Angelic Conflict IV: Why the Human Race?
Why has there been a period of time between the judgment of the fallen angels and the execution of that judgment? It is never stated anywhere in Scripture as such but it is a legitimate deduction from Scripture based on a number of different inferences that that Satan challenged God, and there are three ways in which he did this. It is on the basis of understanding this challenge and the issues that they reveal that we begin to understand why the spiritual life of the church age is so important, and why the character qualities that are emphasised in the church age for the believer are so crucial. It all plays a part in this fantastic cosmic drama of which we are a part. Our life did not just happen; we are being watched on a daily basis by the angels. The point is that we are to be demonstrating the grace of God and demonstrating His character, that God is just and fair.
The result of this is that there was a trial and God decided to give the angels a chance, to give the angels a big object lesson so that Satan and the angels will understand the dynamics and the reality of His grace, His character and His integrity. He is going to create a creature a little lower than the angels whose ultimate destiny is to raised above the angels and to judge the angels, because the creature, mankind, is going to learn things about God and develop an understanding about the character and nature of God, and is going to be able to reach a level of spiritual advancement far superior to anything the angels ever saw or knew. But it is only by following the plan of God.
What are the issues at stake? First, the integrity of God: understanding His righteousness, His love, and His truth. Truth always relates to the expression of His thinking. His thinking is truth. Truth is not some external standard God's decisions conform to; truth is His character and He always conforms to His own character. Second, authority orientation based on Satan's contention that a loving God could not cast His creatures into the lake of fire, and based on his contention that God is not really being fair in the way He is treating Satan and the fallen angels.
Two things that characterise Satan's thinking. We have already seen that he is antagonistic to God so we have divine viewpoint thinking on one hand, and that relates to authority orientation, humility, grace orientation, and being servant. Being a servant relates to the application of role. If humility and authority orientation aren't there then being a servant won't happen. Only the other hand, human viewpoint. Human viewpoint, or what we see here in this case, Satan's viewpoint, is autonomy: he is being independent of God, a law to himself; he determines what is right. It is characterised by arrogance and antagonism. There is an opposition to God's plan and an antagonism to God's way and God's thinking. So as we look at human viewpoint, also called the thinking of demons in James 3:13-15, what we are beginning to isolate here is the characteristic of what we will see as the cosmic system. The cosmic system is not overt; it is thought, ideas, the realm of ideas that produce action.
Three factors, then, are going to be emphasised in the believer's life in order for him to be a positive testimony or witness in the angelic conflict. They relate to his mental attitude. The first relate to his personal love for God. When we graph out the advances in the spiritual life we don't put love for God until and advanced stage because, as Jesus said in John 14: "If you love me you will keep my commandments." If we are going to love God we have to keep commandments. That means we have to learn the commandments, we have to know the commandments, it takes time to learn and assimilate the doctrine so that we can know how to think and how to live. We may be able to love God in small ways at an early or infancy stage of our spiritual life but it is directly related to the amount of doctrine that we have assimilated. Love for God is not an emotion but an attitude that is going to correspond with authority orientation.
The second factor is related to orientation to life itself, which is genuine humility. Humility is related to two important concepts. Of course, it is related to authority because in humility we have to subordinate ourselves to authority that we may not think are worthy of our submission. In orientation to life we have to develop genuine humility. This involves subordination to authority and teachability—learning and being willing to admit that we are wrong. We have to have the humility to exchange the truth of God's Word for our time-cherished traditions. We have to be teachable, we have to realise that the Word of God is absolute truth and we have to completely eradicate almost everything we have ever learned because it is always reflective of human viewpoint. As we advance and grow as believers we become oriented to God's integrity. We are to be holy, a practical holiness, as we live our lives more and more set apart, realising that the sin nature was crucified with Christ and we are to reckon ourselves dead to sin.
