6. The Devil is a powerful, intelligent schemer, but he is not all-powerful or all-knowing
The Devil is a creature who rebelled against God, but we do not know when, how or why he rebelled
Demons sometimes tempt and afflict people today
Pastor Hsi was a former Confucian scholar who became a Christian. Shortly after his conversion to Christianity, he noticed a changed coming over his wife. Although well in body and mind, she became moody, restless and scarcely able to eat or sleep. She was tormented by suggestions of evil. At the time for daily worship she was full of ungovernable rage. Soon all the signs of possession were present, great violence, terrible language and physical convulsions that resembled epilepsy. The neighbours linked this visitation with Hsi’s conversion. He had, they said, turned to doctrines of evil spirits and was reaping his reward. Hsi cast himself on God, fasting and praying for three days and nights. Obviously God answered the prayers of his servant, for the demons were repulsed and Mrs Hsi was not only delivered but declared herself to be a Christian and so she became one with her husband in is life-work. She never again suffered in this way. In Christ she was delivered from the power of Satan. Her deliverance caused a great stir in the district. “Who can this Jesus be?” asked many, and some followed her example and turned to the Saviour.
There is very little mention of demons in the Old Testament. There are, however, many references to these hostile spiritual beings in the Gospels. Demonisation (Scripture does not refer to people being ‘demon-possessed’) can be associated with dumbness, seizures, {Mr 9:17f} a refusal to wear clothing and a living among the tombs. {Lu 8:27}
Although it is sometimes asserted that the NT writers confuse demonisation with ordinary physical and mental disorders, Mt 4:24, for example, is careful to distinguish between the demon-possessed, those having seizures, and the paralyzed. We read elsewhere of people who suffered from deafness, dumbness and blindness, with no suggestion that they were demonised, e.g. Mr 7:32.