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Key verses:

“The devil was a murderer from the beginning… there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, for he is a liar and the father of lies.” (John 8:44, NIV)

Jesus said, “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.” (John 14:6, ESV)

Satan has been lying since the beginning of creation, and he has become very good at it. As C.S. Lewis warns in Screwtape Letters, “Readers are advised to remember the devil is a liar.”

If you want evidence of the Devil’s craftiness, consider this: Satan lures us every day with the same two lies (he has zero originality!)—and even though both sentiments have proven time and time again to be fraudulent and harmful, we are still tempted to believe them. 

As if that’s not striking enough, what if I told you that these two lies are entirely contradictory to one another? Yes, within a matter of seconds, Satan often gets us to believe two polar opposite notions. Here’s how it works:

Lie #1: Temptation (Satan downplays sin)

First, Satan—the Tempter—downplays sin. He tempts you with statements like, 

  • Do it (or believe it)! It’s not a big deal!
  • You deserve this!
  • This is what’s best for you!
  • This is what will make you happy!
  • No need to resist—God will forgive you anyway!

Then you sin. 

Immediately—without a moment’s hesitation—Satan reverses his course. You glance over the shoulder from which the Tempter once whispered promises of happiness and God’s awaiting grace, but now he’s gone. Suddenly you hear hissing from the opposite shoulder—words of guilt and shame. The Tempter is now the Accuser.

Lie #2: Accusation (Satan downplays God’s grace)

Next, Satan downplays God’s grace. He tempts you with statements like,

  • You did that?? That’s a huge deal!
  • Fool! How could you think you deserved that? Shame on you!
  • That was the worst thing you could’ve done!
  • You’ll never have joy again!
  • God will never forgive you!

Notice that the claims Satan makes in accusation are often in direct contradiction to those he speaks in temptation. Yet we believe him again. Somehow—just moments after being conned by Satan’s fraud—we are already biting into his next hook.

We are not ignorant of the devil’s schemes (2 Cor. 2:11)

This is Satan’s game plan: He tempts us to do or believe something, then he accuses us when we do. His vile service is a running subscription with no (earthly) expiration date; it may be hidden at times but it’s never dormant. Satan is always sowing seeds of temptation or accusation. Often both.

Of course, Satan doesn’t need us to sin today to bring harm. The Accuser loves to use our past mistakes and sins against us. Satan’s favorite words are, “Look what you’ve done!”—and he’s perfectly content pointing to regrets from years ago. As long as we are looking at what we’ve done—whether from 20 minutes ago or 20 years ago—we aren’t looking at what Christ has done for us. That’s a win in Satan’s book.

In one sense, Satan already has more than enough ammunition to accuse us for a lifetime. Sure, he will never stop tempting us to sin and doubt God’s promises. But as life goes on, Satan often makes accusation his primary method of attack. As Tim Keller put it, “Accusation is the main problem that we [face] from the forces of darkness, [often] even more than temptation.”

Our defense when Satan tempts us to despair

Here’s the good news: While we are often weak and vulnerable to the lies of Satan, we have a strong Defender who fights for us—and his victory is sure. In fact, “The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:‬8; see also Heb. 2:14-15). The same Christ who brings peace to us brings destruction to Satan (Rom. 16:20)—this is central to his mission!

If you want a beautiful picture of Christ defending you in the midst of Satan’s accusations, read Zech. 3. When Satan accuses us (v. 1), Jesus stands by us (v. 5), rebuking and silencing the devil’s accusations (v. 2). Through Christ, Satan is disarmed (Col. 2:13-15), crushed (Gen. 3:15; Rom. 16:20), overcome (1 John 4:4), conquered, thrown down, and defeated (Rev. 12:9-11).

Rejoice, Christian! In the presence of the slain Lamb of God, Satan’s accusations against you have no power (Zech. 3:1-10; Col. 1:22; Rev. 12:9-11). Does Satan charge you of sin? Jesus came to take away sin (1 John 3:5). Does Satan charge you of being a sinner? Jesus came to save sinners (1 Tim. 1:15). Does Satan charge you of being weak? Ungodly? Sinful? Rebellious? These are the exact categories of people Jesus came to deliver (Rom. 5:6-11). Does Satan charge you of weak faith? Weak faith in a strong Savior is saving faith (Mark 9:20-24). Does Satan charge you with wasting your life? Christ will redeem the years the locusts have eaten (Joel 2:25-28) and bend all things for your good (Gen. 50:20; Rom. 8:28). Does Satan call you worthless or unloved? God himself tells you otherwise (Isa. 43:4; Col. 3:12). Does Satan tell you God has left you? He is irrefutably wrong (Heb. 13:5). Does Satan bring any charge against you? He will fail; no one will lift a finger against God’s people or separate them from his love (Rom. 8:31-39). Yes, because of Christ we can confidently sing,

The Prince of Darkness grim,

We tremble not for him;

His rage we can endure,

For lo! His doom is sure.

One little word shall fell him.

At the word of Christ, the Accuser is instantly silenced (2 Thes. 2:8). Through Christ, we are already free from sin’s penalty (Rom. 8:1) and power (Rom. 6:1-14), and one day we will be freed from its very presence (1 John 3:1-3; Col. 1:22; Rev. 22:3). Rejoice in this glorious hope!

