Hello Thir7ySev3n,
Would this actually mean Satan crafted all other religions in order to lead people away from Jesus? I thought maybe other religions were made by humans who were raised in different beliefs only because of their culture, sort of. What I mean is, surely if we'd been brought up by Jewish or Muslim parents, we might have been mistaken into never embracing the Lord as our Savior. I don't know, can't say really, it feels strange to even think about it, but what if? It's scary to think Satan would have had anything to do with it.
I thought Jesus loved Christians and none Christians alike, because of His infinite love and forgiveness? Is this wrong?
It is highly likely that many religions have been derived and developed in human history from some demonic initiative. It's important to remember that Satan does not possess any qualities exclusively intrinsic to the deity of our LORD, such as, relevantly notable in this case, omnipresence. He is only ever in one place personally at any given time, though his influence through accompanying demonic entities can be widespread. The Scriptures reveal some of the interactions between Satan and God, as well as his original sin and motive of pride that lead him to contend for the position and glory of God (there is some interesting considerations that could be made regarding the relationship between the angels and our LORD prior to the fall that would allow for Satan to delude himself to the possibility of supplanting God, but it would be mostly speculative and not immediately relevant). With this objective, the knowledge he possesses of the Scriptures, and his ability to influence (not the same as possession) the minds of human beings (1 Chronicles 21:1, Mark 8:33), it is to be expected that there will result spiritual deception, sometimes in the form of anti-Christian religions.
I would note that it's not entirely important whether the anti-Christian religious doctrine was derived directly from satanic influence or from some development of an ignorant mind based on a confusion or misinterpretation of God's general revelation of Himself. The real issue is that it is doctrine that is misleading and directs the proponents of those doctrines away from (or, at least, not towards) Christ. Regardless, since these doctrines are false, a lie, they are in some sense still satanic in that Satan is the father of lies (John 8:44). Therefore, the function of other religions from Satan's standpoint is to spread confusion and alienate men from Christ when He is revealed to them, whether those religions are of his initiative or human error. Think of it this way: Hypothetically, even in the instances where an anti-Christian religion could be (if it ever is the case) entirely absent of demonic influence, it could still be manipulated to make a person an enemy of Christ. It could be manipulated in much the same ways that human deceivers manipulate people's emotions or unconsidered positions in politics, or friendships, or any other human relationship; like the person who's insecurities are manipulated to make a person believe a friend has betrayed them, or a spouse's jealousy is used to make them doubt their husband's/wife's fidelity.
To answer your last question, of course Jesus loves all people, regardless of their circumstances or spiritual state. Scripturally, that is overtly obvious (I don't imagine I need to refer to John 3:16, Luke 6:35, and the many others). But you may be wondering how that is possible if He allows certain people to be deceived unto death. This is a question about God's divine providence, and I can provide both a directly Scriptural response, and a theological inference from what is revealed of God in the Scriptures (and general revelation, like what Paul speaks of in Romans 1:19-20).
First, Jesus makes explicitly clear the His ascension from the world in the flesh was to accomplish a nobler task than could be done in His physical presence, namely, the assigning of the Holy Spirit to continue the ministry Jesus began with His disciples and those who were still to believe (John 16:7). The purpose of this ministry, Jesus stated, was to "prove the world to be in the wrong about sin and righteousness and judgment: about sin, because people do not believe in me; about righteousness, because I am going to the Father, where you can see me no longer; and about judgment, because the prince of this world now stands condemned (John 16:8-11)." The culmination of this ministry, then, is to convince the world regarding the truth of the gospel, the Christian faith. Therefore, it is not ultimately ever a problem with a lack of arguments, evidence, or preaching that causes a person to reject Christ til death. Rather, it is a lifelong rejection of the testimony of the Holy Spirit, which is the self-disclosure of God Himself, because such men love darkness rather than the light (John 3:19). So no man or woman ever goes to their grave without culpability of rejecting the witness of the Holy Spirit Himself.
Lastly, we can theologically infer from the Scriptures that God's goal in creating the universe was to actualize the option in the plethora of potentialities before Him that would produce the greatest potential good, this great good being drawing all men freely into a saving knowledge of Himself. We can infer this from what we know about God's qualities, such as His omnibenevolence, omniscience and omnipotence: (**substitute in your mind "greatest potential good" with "greatest quantity of souls freely entering the saving knowledge of God"**)
1. Because God is omnibenevolent, He would desire to create the world that would produce the greatest potential good
2. Because God is omniscient, He would know which world would produce the greatest potential good
3. Because God is omnipotent, He would be able to create the world which would produce the greatest potential good
Therefore, the universe in which we exist is that which would produce the greatest potential good
So all souls that can be saved in some given circumstance, will be saved, and provided the times and conditions necessary to effectuate their salvation. I will conclude with an additionally confirmatory verse regarding this fact: "From one man he made all the nations, that they should inhabit the whole earth; and he marked out their appointed times in history and the boundaries of their lands. God did this so that they would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from any one of us." (Acts 17:26-27)