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Wow, how did you and jhwatts post the same thread title at the same time?
Jesus says, "I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven," in Luke 10:18. So, he fell before Jesus said this to His disciples.When did Satan fall?
Depends on what you mean by "fall."
Jesus says, "I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven," in Luke 10:18. So, he fell before Jesus said this to His disciples..
Lucifer fell in the Earth and heavens cycle in the age before.
Ezekiel 28:13-19 talks about how and why he fell.
GOD destroyed Earth with water also in the pre-adamaic (2 Peter 3:5-6) period. So He flooded the Earth before Noah's flood as well.
This age GOD will destroy Earth and heavens with fire! (2 Peter 3:7)
It is actually 3 earth and heaven cycles.
1. the world before (Lucifer)
2. the world today (us now)
3. the world to come (New Jerusalem etc)
Isaiah 14:12-17 also tells more about Lucifer's thought process and how he wanted to be like the Most High.
Neither Ezekiel or Isaiah mention the devil.
Ezekiel is talking about the ruler of Tyre on the Phoenician coast, and Isaiah is talking about the ruler of Babylon. Both human beings.
"Lucifer" is not the name of any supernatural creature, it is the Latin translation of the epithet used by Isaiah in reference to the king of Babylon, which in Hebrew is הֵילֵל (heylel) which means "bright" or "shining" and refers to the planet Venus, in the Greek of the LXX it is translated as ἑωσφόρος (heosphoros) which means "dawn-bringer", and in Latin lucifer meaning "light-bringer". It's not a proper name, it is an epithet used sardonically.
-CryptoLutheran
Neither Ezekiel or Isaiah mention the devil.
Ezekiel is talking about the ruler of Tyre on the Phoenician coast, and Isaiah is talking about the ruler of Babylon. Both human beings.
"Lucifer" is not the name of any supernatural creature, it is the Latin translation of the epithet used by Isaiah in reference to the king of Babylon, which in Hebrew is הֵילֵל (heylel) which means "bright" or "shining" and refers to the planet Venus, in the Greek of the LXX it is translated as ἑωσφόρος (heosphoros) which means "dawn-bringer", and in Latin lucifer meaning "light-bringer". It's not a proper name, it is an epithet used sardonically.
-CryptoLutheran