The third factor that needs to be emphasised is our orientation to our role, not just roles as men and women but as creatures created in the image and likeness of God designed for a particular function. In Genesis 2:15 we see that the original man, Adam, was created originally to serve. Being created to serve is something that is primary in terms of our role, and yet at the fall man decides to rule autonomously. So part of human viewpoint is the idea that I can run my life apart from God. That mirrors Satan's thinking: "I can do it as well as God can do it." We were created to serve; we weren't created to rule independent from God. There is nothing wrong with being a servant. In fact, Solomon in his prayer 1 Kings chapter three refers to David as "Your servant." He further defines him as righteous, truth, and having an upright heart. This is critical because there in that prayer he is relating being a servant to righteousness and to truth. So in order to be a servant it is necessary to have righteousness and truth. Yashar lebad is the Hebrew in that passage for "uprightness of heart." The term yashar is a synonym for tsaddiq, meaning righteousness, but it has an application sense. But what is interesting is that yashar, the verb, becomes a noun by adding a final nun. At that point it becomes jeshurun, and that becomes a title for spiritually mature Israel. So the spiritually mature of Israel was a jeshurun believer; they had upright hearts. They become mature so that they can become a positive witness in the angelic conflict. They recognise their role as being a servant, so to be a servant you have to have righteousness, truth, and uprightness relating to application of doctrine. This same principle is emphasised in Matthew 18:1ff. Why is it that again and again in these parables when Jesus starts emphasising certain character qualities it always comes back to humility, and again and again He uses the analogy of servant to the master. In part of the spiritual life there is a mentality that is demanding to be a servant because the path to rulership in the Millennial kingdom is to learn to be a servant. Satan wants to rule by being a dominant tyrant and in the New Testament the issue is being a servant to those you lead, not a tyrant over those you lead.
Matthew 18:1 NASB "At that time the disciples came to Jesus and said, 'Who then is greatest in the kingdom of heaven?'"
Matthew 20:20 NASB "Then the mother of the sons of Zebedee came to Jesus with her sons, bowing down and making a request of Him.
The ultimate model that is played against the arrogance and lack of humility of Satan is Jesus Christ. This is emphasised in two verses: Matthew 20:28 NASB "just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many." Mark 10:45 NASB "For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many." The important thing to recognise here is that the verb used here for "serve" is diakoneo [diakonew], a synonym for two other words. One is douleo [doulew], the verb for "slave," and it is also used as a synonym for latreuo [latreuw], a Greek for service of worship. Romans 12:1, 2. So the emphasis, then, is not on a lack of volition. As a diakoneo you voluntarily serve. Whereas bond slave is true and there are other applications, here is being emphasised the voluntary submission to authority, that Jesus voluntarily places Himself under authority. Whereas doulos emphasises the slave's dependence on the master, here He is indicating that He is voluntarily putting Himself in this position. So ultimately Jesus Christ demonstrates all of the characteristics that are antagonistic to Satan in his whole ploy to gain authority and become like God.
So the angelic conflict is not restricted to just answering the simple question: How can a loving God cast His creatures into a lake of fire. To extrapolate beyond that, in developing the character of Christ in the believer, when the believer reaches spiritual maturity he becomes a living testimony to the fallaciousness of Satan's challenge. If even one believer trusts Christ as saviour then Satan's whole charge is destroyed. But there are millions of believers who are advancing to spiritual maturity who by every positive decision for doctrine demonstrate that Satan's charge is false. And that is why the believer's advance to spiritual maturity is going to be raised to a level to rule and reign with Christ in the Millennial kingdom as a result of the rewards that they receive at the judgment seat of Christ, and they will be qualified to judge the angels because they have mastered and learned character qualifications in the heat of the battle that angels never developed and never were able to develop. Consequently believers who are failures, who never advance, who lose rewards at the judgment seat of Christ and are ashamed at the judgment seat of Christ, aren't going to enter into that blessing. That is our inheritance, called inheriting the kingdom. Believers who are failures are not going to inherit the kingdom. They will be there but they won't have the privilege and responsibility of ruling and reigning with Christ because they didn't learn it here and now. This is the training ground. Whether or not we pass the course right now determines our position and our place for all eternity. This is how the spiritual life relates to the angelic conflict.