The following extract is from my book Such a Mind as This (xviii-xix)
This story [referring to the previous blog] is obviously a fantasy, but it resembles the devil’s intellectual profile provided in the Scriptures. Satan is an incisive thinker and supremely intelligent. He carefully plans and ponders his every move, like a champion chess player. He thinks strategically, both short- and long-term. He considers every contingency and countermove. He is a master teacher, grooming his demonic horde with a fiendish mindset so that they learn his ways and mimic his priorities. Together they execute his plan for the world under his guidance.
In addition, the devilish agenda the story imagines is in accord with the warnings of Scripture. Tactically, a long-term plan that renders believers stupid and irrelevant is brilliant, from the devil’s point of view. He realigns our thinking with folly and wickedness. He spouts data that misinform and manipulate. He fills our minds with trivia and distraction. He wants us to ignore, misunderstand, and
misapply God’s revelation, on both the individual and social levels. He skews our sense of identity as God’s image. He associates our epistemological stewardship with dystopian ends.
Satan’s program uses every conceptual machination available against humanity, including syncretism, disorientation, and disinformation. It undermines the intellectual plausibility and existential credibility of biblical faith. It deconstructs the Scriptures. It redefines spirituality to minimize the mind and promotes secularism to delegitimize religion. Intellectual disloyalty, anti-intellectualism, and rank ignorance are its weapons of choice. But above all, the demonic realm strives to still God’s voice so that people will not and cannot hear.
In the Old Testament, the devil seemingly plays a relatively small role. (We need the New Testament to fill out his true epistemic profile.) His presence is often implicit. He shows up, however, at pivotal epistemological moments. In Genesis 3, he queried Eve seditiously, “Did God actually say?” In Job 1, he insinuated with incredulity, “Does Job fear God for no reason?” In Daniel 10, he hindered the acquisition of knowledge concerning the meaning of prophecy.
The post-edenic, epistemological milieu is very complicated and enigmatic thanks to the influence of sin and Satan. The mental universe is populated by many voices, good and malevolent. There are competing pedagogues, divergent epistemological agendas, and flawed participants. The whole Old Testament is a battlefield between the human mind and God’s revelation. And lurking in the chronological and epistemological background is the diabolical dissembler who questions the veracity of God’s word. The devil plays a role in how and what we think. Without question, Christians require discernment and wisdom to navigate the “present evil age” (Gal 1:4; see also Eph 2:1–3).



