Satan, the Devil, and Lucifer: are they one and the same?

Most Christians believe that these three names are interchangeable for identifying the biggest and most powerful ‘bad guy’ of the Bible. Just what are the dictionary definitions for these words: Satan, Devil, Lucifer?

According to Merriam-Webster, Satan is Greek and the Hebrew is śā[t]ān, which means adversary. It is the angel in Jewish belief that is commanded by God to tempt humans to sin and carry out God’s punishment, and the Christian belief is that of a rebellious angel who is the adversary for God and lord of evil. Now, the Devil is from the Greek diabolos and literally means slanderer. It is the personal supreme spirit of evil and represented as the tempter of mankind, leader of all apostate angels, and ruler of hell. Lucifer, on the other hand, is from Latin (lux=light, fer=ferous [more]) meaning light-bearing, and is used as a name of the Devil, as well as the name of the planet Venus when appearing as the morning star.1 It would seem that these three words could be interchangeable, when used for “the evil one” in the Bible. But is all of this really true, from a biblical perspective?

In Genesis is the story of the fall of man caused by Satan, but Ezekiel gives a detailed account of Satan’s own fall. The full account is given in Ezekiel 28:11–26, but the following is a brief description. In this “King of Tyre” prophecy, Ezekiel was describing Satan. He says that Satan was a guardian angel who had unimpeded access to God’s domain. He was adorned with nine precious gemstones, which symbolized his great beauty and high position. He was completely blameless but, because of self-generated pride, wickedness infected his perfect nature and this sin led to his fall and judgement.2 Now, Satan is the head of operations for rebellion and evil; he is chief of all the fallen angels, which are active rebels against God.3

Throughout the Bible we learn Satan has many names. He is called the adversary, the dragon, that old serpent, and the god of this world, among others. In the New Testament, Satan is used interchangeably with Diabolos, or “the devil” at least thirty times or more, depending upon which version is used. You will also find that he is Beelzebub the prince of demons, as well as many more reference comparisons (e.g. power of death, roaring lion).4 So Satan and the Devil are, indeed, one and the same, but what about Lucifer — who is he?

Who is Lucifer?

The Bible City of Babylon

How did Satan, the Devil, get the name Lucifer? To understand, we need to go to the Old Testament book of Isaiah. At Isaiah 14:12 (NKJV), it says: “How you are fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How you are cut down to the ground, You who weakened the nations!”

Besides being in the modern New King James Version (NKJV) and the older King James Version (KJV), only one other instance of using the label “Lucifer” is found and it is in The Message,5 a modern American-styled English version, which states in Revelation: “But you walked away from your first love–why? What’s going on with you, anyway? Do you have any idea how far you’ve fallen? A Lucifer fall!” (Revelation 2:5, The Message).6 That is it – only three references to Lucifer from all generally available Bibles. No other current version or translation mentions Lucifer. Why is this? How did Lucifer come to be mentioned in the first place?

From the definition in the beginning of this article, we know that ‘Lucifer’ is a Latin translation. “The term ‘Lucifer’ was taken by the King James Version translators from Jerome’s Latin Vulgate (383-405 A.D.) edition of the Bible. The Hebrew word is ‘heylel’ which suggests the idea of ‘shining,’ or ‘bearing light.’ Jerome assumed the word was the name of the morning star, hence, he rendered it by the Latin title [of] Lucifer.”7 Unlike Jerome, who correctly assumed the term was the name of the morning star (the planet Venus), later translators believed it was the name of the Devil.

Actually, the Isaiah description was a reference to “the king of Babylon as the morning star to depict the once-shining-but-now-dimmed, once-lofty-but-now-diminished, status of the (soon to be former) ruler.”8 Babylon’s fall was great and the description of the king falling along with it, fit the description of the bright morning star dimming as the light of day increased. “As the morning star is not the sun which distinguishes day from night, the king of Babylon is not God! However, in its drive to rule the world, Babylon’s pride was unlimited and it acted as God on earth.”9

Over time, the idea developed that this was a description of Satan’s fall, although there is no evidence to support that idea. Others substantiate this misconception, too. “The fact is . . . there is absolutely no evidence, whatever, that Isaiah 14 contains any reference to Satan . . . . [and] the context clearly identifies the narrative as a ‘parable against the king of Babylon’ ([Isaiah] 14:4). The death of that oppressive character is vividly described.”10

An excellent Bible commentary states “the text speaks nothing at all concerning Satan nor his fall, nor the occasion of that fall, which many divines have, with great confidence, deduced from this text. Oh, how necessary it is to understand the literal meaning of Scripture, that preposterous comments may be prevented.”11 And writer and publisher Gustav Davidson, who wrote the classic text A Dictionary of Angels, stated that Lucifer is “erroneously equated with the fallen angel (Satan) due to a misreading of Isaiah 14:12.”12

