion
due to the weaknesses of
human natures and
his clever deception.
You recall Our Lord’s parable of the
wheat and the cockle
(Matthew 13:24). A man went out to his field and sowed good grain; but while he
slept an enemy came and sowed in the same field
cockle (a
harmful weed).
When the stalks of wheat grew up and produced grain, the
cockle came too.
The owner of the field commented: "An enemy has done this".
That same enemy is today sowing
weeds and cockle of error
among the good grain of solid doctrine in the
Church. And how does
he do
this? Again Pope Paul gives the answer:
"The Devil undermines man’s moral equilibrium with his sophistry. He
is the malign, clever seducer who knows how to make his way into us
through the senses, the imagination, the libido (lust), through utopian
logic . . . so that he can bring about in us deviations that are all the
more harmful because they seem to conform to our physical and mental
makeup, or to our profound instinctive aspirations."
Not that every sin is
due to the Devil’s influence; but "it
is true," the Pope continued, "that those who do not keep watch over
themselves with a certain moral vigor are exposed to the influence of the
‘mystery of iniquity’ cited by Saint Paul" (2Thesalonians 2:7). And without
divine help they are no match for
his intelligence and cleverness.
Although the Devil
cannot directly influence man’s mind or
will, he can and does indirectly affect
those faculties by means of the external senses and
lower faculties - the
imagination, the
sensibility, the memory, as the Holy Father points out.
He
can awaken sense-images and cause us to have
feelings that affect our
thinking, and incline our will to accept what
satisfies us.
Speaking of how the Devil
works through the imagination and the
sensibility to achieve this
deception, Saint Thomas Aquinas states:
"It happens, through the rousing of a passion,
that what is put before the imagination is judged as being something to
be pursued, because, to him who is held by the passion, whatever the
passion inclines him to, seems good. In this way the devil induces man
inwardly to sin." (I II, 80, 2)
The Tactics of Satan
The Devil is too
clever to show his hand, disguising
himself as an "angel of light"
(2Corinthians 11:14). He will suggest some
veiled evil, under the guise of
something good . . . something part good and
part evil . . . something
part true and part
false. He might, for example, encourage a little easing up on
our efforts . . . a little less prayer . . . a little more indulgence in
this or that . . . until the weakness and inclinations of our fallen nature
do the rest.
It is sometimes said that one of the
Devil’s cleverest
victories is to convince man that he does
not exist. And how often do we hear
today, even among Christians, of some who seek to reduce the existence of
the angels to mere folklore. Such ones play right into
his hands.
There is a strange anomaly in this regard that is
difficult to understand, except for the deception and cleverness of the
Devil. While on the one hand we find many intellectuals who will question or
deny the existence of spiritual beings (and therefore of
devils), we find on
the other hand, a decided increase in recent times in the
cult of Satanism.
We can be sure Satan is active in fostering
both evils.
The tactics of Satan over the centuries have not changed,
because human nature has not changed. As mentioned above,
Saint Paul refers to
the work of Satan as the "mystery of iniquity", or as it is sometimes
translated -"the mystery of lawlessness," the
Devil being the
"Lawless One". When you look around the world today and see the great
amount of lawlessness, the great increase of every form of
lustful
immorality, of violence, of
terrorism, of abortion, etc., we can see the
signs of Satan’s influence on all sides. Truly, this is
his hour.
The Devil's Subtle Suggestions
Let us consider briefly the subtle tactics of
Satan, and
see ways in which he manipulates many who do not realize they are being
manipulated.
Because of his great intelligence,
he can suggest subtle different
interpretations of the Scriptures, and of Theology, that
distort
revealed truth.
He will seek to persuade one to be
broad-minded in moral matters,
his object being a gradual
weakening of one’s moral fibre, and a further
deepening of his tendency to wishful thinking.
Knowing from experience how powerless
he is against the
humble and
the obedient,
he seeks to encourage a spirit of independence, and of
rebellion against lawful authority.
Knowing how the
Holy Spirit guides the
Church in the way of
truth,
this "father of lies" seeks to bring us to doubt the teaching of
the Church, and to call into question
its dogmas and moral teaching.
Knowing the
power of prayer to obtain
grace, he seeks to instill in
us the idea of self-sufficiency, that we don’t need
prayer . . . we can
manage our own life.
In countless ways the Devil
can deceive us with
half truths, as Pope Paul says, "undermining
man’s moral equilibrium with his sophistry". In some mysterious way
he
can bring suggestions before us that are so appealing to our
pleasure-seeking,
glory-seeking and freedom-seeking nature. These are a few
examples:
I need to be free of those telling me what to do, in order to attain
my real fulfillment.
If I suppress my
sensual impulses and urges, I may do
harm to my
natural development.
I am a mature person. I can read whatever I wish, or watch whatever
kind of TV program or movies I wish. It doesn’t affect me at all.
If I always say no to others in regard to
sex, or drugs, or
alcohol,—I will never be accepted by others. I will never have any
friends.
I don’t need confession. I haven’t any
grave sins. And besides, if I
stay away more there will be less danger of routine
confessions.
My
prayers don’t seem to be answered . . . so what is the use of
praying.
My
conscience is the only guide I need. As long as I am at
peace
with my conscience, I need not
worry - even if some of my acts and
decisions are not always in line with the teachings of the
Church . . .
etc. etc.
(And so on without end . . . is the cleverness of the
Evil One in exploiting
our weaknesses, our likes and dislikes.)
Call Upon Mary
All this may seem to present a rather
pessimistic view of
life, especially when we recall man’s
weakness and the
Devil’s strength, our
ignorance and his astuteness. In answer to this Saint Thomas Aquinas
reminds us that if there are countless fallen
angels seeking to snare us,
there is an even greater number of angels
working for our salvation.
"So that the contest should not be unequal, men
get some compensation, first, through the help of God’s grace, and
second, through the guardianship of the Angels. Thus Elisha said to his
servant: ‘Do not be afraid, for there are more on our side than on
theirs’."
In God’s creation everything has a purpose. Even the
fallen angels with
their malicious deceitfulness can be used by
God as instruments of
testing man. Where there is no
test,
there is no growth. And in every
temptation, sufficient
grace is offered to
withstand it. (1Corinthians 10:13)
As we have seen in a preceding issue (Vol. 40, n. 6), in
the divine plan,
Mary, the Mother of the
Redeemer, is destined - through the
power of her Divine Son - to crush the
head of the serpent.
Queen of Heaven
and Earth, she can call upon the
heavenly host to protect us from the
wiles
and snares of the
enemy. This presupposes, of course, that we do what we can
to avoid occasions of sin, and bring discipline to bear on our
weaknesses,
and rely faithfully on prayer and the
sacraments, the chief sources of
grace.
As Our Savior warned
the apostles in the Garden of Gesthemani: "Watch
and pray that you enter not into temptation."
Prayer and vigilance are essential if we
are not to be deceived and
led astray by the
tempter of souls, the
"father of lies". Pray too for those in positions of influence in the
Church, for, as we saw, they are
particular objects of the Devil’s attacks . . . as are all who keep
God’s commandments. (Revelation 12:17)
Whether it be moments of
temptation, of doubt, or of
conflict . . . whether the
problems be ours . . . or those of
another . . . heed with confidence the advice of Saint Bernard: "Look
to the Star, Call upon Mary!"

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