The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 1: Why was Sin Permitted?
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Many were disposed to heed this counsel, to repent of their
disaffection, and seek to be again received into favor with the
Father and His Son. But Lucifer had another deception ready.
The mighty revolter now declared that the angels who had united
with him had gone too far to return; that he was acquainted with
the divine law, and knew that God would not forgive. He
declared that all who should submit to the authority of Heaven
would be stripped of their honor, degraded from their position.
For himself, he was determined never again to acknowledge the [p. 41] authority of Christ. The only course remaining for him and his
followers, he said, was to assert their liberty, and gain by force
the rights which had not been willingly accorded them.
So far as Satan himself was concerned, it was true that he had
now gone too far to return. But not so with those who had been
blinded by his deceptions. To them the counsel and entreaties of
the loyal angels opened a door of hope; and had they heeded the
warning, they might have broken away from the snare of Satan.
But pride, love for their leader, and the desire for unrestricted
freedom were permitted to bear sway, and the pleadings of divine
love and mercy were finally rejected.
God permitted Satan to carry forward his work until the spirit
of disaffection ripened into active revolt. It was necessary for his
plans to be fully developed, that their true nature and tendency
might be seen by all. Lucifer, as the anointed cherub, had been
highly exalted; he was greatly loved by the heavenly beings, and
his influence over them was strong. God's government included
not only the inhabitants of heaven, but of all the worlds that He
had created; and Lucifer had concluded that if he could carry the
angels of heaven with him in rebellion, he could carry also all
the worlds. He had artfully presented his side of the question,
employing sophistry and fraud to secure his objects. His power
to deceive was very great. By disguising himself in a cloak of
falsehood, he had gained an advantage. All his acts were so clothed
with mystery that it was difficult to disclose to the angels the true
nature of his work. Until fully developed, it could not be made
to appear the evil thing it was; his disaffection would not be seen
to be rebellion. Even the loyal angels could not fully discern his
character or see to what his work was leading.
Lucifer had at first so conducted his temptations that he himself
stood uncommitted. The angels whom he could not bring fully
to his side, he accused of indifference to the interests of heavenly
beings. The very work which he himself was doing, he charged
upon the loyal angels. It was his policy to perplex with subtle
arguments concerning the purposes of God. Everything that was
simple he shrouded in mystery, and by artful perversion cast doubt
upon the plainest statements of Jehovah. And his high position,
so closely connected with the divine government, gave greater
force to his representations. [p. 42]
God could employ only such means as were consistent with
truth and righteousness. Satan could use what God could not—
flattery and deceit. He had sought to falsify the word of God and
had misrepresented His plan of government, claiming that God
was not just in imposing laws upon the angels; that in requiring
submission and obedience from His creatures, He was seeking
merely the exaltation of Himself. It was therefore necessary to
demonstrate before the inhabitants of heaven, and of all the
worlds, that God's government is just, His law perfect. Satan had
made it appear that he himself was seeking to promote the good
of the universe. The true character of the usurper and his real
object must be understood by all. He must have time to manifest
himself by his wicked works.
The discord which his own course had caused in heaven, Satan
charged upon the government of God. All evil he declared to be
the result of the divine administration. He claimed that it was
his own object to improve upon the statutes of Jehovah. Therefore
God permitted him to demonstrate the nature of his claims,
to show the working out of his proposed changes in the divine
law. His own work must condemn him. Satan had claimed from
the first that he was not in rebellion. The whole universe must
see deceiver unmasked.
Even when he was cast out of heaven. Infinite Wisdom did
not destroy Satan. Since only the service of love can be acceptable
to God, the allegiance of His creatures must rest upon a conviction
of His justice and benevolence. The inhabitants of heaven
and of the worlds, being unprepared to comprehend the nature
or consequences of sin, could not then have seen the justice of
God in the destruction of Satan. Had he been immediately
blotted out of existence, some would have served God from fear
rather than from love. The influence of the deceiver would not
have been fully destroyed, nor would be the spirit of rebellion have
been utterly eradicated. For the good of the entire universe
through ceaseless ages, he must more fully developed his principles,
that his charges against the divine government might be seen in
their true light by all created beings, and that the justice and
mercy of God and the immutability of His law might be forever
placed beyond all question.
Satan's rebellion was to be a lesson to the universe through all
coming ages—a perpetual testimony to the nature of sin and its [p. 43] terrible results. The working out of Satan's rule, its effects upon
both men and angels, would show what must be the fruit of setting
aside the divine authority. It would testify that with the existence
of God's government is bound up the well-being of all the
creatures He has made. Thus the history of this terrible experiment
of rebellion was to be a perpetual safeguard to all holy
beings, to prevent them from being deceived as to the nature of
transgression, to save them from committing sin, and suffering
its penalty.
He that ruleth in the heavens is the one who sees the end from
the beginning—the one before whom the mysteries of the past and
the future are alike outspread, and who, beyond the woe and
darkness and ruin that sin has wrought, beholds the accomplishment
of His own purposes of love and blessing. Though "clouds
and darkness are round about Him: righteousness and judgment
are the foundation of His throne." Psalm 97:2, R.V. And this the
inhabitants of the universe, both loyal and disloyal, will one day
understand. "His work is perfect: for all His ways are judgment:
a God of truth and without iniquity, just and right is He."
Deuteronomy 32:4.
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