Hello Salomon,
Alas, the issue has already been disputed as for the serpent is or not Satan. I didn't like the idea to mix a beast up with Satan, but I had to concede it when reading Revelation 12, which I find unambiguous
God bless
I believe that it was CrystalDragon here who insists that the serpent is not Satan. And, from the perspective of the original, literal meaning of the text, the serpent is not Satan, not demonic, and is deceptive only in his cunning openness. The plain text describes him first and foremost as the wisest of the beast.
I am certainly not a proponent of an Islamic conception of God as someone who can blot out today what was proclaimed as truth yesterday. I believe that CrystalDragon is quite correct in insisting on remaining true to the original framework of the text. To state unequivocally that the serpent is Satan ignores that original framework, and blots out today what had been revealed truth yesterday.
Yet one cannot ignore that the Bible itself has recorded a much more complex vision of the original text over the years. The New Testament especially, and Jesus specifically, has greatly expanded upon the character of Satan from what it had been in Old Testament scripts. Indeed Revelation does see the serpent as a demonic figure, and with Jesus, Satan is not just seen as a hyper-critical member of God's inner circle, but an evil overlord cast out of heaven.
With the Satan as seen by Jesus, we begin to see spiritual evil existing in its own right, and yes, that spiritual evil does connect directly to the story of Adam and Eve. The spirit of Satan in the NT is the spirit of rebellion, and it is that spirit of rebellion that the serpent foments in Adam and Eve, and in effect puts the two in awe of his own wisdom, rather than the wisdom of the Creator.
While God certainly ought not be seen as blotting out the truths of yesterday with the revelations of today, neither is it true that the truths of yesterday can blot out what is revealed as true later on in the Bible. Truth is multi-faceted, but more than this, Biblical truths are dynamic and engender real spiritual growth. The bible changes us over our lifetime and over the centuries. It is precisely that spiritual growth that brings us beyond the original meanings of the text to discover new meanings that were never imagined by the original authors.
Whether that original author be Moses, or JEPD, the inspiration of the Bible comes directly from the Holy Spirit, and the miracle of the Bible is that its meanings go beyond what any single author could have possibly envisioned.