The ironic truth behind Satan’s lies

Satan’s accusations contain a glorious twist of irony: they are actually the first verse of every believer’s joyful song of redemption. Fortified by gospel hope, we don’t need to silence Satan’s charges of sinfulness. When Satan accuses us, saying, “You are a sinner!” we can tell him we agree—then remind him of the rest of the gospel refrain! As Martin Luther famously put it,

“When the devil throws your sins in your face and declares that you deserve death and hell, tell him this: ‘I admit that I deserve death and hell, what of it? For I know One who suffered and made satisfaction on my behalf. His name is Jesus Christ, Son of God, and where He is there I shall be also!’”

Victory in the blood of the Lamb

Believer, remember this: We conquer the Accuser not by promising to do more or be better, but by boldly claiming the blood of the Lamb (Heb. 4:14-16; Rev. 12:11). To quote another precious hymn, “When Satan tempts me to despair and tells me of the guilt within, upward I look and see Him there, who made an end to all my sin.”

As long as we are looking at Jesus—the Truth himself—Satan’s lies have no power. Let’s rejoice afresh today in Christ’s victory!

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Thanks for stopping by the blog! If you find this resource helpful, consider joining hundreds of readers who subscribe to receive free resources to your inbox (usually 1-3 per month). You can find more of my work at The Gospel Coalition.

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Read “How to Find Freedom From Shame” here.

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Blake Glosson is a pastoral resident at Chapelstreet Church in Geneva, Illinois, and an MDiv student at Reformed Theological Seminary. He has been published by The Gospel CoalitionLife Bible, and Crosswalk.com and republished and/or referred by Eternal Perspective Ministries (Randy Alcorn)Challies.com (Tim Challies)DashHouse (Darryl Dash), Moody Radio (herehere, and here), The JOY FM (The Morning Cruise with Dave, Bill, and Carmen)ChurchLeaders.comMonergism.com, The Aquila Report (here and here), and numerous other sources. Previously, he served as the director of young adults at New Covenant Bible Church in St. Charles, Illinois.

Read “3 Lies To Combat in Suffering and Anxiety” here.

Read “Five Habits That Kill Contentment” here.

Read “Four Burdens Jesus Never Asked You to Carry” here.

Read “In Suffering, God is Not (Simply) Teaching You a Lesson” here.

Read “An Answer to Prayer Even Better Than Clarity” here.

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Satan’s accusations are the first verse of every believer’s song of redemption!

Consider parts of two church favorites, All I Have Is Christ and His Mercy Is More:

Key:

[RED: Satan and Saints sing together]

[BLUE: Saints sing alone]

All I Have Is Christ

I once was lost in darkest night

Yet thought I knew the way

The sin that promised joy and life

Had led me to the grave

I had no hope that You would own

A rebel to Your will

And if You had not loved me first

I would refuse You still

But as I ran my hell-bound race

Indifferent to the cost

You looked upon my helpless state

And led me to the cross

And I beheld God’s love displayed

You suffered in my place

You bore the wrath reserved for me

Now all I know is grace

His Mercy is More

What riches of kindness

He lavished on us

His blood was the payment

His life was the cost

We stood ‘neath a debt

We could never afford

Our sins they are many

His mercy is more

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Recommended resources:

Recommended songs:

6 responses to “Satan’s Two Favorite Lies (and Christ’s Victory)”

  1. This helps me considerably! Thank you

    1. Praise God – thanks for the comment, Jason!

  2. I teach a Bible study at our local jail once a week. Currently an inmate (woman) believes being alone is her lot in life and God hates her. She loves God but God hates her. Tough gal to reach and very argumentative. I will take this Two Lies bible study to her today. Wish you lived closer. Pray hard. If any other scripture you could lead me too I would appreciate it.

    1. Praying now, Patty. That’s wonderful you teach a Bible study at the local jail. I am glad the post is useful, and I pray the Lord blesses you, your teaching, and the inmate to whom you’re ministering.

      Here’s a quote from Tim Keller I’ve found useful in caring for those who feel like God has abandoned them:

      “If Jesus wouldn’t abandon you on the cross, he won’t abandon you now. If he wouldn’t abandon you when Hell itself was coming down on him—if that didn’t separate his love from you—do you think you having a bad week is going to do it? Or when bad things happen and you say, ‘I must be abandoned!’ Remember: If he didn’t abandon you then, he isn’t going to abandon you now. He spared nothing—not even his life—for you. He put the weight of the world on his shoulders for you. And you think somehow he is going to let your life go off the rails now? He’s not going to leave you or deny you anything you need. This is the love you’ve been looking for all your life.” (slightly edited for print)

      Also, Charles Spurgeon:

      “Jesus Christ was up on the cross, nailing, bleeding, dying, looking down on the people betraying him, and forsaking him, and denying him—and in the greatest act of love in the history of the universe—[with all authority to leave]—he stayed.”

      If Jesus stayed on the cross for you, he’s going to stay with you in this trial. If he stayed with you (and for you) in his deepest darkness, he’s going to stay with you in your deepest darkness.

      Hope some of this is useful. May the Lord go with you and bless you, Patty.

  3. Thank you for talking about the role of the Accuser!

  4. This very subject came to mind today as I was meditating on Revelation 20:1-3. The idea occurred to me that perhaps Satan “must be let out for a little while” because God uses him at our judgement as a prosecutor! I am no theologian, but I imagined that I was at trial and God allowed satan to throw all his accusations at me and I could have nothing to excuse myself. (This is very same thing which I first realized at the moment of my conversion, repentance, and coming to God.) All I could say would be something similar to what Martin Luther said in the quote you provided. Thank you so much for giving it so I could hear it for the first time, and for this whole article. God bless you.

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