Conclusion

So the idea that Satan and Lucifer were the same came later as time went on. The Lucifer-Satan theory, “nevertheless, became popular enough to be repeated still today. In fact, it even seems to have inspired Mohamed’s story of ‘the fall of Satan’ in sura 7 of the Quran.”13 And besides becoming a byword for Satan or the Devil in the church, Lucifer was also used in popular literature as in Dante Alighieri’s Inferno, Joost van den Vondel’s Lucifer, and John Milton’s Paradise Lost.14 Currently, and in the recent past, television shows and motion pictures give many more falsehoods about the Lucifer-Satan relationship.

We can therefore conclude that the names of Satan and the Devil are interchangeable, but the name or label of Lucifer had nothing to do with this fallen evil angel in the Bible. Of course, we are only talking about a technicality in usage, because when someone speaks of Lucifer, we know exactly who they are talking about. So even though that name became known by way of biblical error, Lucifer has entered our common language and is now considered an equivalent label for Satan the Devil.

Copyright © 2018, Dr. Ray Hermann
[Revised 1 August 2018]
OutlawBibleStudent.org

 

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References & Notes

1. Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 11th ed., (Springfield, MA: Merriam-Wester, Inc., 2003).

2. Dyer, Charles H., The Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures, (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1985), vol. 1, p. 1283-1284.

3. Cathey, Joe, Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary, (Nashville, TN: Holman Reference, 2003), p. 419.

4. Easton, M. G., Easton’s Bible Dictionary, (New York: Thomas Nelson, 1893).

5. Author’s note #1: It may be that the single author of this Bible translation was trying to be poetic, just as the verse is in Isaiah 14, when referring to the gradual dimming of the morning star.
Author’s note #2: Wikipedia gives more information about The Message. It is an idiomatic translation of the original languages of the Bible. It is a structural form peculiar to the contemporary slang from the United States, rather than a more neutral International English, and it falls on the extreme dynamic end of the ‘dynamic and formal equivalence spectrum.’
“The Message (Bible),” (Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., 10 May 2018), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Message_(Bible)

6. Peterson, Eugene H., The Message, The Bible in Contemporary Language, (Colorado Springs: NavPress Publishing Group, 2002). Used by permission.

7. Jackson, Wayne, “Who Is Lucifer?” (Christian Courier, retrieved 29 May 2018), https://www.christiancourier.com/articles/158-who-is-lucifer

8. Thompson, Bert, “Is Satan ‘Lucifer’?” (Apologetics Press, retrieved 31 May 2018), http://www.apologeticspress.org/apcontent.aspx?category=11&article=1091

9. VanGemeren, Willem A., Evangelical Commentary on the Bible, (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1989), vol. 3, pp. 484-485.

10. Jackson, Wayne, “Who Is Lucifer?” (see above #7)

11. Clarke, Adam, Commentary on the Bible, (Nashville, TN: Abingdon, 1972), vol.4, p. 82.

12. Davidson, Gustav, A Dictionary of Angels, (New York: The Free Press, 1967), p. 176.

13. Leonard, Paul, “Why Satan is not Lucifer in Isaiah 14,” (Religible.com, 6 June 2017), http://religible.com/398/satan-lucifer-devil/

14. “Lucifer,” (Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., 31 May 2018), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucifer

 

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27 thoughts on “Satan, the Devil, and Lucifer: are they one and the same?”

    • In our modern time ‘Lucifer’, ‘Satan’, and the ‘devil’ are interchangeable terms for the same evil entity. But during the very early Christian era and before, the term Lucifer was not linked to Satan or the devil.

      As my article states, the term ‘Lucifer’ was taken by the King James Version translators from Jerome’s Latin Vulgate edition of the Bible. Babylon’s fall was great and the description of the king falling along with it, fit the description of the bright morning star dimming as the light of day increased.

      Over time, the idea developed that this was a description of Satan’s fall, although there is no evidence to support that idea.

      Reply
  1. Well written, but I’m afraid you missed a rather important reference, which may change your conclusion. In Rev 22:16, John writes that Jesus says, “I am… the Morning Star.” If Jesus is actually the morning star—and these OT passages incorrectly attributed to Satan were just talking about kings comparing themselves to God—then it should absolutely not be used to describe Satan, regardless of how modern language has distorted the true meaning.

