The Bible (New Testament) is the divine revelation given to us by God. He inspired certain men (the apostles) and they and others who learned directly from them wrote the Bible in about 100-150 years. We certainly did not write it based on our interpretation or what “we” wanted it to be.
Read the Gospel of Mark, then read the Gospel of John. Compare them while asking yourself, “Who is Jesus in this Gospel, and what is His relationship with God?” Compare the Passion story in each, and ask, “What is this telling us about Jesus?” What does Jesus say in each Gospel about the Jews?
Of course each Gospel has a somewhat interpretation of Jesus. They were told to different audiences by different people who lived in different communities. They used some of the same information, but adapted it to fit their needs. It is there for all to see.
Likewise, the Bible does not tell us why he allows evil and Satan to exist.
Where is hell? Where is Satan? We have many examples, both in and out of Scripture, where Angels of the Lord appear. Where are the examples of when Satan appears? The only one I am aware of in the Gospels is in the tempting of Jesus. But that brings up a question that no one has ever answered for me: How can Satan tempt God? And why would Satan try? And if God eternally punishes the wicked for the evil they do, and Satan is the lowest form of evil that one could imagine why did not God at that moment just smite Satan and destroy him then and there? Or, if God is Love and is all powerful, and Satan is evil, then God could have removed the evil from Satan’s heart and turned him back to a “good” angel. That didn’t happen either. Hmmmm…Perhaps the point of that story is that Jesus was subject to BOTH human and divine instincts and feelings, and if He let his human desires take over, He could have had all the temporal power He wanted. But instead He did not “tempt God”, suppressed His human desires and accepted the will of His Father.
Also, have you ever noticed that evil never wins. If you are a student of history, you’ll notice that all tyrannical regimes and evil-doers throughout the centuries fail in their ultimate aspirations, which are always consistent with attributes assigned to Satan. Yes, they cause destruction and hurt the world through war and genocide (or whatever), but they ultimately fail at the end. Goodness always triumphs.
“Never wins?” “Goodness always triumphs”? There are a lot people and countries who were on the wrong end of the sword who would disagree with that. That “ultimately” can sometimes be a very long time in coming, with much destruction and suffering before it occurs. Perhaps God could speed up the process a little?
God is ALL-POWERFUL. You should never surmise that just because Satan and evil exists, then God must not have the power to destroy them.
If God is all powerful, then He has a strange way of showing it in the case of a subservient, disobedient entity HE created. Which brings up another question: Why would God create Satan at all, or create something He obviously can’t control.
I’m not convinced, just yet.
On the contrary, through deduction of Scripture, through dialogue with past saints, and through dialogue with evil spirits during exorcisms, the fact that Satan and evil are subservient to God has been manifest over the centuries.
Then God and Satan both have a “funny” way of demonstrating that subservience, since Satan seems to thumb his nose at God, and God is so wishy-washy he doesn’t do anything about it. Like you, MY father would have used a hand or belt if I did that.
The Catholic Church and other Christian faiths have correctly concluded that God uses Satan and his evil works to bring an ultimate good to humanity. In other words, he inverts evil and makes a good out of it. This is part and parcel of His divine design, of which we only know that we are part of it.
Why use Satan at all? Why must the source of evil be from something outside ourselves? Could it not come from our own human nature? Is it easier to blame someone else for our failures then to point the finger at ourselves? Here is what Jesus told us about what God will do for us “wicked” people, from Matthew 7:
Which one of you would hand his son a stone when he asks for a loaf of bread,
or a snake when he asks for a fish?
If you then, who are wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give good things to those who ask him.
And where does Jesus say evil is found?
From Luke 6:
A good person out of the store of goodness in his heart produces good, but an evil person out of a store of evil produces evil; for from the fullness of the heart the mouth speaks.
From Matthew 23:
You are like whitewashed tombs, which appear beautiful on the outside, but inside are full of dead men’s bones and every kind of filth.
Even so, on the outside you appear righteous, but inside you are filled with hypocrisy and evildoing.
No using Satan as an excuse or reason here. Good or evil, it comes from within us.
Of course, Jesus also tells us, as in the last quote, that the source of all goodness and Love is within us as well. For He is within us and we are within Him.
Which is the Promise of Christmas…so have a very blessed one.