Digression 12:
Lucifer
Is. 14:12-14: “How you are fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the
morning! How you are cut down to the ground, you who weakened the nations!
For you have said in your heart: ‘I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my
throne above the stars of God; I will also sit on the mount of the
congregation on the farthest sides of the north; I will ascend above the
heights of the clouds, I will be like the Most High’”.
Popular Interpretation
It is assumed that Lucifer was once a powerful angel who
sinned at the time of Adam and was therefore cast down to earth, where he is
making trouble for God’s people.
Comments
- The words “devil”,
“satan” and “angel” never occur in this chapter. This is the only place in
Scripture where the word “Lucifer” occurs.
- There is no evidence that
Is. 14 is describing anything that happened in the garden of Eden; if it is,
then why are we left 3,000 years from the time of Genesis before being told
what really happened there?
- Lucifer is described as being covered in
worms (v. 11) and mocked by men (v. 16) because he no longer has any power
after his casting out of heaven (vs. 5-8,12); so there is no justification
for thinking that Lucifer is now on earth leading believers astray.
- Why is Lucifer punished for saying, “I will ascend into heaven” (v. 13), if
he was already there?
- Lucifer is to rot in the grave: “Your pomp is
brought down to Sheol (the grave),...and the worms cover you” (v. 11).
Seeing angels cannot die (Lk. 20:35-36), Lucifer therefore cannot be an
angel; the language is more suited to a man.
- Verses 13 and 14 have
connections with 2 Thes. 2:3-4, which is about the “man of sin” - thus
Lucifer points forward to another man - not an angel.
Suggested Explanations:
- The N.I.V. and other modern versions have set out the
text of Isaiah chapters 13-23 as a series of “burdens” on various nations,
e.g. Babylon, Tyre, Egypt. Is. 14:4 sets the context of the verses we are
considering: “you will take up this proverb (parable) against the king of
Babylon...”. The prophecy is therefore about the human king of Babylon, who
is described as “Lucifer”. On his fall: “those who see you will...consider
you, saying: ‘Is this the man who made the earth tremble...?’” (v. 16). Thus
Lucifer is clearly defined as a man.
- Because Lucifer was a human king,
“All the kings of the nations... shall speak and say to you: ‘Have you also
become weak as we? Have you become like us?” (vs. 9-10). Lucifer was
therefore a king like any other king.
- Verse 21 says that Lucifer’s
“children” will be destroyed. Verse 22 says that Babylon’s “posterity” will
be destroyed, thus equating them. ‘Lucifer’ desired to rise up to heaven,
and so did Babylon (Jer. 51:53); “her judgment [i.e. her sin that warrants
her judgment] reaches to heaven” (Jer. 51:9).
- Remember that this is a
“proverb (parable) against the king of Babylon” (v. 4). “Lucifer” means “the
morning star”, which is the brightest of the stars; it is in fact the planet
Venus. In the parable, this star proudly decides to “ascend (higher) into
heaven...exalt my throne above the (other) stars of God” (v. 13). Because of
this, the star is cast down to the earth. The star represents the king of
Babylon. Daniel chapter 4 explains how Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon
proudly surveyed the great kingdom he had built up, thinking that he had
conquered other nations in his own strength, rather than recognizing that
God had given him success. “your greatness (pride) has grown and reaches to
the heavens” (v. 22). Because of this “he was driven from men and ate grass
like oxen; his body was wet with the dew of heaven till his hair had grown
like eagles’ feathers and his nails like birds’ claws” (v. 33). This sudden
humbling of one of the world’s most powerful men to a deranged lunatic was
such a dramatic event as to call for the parable about the falling of the
morning star from heaven to earth. Stars are often symbolic of powerful
people, e.g. Gen. 37:9; Is. 13:10 (concerning the leaders of Babylon); Ez.
32:7 (concerning the leader of Egypt); Dan. 8:10 cp. v.24. Ascending to
heaven and falling from heaven are Biblical idioms often used for increasing
in pride and being humbled respectively - see Job 20:6; Jer. 51:53 (about
Babylon); Lam. 2:1; Mt. 11:23 (about Capernaum): “...you, Capernaum, who are
exalted to heaven, will be brought down to Hades” (the grave).
- Verse
17 accuses Lucifer of making the “world as a wilderness, (destroying) its
cities... (not opening) the house of his prisoners... (filling) the face of
the world with cities” (vs.21), “the exactress of gold” (vs.4 A.V. margin).
These are all descriptions of Babylonian military policy - razing whole
areas to the ground (as they did to Jerusalem), transporting captives to
other areas and not letting them return to their homeland (as they did to
the Jews), building new cities and taking tribute of gold from nations they
oppressed. Thus there is emphasis on the fact that Lucifer was not even
going to get the burial these other kings had had (vs. 18-19), implying that
he was only a human king like them, seeing his body needed burying.
- Verse 12 says that Lucifer was to be “cut down to the ground” - implying he
was a tree. This provides a further link with Dan. 4:8-16, where
Nebuchadnezzar and Babylon are likened to a tree being cut down.
- Babylon and Assyria are often interchangeable phrases in the prophets; thus,
having spoken of the demise of the king of Babylon, v 25 says, “I will break
the Assyrian...”. The prophecies about Babylon in Is. 47 are repeated
concerning Assyria in Nah. 3:3-5,18 and Zeph. 2:13,15; and 2 Chron. 33:11
says that the king of Assyria took Manasseh captive to Babylon - showing the
interchangeability of the terms. Am. 5:27 says that Israel were to go into
captivity “beyond Damascus”, i.e. in Assyria, but Stephen quotes this as
“beyond Babylon” (Acts 7:43). Ezra 6:1 describes Darius the king of Babylon
making a decree concerning the rebuilding of the temple. The Jews praised
God for turning “the heart of the king of Assyria” (Ezra 6:22), again
showing that they are interchangeable terms. The prophecy of Isaiah ch. 14,
along with many others in Isaiah, fits in well to the context of the
Assyrian invasion by Sennacherib in Hezekiah’s time, hence v. 25 describes
the breaking of the Assyrian. Verse 13 is easier to understand if it is
talking about the blasphemous Assyrians besieging Jerusalem, wanting to
enter Jerusalem and capture the temple for their gods. Earlier the Assyrian
king, Tiglath-Pileser, had probably wanted to do the same (2 Chron.
28:20,21); Is. 14:13: “For you have said in your heart: ‘I will ascend into
heaven... (symbolic of the temple and ark - 1 Kings 8:30; 2 Chron. 30:27;
Ps. 20: 2,6; 11:4; Heb. 7:26). I will also sit on the mount of the
congregation (mount Zion where the temple was) on the farthest sides of the
north” (Jerusalem - Ps. 48:1,2).
- It is therefore necessary to
understand “I will ascend to heaven” as hyperbole, as in 1 Sam. 5:12; 2
Chron. 28:9; Ezra 9:6; Ps. 107:26.
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