Then I heard a loud voice in heaven say: “Now have come the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God, and the authority of his Christ. For the accuser of our brothers, who accuses them before our God day and night, has been hurled down. They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony” (Rev. 12:10-11).
The apostle John penned this descriptor of Satan in the book of Revelation. He is often called the devil in the New Testament. The word translated from the Greek as “devil” is “diabolou.” It actually means a false accuser or slanderer. It is the nature of Satan to slander and accuse. We discover from John’s words in Revelation that he accuses the people of God day and night. He does so in the presence God.
In the Garden of Eden, Satan, in the form of a serpent, actually slandered God and drew Adam and Eve into agreement with his accusations. In the first chapter of Job, you will find him in the presence of God slandering and accusing Job. In Zechariah 3:1-5, we find a scene where Satan is before the Lord accusing Joshua, the high priest. In Luke 22:31. Jesus said to Peter, “Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift all of you s wheat, but I have prayed for you…” I think we can assume that Satan had come into the presence of God to accuse the apostles and maybe, specifically, Peter.
In the courts of God, Satan is persistently trying to gain legal access to afflict or torment believers by bringing accusations against them. Remember, his complaint in Job was that God had protected Job against the assaults of Satan, and the devil was seeking permission to afflict the man. In one sense, that is a different topic than I want to discuss today, but it reveals the nature and strategy of Satan against God’s people.
What I want to emphasize today, is that Satan uses the same strategy against each of us. If he cannot keep us out of the kingdom, then he strives to keep us ineffective in the kingdom. His goal, is to make us feel defective, inadequate, and disapproved of. His goal is to discourage us and make us feel disqualified for the blessings of God. He constantly reminds us of past failures and whispers that whatever we have done for the Lord was not good enough. He fills us with doubt about pleasing God. He pushes us to a legalism that demands we do enough to be saved, be sincere enough to be saved, have enough faith to be saved, and, of course, assures us that we have failed in every department.
In my experience, the flesh gravitates towards legalism which is the idea that we are saved by works and our own righteousness. I know that is true because every religion conceived by man, bases salvation on works and self-righteousness. Only the Holy Spirit reveals a salvation by grace through faith. Paul put is this way. “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Eph. 2:8-10).
We are created in Christ to do good works, but we are not saved by those good works. We are not even capable of them until we are saved. Good works are our response to God’s grace rather than the cost of admission into heaven. They are evidence of salvation, but not the means of salvation. They affect our rewards in heaven, but not our presence there. That is the work of Christ and Christ alone, whose righteousness is imputed to us when we believe in God’s goodness towards us.
I find that the concept of grace can be slippery and Satan, through his accusations, often draws us into a sense of failure and condemnation by pointing out past failures and present inadequacies. But the blood of “Christ has a erased our failures in the past and makes up for our inadequacies in the present. We need to be convinced of that when Satan comes accusing.
If you struggle with the concept of grace, let me encourage you to find all the passages you can that underline the truth of God’s grace made available to us through the blood of Christ and spend days meditating on those passages. When Satan reminds us of out past and current failures, the answer is that the accusation may be true, but his premise is false. His premise is that our salvation and God’s love for us is based on our performance. That is a false premise. Both are wholly wholly based on the perfect performance of Jesus and the goodness of God. Maybe the accusations of our shortcomings are true, but it doesn’t matter. That is the good news of Jesus Christ. An understanding of grace is the body armor that protects us from the attacks of the enemy. Saving faith is simply the faith that is convinced of God’s grace through the cross.
If the accuser of the brethren is wearing you out, get hold of grace. Meditate on passages about grace. Ask the Holy Spirit to give you a revelation of grace. Read books on grace. (What’s So Amazing About Grace? by Phillip Yancey is a good one.) Hang out with people who have a handle on grace. And don’t stop until you get it.. When you get it, the accuser will be disarmed.