The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 1: Why was Sin Permitted?
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Taking advantage of the loving, loyal trust reposed in him by
the holy beings under his command, he had so artfully instilled
into their minds his own distrust and discontent that his agency
was not discerned. Lucifer had presented the purposes of God
in a false light—misconstruing and distorting them to excite
dissent and dissatisfaction. He cunningly drew his hearers on to
give utterance to their feelings; then these expressions were
repeated by him when it would serve his purpose, as evidence that
the angels were not fully in harmony with the government of
God. While claiming for himself perfect loyalty to God, he urged
that changes in the order and laws of heaven were necessary for
the stability of the divine government. Thus while working to
excite opposition to the law of God and to instill his own
discontent into the minds of the angels under him, he was ostensibly
seeking to remove dissatisfaction and to reconcile disaffected
angels to the order of heaven. While secretly fomenting discord and
rebellion, he with consummate craft caused it to appear as his sole
purpose to promote loyalty and to preserve harmony and peace.
The spirit of dissatisfaction thus kindled was doing its baleful
work. While there was no open outbreak, division of feeling
imperceptibly grew up among the angels. There were some who
looked with favor upon Lucifer's insinuations against the
government of God. Although they had heretofore been in perfect
harmony with the order which God had established, they were now
discontented and unhappy because they could not penetrate His
unsearchable counsels; they were dissatisfied with His purpose in
exalting Christ. These stood ready to second Lucifer's demand
for equal authority with the Son of God. But angels who were
loyal and true maintained the wisdom and justice of the divine
decree and endeavored to reconcile this disaffected being to the will
of God. Christ was the Son of God; He had been one with Him
before the angels were called into existence. He had ever stood
at the right hand of the Father; His supremacy, so full of blessing
to all who came under its benignant control, had not heretofore [p. 39] been questioned. The harmony of heaven had never been interrupted;
wherefore should there now be discord? The loyal angels
could see only terrible consequences from this dissension, and
with earnest entreaty they counseled the disaffected ones to
renounce their purpose and prove themselves loyal to God by fidelity
to His government.
In great mercy, according to His divine character, God bore
long with Lucifer. The spirit of discontent and disaffection had
never before been known in heaven. It was a new element, strange,
mysterious, unaccountable. Lucifer himself had not at
first been acquainted with the real nature of his feelings; for a
time he had feared to express the workings and imaginings of
his mind; yet he did not dismiss them. He did not see whither
he was drifting. But such efforts as infinite love and wisdom only
could devise, were made to convince him of his error. His disaffection
was proved to be without cause, and he was made to see what
would be the result of persisting in revolt. Lucifer was convinced
that he was in the wrong. He saw that "the Lord is righteous in
all His ways, and holy in all His works" (Psalm 145:17); that
the divine statutes are just, and that he ought to acknowledge
them as such before all heaven. Had he done this, he might have
saved himself and many angels. He had not at that time fully
cast off his allegiance to God. Though he had left his position
as covering cherub, yet if he had been willing to return to God,
acknowledging the Creator's wisdom, and satisfied to fill the place
appointed him in God's great plan, he would have been reinstated
in his office. The time had come for a final decision; he must fully
yield to the divine sovereignty or place himself in open rebellion.
He nearly reached the decision to return, but pride forbade him.
It was too great a sacrifice for one who had been so highly honored
to confess that he had been in error, that his imaginings were
false, and to yield to the authority which he had been working
to prove unjust.
A compassionate Creator, in yearning pity for Lucifer and
his followers, was seeking to draw them back from the abyss of
ruin into which they were about to plunge. But His mercy was
misinterpreted. Lucifer pointed to the long-suffering of God as
an evidence of his own superiority, an indication that the King of
the universe would yet accede to his terms. If the angels would
stand firmly with him, he declared, they could yet gain all that [p. 40] they desired. He persistently defended his own course, and fully
committed himself to the great controversy against his Maker.
Thus it was that Lucifer, "the light bearer," the sharer of God's
glory, the attendant of His throne, by transgression became
Satan, "the adversary" of God and holy beings and the
destroyer of those whom Heaven had committed to his guidance
and guardianship.
Rejecting with disdain the arguments and entreaties of the
loyal angels, he denounced them as deluded slaves. The preference
shown to Christ he declared an act of injustice both to himself
and to all the heavenly host, and announced that he would no
longer submit to this invasion of his rights and theirs. He would
never again acknowledge the supremacy of Christ. He had
determined to claim the honor which should have been given him,
and take command of all who would become his followers; and
he promised those would enter his ranks a new and better
government, under which all would enjoy freedom. Great numbers
of the angels signified their purpose to accept him as their
leader. Flattered by the favor with which his advances were
received, he hoped to win all the angels to his side, to become
equal with God Himself, and to be obeyed by the entire host of
heaven.
Still the loyal angels urged him and his sympathizers to submit
to God; and they set before them the inevitable result should they
refuse: He who had created them could overthrow their power
and signally punish their rebellious daring. No angel could
successfully oppose the law of God, which was as sacred as Himself.
They warned all to close their ears against Lucifer's deceptive
reasoning, and urged him and his followers to seek the presence
of God without delay and confess the error of questioning His
wisdom and authority.
Part: A
B
C
D
< Prev T. of C.
Pref.
Intro.
1
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3
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7
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9
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