Well that all depends if you want christian satan, Jewish satan or islam satan
I do not think Satan is a ghost. ________________________________________ No he isn't. Satan represents two things. * the spiritual being that fell from heaven, the Angel or Demon. * and anything in opposition to the Christian or Jewish Dogma
A:Lilith and Satan are never mentioned together in the Bible. There is no suggestion in any Jewish midrash or tradition that Lilith was Satan's wife. However, a Jewish tradition is that she was Adam's first wife, but that she flew away because Adam would not allow her to be on top when having sex.
There is no mention of Satan (the 'adversary') in any Old Testament scripture written before the Babylonian Exile. Scholars say Satan entered Jewish belief from the Zoroastrianism, where Angra Mainyu was the wholly malign adversary of Ahura Mazda. Thus, Satan was created in Jewish belief somewhere around 500 BCE.
Robert Reich is Jewish.
There is no mention of Satan (the 'adversary') in any Old Testament scripture written before the Babylonian Exile. Scholars say Satan entered Jewish belief from the Zoroastrianism, where Angra Mainyu was the wholly malign adversary of Ahura Mazda. Thus, Satan was created in Jewish belief somewhere around 500 BCE.
Yes! Why?! Because Satan tried to take over heaven and Satan is jealous of god because i lot of people worship god and not Satan
Jewish answer: Nothing. Judaism rejects the idea of Satan as an independent agent. That smacks too much of Zoroastrian-style dualism where there is god and an anti-god fighting over creation.
they mined gold they were evil greedy men that constantly killed jewish people. they worshipped satan
In Jewish belief, Satan is the loyal assistant of God, tasked with testing the righteousness of the faithful. In this sense, he could be called a hero.In Christian belief, on the other hand, Satan is the evil opponent of God. In this sense, he could be called an antihero.Why the difference? In Zoroastrianism, Angra Mainyu is the wholly malign adversary of the Persian god, Ahura Mazda. When the concept was adopted in Judaism after the Babylonian Exile, the Jews struggled with the notion of God having an opponent who could defy him. Deciding that this was not possible, the Jews adapted Satan to do God's bidding by challenging the faithful, as we see in the Book of Job. Christianity retained the concept of Satan as evil and adapted him away from the Jewish view of him.
AnswerSatan would be welcome in a Jewish Synagogue, where he would be considered the loyal assistant of God, tasked to test the righteousness of the people. He would not be at all welcome in a Christian church, as Christianity has developed the tradition of Satan as the adversary of God.
It's just Satan still