On another thread a member came to a rather interesting conclusion, one that I personally had not considered previously. It is a conclusion that I believe can be rather quickly dismissed, but since a couple of members agreed with the posting I thought it worth exploring a little.
In the thread Christ made Sin? @Martin Marprelate (with the approval of @percho and winning approval of @SovereignGrace ) compared Christ as being lifted up to Satan in Revelation 12:3 and suggested that Scripture presenting Satan as "a type of Christ" is proof that Christ was literally made sin.
He is the father of lies (John 8:44).
He is the thief that comes only to steal and kill and destroy; contrasted with Christ who came that men may have life and have it in abundance (John 10:10).
He is the enemy of mankind (1 Peter 5:8).
He is the author of the “powers of this dark world” and the “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” (Ephesians 6:11).
He is the accuser of men (Job 1:6-12).
He is the tormentor of men (2 Corinthians 12:1-10).
He is opposed to the Church (Revelation 2:8-10).
There are, of course, at least two sides of the argument: Those who affirm Satan as a type of Christ (at least @Martin Marprelate , @percho , and @SovereignGrace ) and those who reject the idea as unbiblical.
What is interesting is how Satan is viewed as well. When we look at Scripture Satan is not viewed as "God's accuser" but as the "accuser of man". So is Satan God's adversary or the adversary of man?
How one answers that question is important. I do not believe that God has legitimate adversary because no one can actually strive against God except as God has permitted. So I view Satan as the adversary of man. Therefore I view the claim Satan is "a type of Christ" as heretical foolishness.
But I can see at least two other ways of viewing the issue. One is that Satan is God's accuser or adversary. The other is considering that Jesus literally became sin (literally became an unholy, evil, act of rebellion against God) and trying to develop a fuller theory to narrate the error.
Open to discussion:
Is Satan a "type of Christ"?
In the thread Christ made Sin? @Martin Marprelate (with the approval of @percho and winning approval of @SovereignGrace ) compared Christ as being lifted up to Satan in Revelation 12:3 and suggested that Scripture presenting Satan as "a type of Christ" is proof that Christ was literally made sin.
Let's consider: How does Scripture present Satan?…Well where do we see in Scripture a red, fiery serpent? Well in Revelation 12:3, we are introduced to ‘A great fiery red dragon’ who, in verse 9, is seen to be the serpent, alias Satan himself. So how can Satan possibly be a type of Christ? He can only be a type of Christ made sin for us.
He is the father of lies (John 8:44).
He is the thief that comes only to steal and kill and destroy; contrasted with Christ who came that men may have life and have it in abundance (John 10:10).
He is the enemy of mankind (1 Peter 5:8).
He is the author of the “powers of this dark world” and the “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” (Ephesians 6:11).
He is the accuser of men (Job 1:6-12).
He is the tormentor of men (2 Corinthians 12:1-10).
He is opposed to the Church (Revelation 2:8-10).
There are, of course, at least two sides of the argument: Those who affirm Satan as a type of Christ (at least @Martin Marprelate , @percho , and @SovereignGrace ) and those who reject the idea as unbiblical.
What is interesting is how Satan is viewed as well. When we look at Scripture Satan is not viewed as "God's accuser" but as the "accuser of man". So is Satan God's adversary or the adversary of man?
How one answers that question is important. I do not believe that God has legitimate adversary because no one can actually strive against God except as God has permitted. So I view Satan as the adversary of man. Therefore I view the claim Satan is "a type of Christ" as heretical foolishness.
But I can see at least two other ways of viewing the issue. One is that Satan is God's accuser or adversary. The other is considering that Jesus literally became sin (literally became an unholy, evil, act of rebellion against God) and trying to develop a fuller theory to narrate the error.
Open to discussion:
Is Satan a "type of Christ"?