    Unless we are to assume Satan once held the position of Morning Star, but now Jesus does, which is a rather ridiculous notion by any biblical interpretation, considering what it would mean for the relationship between Jesus, the Father, and Satan.

    Reply
  2. Jerome the master linguist knew Greek and for his 405 AD Vulgate Bible translation had at first had translated using the Septuagint, but after the manuscript was stolen, (he claimed), he went about re-producing a translation, but this time instead with the crummy pre-Mascoretic Hebrew text he knew.

    J. Martyr and Irenaeus wrote on how falsified and mutilated it is. His rabbi friends must have put a Kabbalah magic spell on him to have gotten him to chose it over the one and only text used until then (i.e, the Greek edition of the Seventy). He didn’t assume the Hebrew term was the name of the morning star, he knew it was essentially the same.

    (The author’s comment was somewhat edited by OBS for clarity, but hopefully the author’s thoughts were not altered.)

    Reply
  3. We all come from the Lord God of the good and evil. Genesis 3:22. “Now man is one of us…knowing of the good and evil”. The us of the living…forever. To live is to forever do good and evil. It is not a good thing to be living. We are better off to die, so we can receive our ‘Spirit’ of all things good.

    The serpent had better knowledge than man until Eve fell for its trick. He wanted man to be like him and Lord God of the garden of Eden. Obviously there was evil before Eve even disobey the Lord’ command.

    The ‘tree of life’ was the trouble maker. It brought Spirit to life. It gave it soul. It was to be good or evil…BOTH! And, we have forever been just that…good or evil… Is there any wonder that the evil souls on earth are just as fortunate and MORE, than the good souls? UNTIL we give up living, we will not be given our Spirit body. It is why Jesus Christ had to bail out.

    When we are being like a snake, sneaky and betraying, we are ‘Lucifer’. When we are being vicious, wicked, cruel, we are being the ‘Devil’ (the devil has MANY of us on his side working with him, his angels) and, when we are being rebellious, rejecting God’s way, we are being ‘Satan’. Remember, even Peter was called Satan by Jesus.

    Demons are anything harmful, even our diseases. We are not even allowed to be good, and dare claim that it is our doing. God is a jealous God…He will/does make us regret our pride. The us in Genesis 3:22 was Satan and God. Good and evil.

    Why God uses Satan to do the evil works. Shown us in Job. We have always had both in us…because we are the ‘US’ with them BOTH. To be with the I AM, we have to give up trying to know everything, and accept we will NEVER know the ‘mystery’ completely until we die out of earth body. The LIGHT body shall only be on the other side. A quick ghost!

    Reply
  4. So it seems like the term ‘Lucifer’ would equate better use in analogy if one was making comparison with an evil person on earth who lived with the idea that he should be all powerful and decision maker over those suitable for life and those not. One who causes destruction, fear, death and more across the lands… say an analogy to Hitler, for example, rather than The Devil Satan. Germany was Hitler’s Babylon.

    Am I putting it all together properly?

    Reply
    • Thank you for reading the article. That is an interesting question. Someone once said each name means something different and it was, sort of, like a trinity. I don’t believe there is any merit to that theory, though.

      Reply
    • Thanks for pointing out the correction. The Modern English Version (MEV) does state: “How are you fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How you are cut down to the ground, you who weaken the nations!” (Isiah 14:12).

      Reply
  5. I just found your article while pondering this very question. It makes so much sense now, with chapter and verse to support it to boot. I really enjoy your writing style and references. I’m going right now to look up some more questions I’ve been wondering about. Thank you.

    Reply
  6. This is very good. I have a co-worker who states her husband quit reading the ESV because of the Isaiah 14 verse. Messianic Jewish friends during study gave me the understanding of the second born theory. Lucifer first son but fallen, the Yeshua/Jesus became the first begotten. This article makes such sense. Satan or the devil is a fallen angel. Yeshua/Jesus is YHWH The Word and became flesh and dwelt among us. He is not an angel to my understanding. Thanks for this article. I have printed it down to take to them.

    Reply
  7. Another outstanding display of your research and commitment to the proper understanding of these Biblical passages many of us have always taken as Gospel. As always, your style of writing keeps a reader (me) interested throughout your entire article.
    While on the Satan subject, I stay amazed that there are people who want to build or join a religion around the worship of this demon. Perhaps they think they will achieve a ranking position in an immortal after-life, or could it be something like an immature rebellious psychological disorder?

    Reply
    • Thank you for your comment and for being a long-term comment contributor to The Outlaw Bible Student. I think you are correct about some people thinking that the worship of Satan will get them some sort of reward. If they do achieve an immortal after-life, it may be in a fairly hot location.

      Reply

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