February 2006

QUESTION: Can the devil read our minds? Does he know what we are thinking?

ANSWER: No, the devil doesn’t know what we are thinking. The Bible tells us that God knows our thoughts (Psalm 139:23; Isa. 66:18; Matt. 9:4; 12:25), but it never attributes this kind of knowledge to the devil. In fact, the legendary preacher and Bible teacher A. W. Tozer used to say that he would sometimes talk out loud to the devil, reminding him that our sins have been forgiven upon the basis of the merits of the Lord Jesus the Messiah. This is precisely why it is necessary to communicate with the devil and his minions verbally—because they cannot read our minds.

The Bible says that the shalom of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard (KJV, “keep”) our hearts and minds through Jesus the Messiah (Phil. 4:7). Is it possible that the devil has access to something that is kept and guarded by God himself? I do not think so.

Perhaps the confusion on this question arises from the fact that the devil has the ability to submit thoughts to us for our consideration (see the comments about “fiery darts,” or flaming arrows, in Ephesians 6:16). However, we have the ability and the authority (through the shed blood of the Lord Jesus) either to accept or to reject those thoughts. (In the imagery of the Ephesians passage, we protect ourselves from those flaming arrows with the shield of faith.) The very fact that these kinds of satanic attacks (e.g., temptations, evil and confusing thoughts) are described as originating externally, and as assailing our minds like flaming arrows, clearly indicates that the devil does not have access to our minds internally.

Don’t give the devil more credit than he deserves. He is not omnipresent or omnipotent like God. His powers are limited. He is a finite, created being and can only be in one place at any given point in time. Very few of us will ever receive a personal visit from the devil. Most of our temptations and spiritual battles arise from our own sinful nature rather than from direct encounters with the devil or with demons ( James 1:12-14).





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HANUKKAH


DEC 22, 2008

Hanukkah is not mentioned in the Tanakh; however, it is alluded to in the apocrypha books of 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees. In the Second Century BCE, Judah Maccabees and his brothers led a revolt against Antiochus IV Epiphanes, who had desecrated the Temple, murdered Jewish citizens, and outlawed the Jewish religion. In 165 BCE, Judah successfully reclaimed the Temple and rededicated it. The 8-day festival of Hanukkah was instituted to celebrate that rededication. The Gospel of John references the festival in Chapter 10, verse 22: “Now it was the Feast of Dedication in Jerusalem, and it was winter.”





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