Think before you use the word. What kind of "Satan" were you talking about? The non-existent supernatural being? Or just the simple concept of adversary. Satan can be anything that is adversarial, to anything, but the popular Satan almost always refers to the adversary to good, the adversary to the Divine.
The first thing we have to address is the definition of Satan. While fundamentalists will tell you that Satan was present in the Bible from the very foundations laid in Genesis, history tells us a different story. The words Satan, Devil, demon, Lucifer, fallen angel etc. simply don't occur in the whole of the book of Genesis. Throughout the Old Testament, the one and only God is presented as all powerful, without equal and in no competition with any other cosmic force. The Old Testament makes it clear that any 'adversary' to God's people was ultimately under the control of God Himself. ...
It was a Canonic invention, after the Romans usurped Christianity in the 3rd century and declared itself as the sole authority of the Christendom. They also created Lucifer out of nothing - merely from ONE verse which is lost from translation:
The word “Lucifer” occurs only once in the entire Bible. This is in Isaiah 14:12, which says: “How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations!” Those who read this verse in its actual context will clearly see that the sentence is applied specifically to a certain Babylonian king who was an enemy in war of the Israelites. The original Hebrew text uses the word הֵילֵל which literally means “bright star” or “shining one,” a term applied sarcastically or mockingly by the Israelites to this particular enemy of theirs. The translators of the King James Version of the Bible – one of the chief of whom was the well known Rosicrucian initiate Dr Robert Fludd, a fact which will no doubt shock and horrify many Christians – chose to translate this word with the Latin word “Lucifer.” ...
If you don't believe Satan exists, then you have not done enough digging on the cabal & its actions over the past few thousand years.
Think before you use the word. What kind of "Satan" were you talking about? The non-existent supernatural being? Or just the simple concept of adversary. Satan can be anything that is adversarial, to anything, but the popular Satan almost always refers to the adversary to good, the adversary to the Divine.
It was a Canonic invention, after the Romans usurped Christianity in the 3rd century and declared itself as the sole authority of the Christendom. They also created Lucifer out of nothing - merely from ONE verse which is lost from translation:
I just did, and I'm not finished. And you?