IF GOD KNEW THAT SATAN WOULD REBEL, WHY DID HE CREATE HIM?
This
is a two-part question. The first part is “Did God know Satan would rebel?” We
know from Scripture that God is omniscient, which literally means
“all-knowing.” Job 37:16; Psalm 139:2–4, 147:5; Proverbs 5:21; Isaiah 46:9-10;
and 1 John 3:19–20 leave no doubt that God’s knowledge is infinite and that He
knows everything that has happened in the past, is happening now, and will
happen in the future.
Looking at some of the superlatives in these verses—“perfect in knowledge”;
“his understanding has no limit”; “he knows everything”—it is clear that God’s
knowledge is not merely greater than our own, but it is infinitely greater. He
knows all things in totality. If God’s knowledge is not perfect, then there is
a deficiency in His nature. Any deficiency in God’s nature means He cannot be
God, for God’s very essence requires the perfection of all His attributes.
Therefore, the answer to the first question is “yes, God knew that Satan would
rebel.”
Moving on to the second part of the question, “Why did God create Satan knowing
ahead of time he was going to rebel?” This question is a little trickier
because we are asking a “why” question to which the Bible does not usually
provide comprehensive answers. Despite that, we should be able to come to a
limited understanding. We have already seen that God is omniscient. So, if God
knew that Satan would rebel and fall from heaven, yet He created him anyway, it
must mean that the fall of Satan was part of God’s sovereign plan from the
beginning. No other answer makes sense given what we’ve seen thus far.
First, we should understand that knowing Satan would rebel is not the
same thing as making Satan rebel. The angel known by many as Lucifer had a free will and
made his own choices. God did not create hin as the devil; He created him
good (Genesis 1:31).
In trying to understand why God created Satan, knowing he would rebel, we
should also consider the following facts:
1) Satan had a good and perfect purpose before his fall. Satan’s rebellion
does not change God’s original intent from something good to something bad.
2) God’s sovereignty extends to Satan, even in his fallen condition. God is
able to use Satan’s evil actions to ultimately bring about God’s holy plan (see
1 Timothy 1:20 and 1 Corinthians 5:5).
3) God’s plan of salvation was ordained from eternity past (Revelation 13:8);
salvation requires something to be saved from, and so God allowed
Satan’s rebellion and the spread of sin.
4) The suffering that Satan brought into the world actually became the means by
which Jesus, in His humanity, was made the complete and perfect Savior of
mankind: “In bringing many sons and daughters to glory, it was fitting that
God, for whom and through whom everything exists, should make the pioneer of
their salvation perfect through what he suffered” (Hebrews 2:10).
5) From the very beginning, God’s plan in Christ included the destruction of
Satan’s work (see 1 John 3:8).
Ultimately, we cannot know for sure why God created Satan, knowing he would
rebel. It’s tempting to assume that things would be “better” if Satan had never
been created or to declare that God should have done differently. But such
assumptions and declarations are unwise. In fact, to claim we know better than
God how to run the universe is to fall into the devil’s own sin of promoting himself
above the Most High (Isaiah 14:13–14).
SOURCE: GotQuestions.com
Comments
Post a Comment