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Personal or Impersonal? An Analysis of Karl Barth and Merrill Ungers Perspectives on the Personhood of the Demonic

by Scott Douglas MacDonald

Supervisor: Dr. Gerrit Brand

Faculty of Theology

March 2013

Stellenbosch University http://scholar.sun.ac.za

Declaration

By submitting this thesis electronically, I declare that the entirety of the work contained

therein is my own, original work, that I am the sole author thereof (save to the extent explicitly

otherwise stated), that reproduction and publication thereof by Stellenbosch University will not

infringe any third party rights and that I have not previously in its entirety or in part submitted it

for obtaining any qualification.

March 2013

Copyright © 2013 Stellenbosch University

All rights reserved

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Abstract

Is the demonic personal or impersonal? The question is rarely treated in depth. This

thesis initially delves into the demonological offerings of a pair of twentieth century theologians,

Karl Barth and Merrill Unger, in order to discern their particular positions upon the subject.

Personhood itself is a divisive issue between the two theologians. Barths perspective on

personhood is not intrinsically linked to the physical nature. Persons are who they are because of

their relationship with the divine. In reference to the demonic, Unger briefly assesses

personhood by inseparably correlating it with ontological reality. Their disagreement continues

into the definition of “demon.” Barth prefers to see the demonic as uncreated yet derived from

God as a byproduct of His creative decree, and Unger opts for a famous classical construction

that they are created beings who rebelled against their Maker.

Yet, Barth and Unger are both found to not only adhere to personal language concerning

the demonic but also to posit demons as personal beings. According to Barth and Unger, demons

are real, personal, and malevolent. This unusual unity, even with their distinct theological

backgrounds, can only be properly understood as the result of their mutual profession to reflect

the biblical material.

Considering the dated nature of Barth and Ungers writings, recent biblical scholarship is

examined in order to determine whether or not their attestation of a demonic personhood is borne

out by current studies. While a few exceptions are noted, the majority of scholars indicate that

the biblical material portrays personal intermediary players besides God and humanity, with the

category of “demon” becoming progressively prevalent as one chronologically journeys through

the divine revelation. Spurning a Bultmann-inspired demythologization, Barth and Unger simply

attempt to reflect the biblical material.

But how does Barth and Ungers idea of demonic personhood hold up in light of the

multicultural context? As the globe hurriedly shrinks during our technologically connected age,

the boundaries between cultures have fallen, resulting in numerous contexts which contain two

or more cultures sharing the same space. How can Christianity navigate such turbulent times,

except by emphasizing the centrality of the Gods Word! It coheres Gods people, while

convicting and transforming every contacted culture. In the multicultural context, specifically

through the Western and African worldviews, Barth and Ungers personhood of the demonic

speaks admonition and affirmation to the Christian masses. Unhealthy superstition is challenged,

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and dismissive skepticism is chastised. Caution is upheld, and the openness of the African

worldview is vindicated. Thus, in light of the multicultural context, a biblical personhood of the

demonic realm is plausible, and as a revelation-centric position, it surpasses current ethnocentric

expressions of the topic.

As we turned toward constructing some conclusions, Barth and Ungers strengths and

weaknesses were assessed. Karl Barth claims that conveying the biblical testimony is his first

concern, but on the subject of the demonic, he entertains a confusing philosophy which

unpredictably maintains personhood. Merrill Unger paints with broad brush strokes, failing to

discuss or respond to the progressive way in which the demonic is unveiled throughout the

biblical text. One of the strengths of Barths demonological presentation, which includes

demonic personhood, is that he highlights the activity of the demonic before the ontology of the

demonic. Though interacting with scholars and theologians, Ungers clear emphasis and strength

is on recapitulating the biblical text, linking nearly every point to numerous texts.

Finally, if we accept the reality of a personal demonic, our response to the demonic

should reflect it. Theologically, it should spur us onward toward a truly personal view of

redemption. Practically, it means that we should critically analyze and carefully consider the

constructive works of counselors, pastors, and deliverance practitioners that we may cautiously

adapt our ecclesiological practices to reflect biblical realities.

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Opsomming

Is die demoniese persoonlik of onpersoonlik? Die vraag word selde in diepte behandel.

Hierdie tesis beskou aanvanklik die demonologiese aanbiedinge van twee twintigste-eeuse

teoloë, Karl Barth en Merril Unger, om hulle spesifieke standpunte oor die onderwerp te

onderskei.

Persoonskap self is 'n verdelende kwessie tussen die twee teoloë. Barth se perspektief op

persoonskap is nie intrinsiek aan hulle fisiese aard gekoppel nie. Persone is wie hulle is weens

hul verhouding met die goddelike. Met verwysing na die demoniese evalueer Unger

kortliks persoonskap deur dit onlosmaaklik met die ontologiese werklikheid te korreleer. Hul

meningsverskil strek tot in hul definisie van die "demoon". Barth verkies om die demoniese as

ongeskape, tog afgelei van God as 'n byproduk van Sy skeppingsverordening te sien, en Unger

verkies 'n bekende klassieke voorstel dat hulle geskape wesens is wat in opstand gekom het teen

hulle Maker.

Tog word daar gevind dat Barth en Unger beide nie persoonlike taal betreffende die

demoniese aanhang nie, maar demone ook as persoonlike wesens poneer. Volgens Barth en

Unger is demone werklik, persoonlik en kwaadwillig. Hierdie ongewone eensgesindheid, selfs

met hul verskillende teologiese agtergronde, kan slegs behoorlik verstaan word as die gevolg van

hul gedeelde aanspraak dat hulle die Bybelse stof weerspieël.

Die verouderde aard van Barth en Unger se geskrifte in ag geneem, word onlangse

Bybelwetenskap ondersoek om te bepaal of hulle bevestiging van 'n demoniese persoonskap deur

huidige studies beaam word. Hoewel 'n paar uitsonderings waargeneem word, dui die

meerderheid geleerdes daarop dat die Bybelse stof persoonlike tussengangers buiten God en die

mensdom uitbeeld, met die kategorie van die "demoon" wat toenemend voorkom soos wat 'n

mens chronologies deur die goddelike openbaring reis. In veragting van 'n Bultmann

geïnspireerde ontmitologisering probeer Barth en Unger eenvoudig die Bybelse stof weerspieël.

Maar hoe hou Barth en Unger se idee van demoniese persoonskap stand in die lig van die

multikulturele konteks? Soos die wêreld haastig krimp tydens ons tegnologies-verbinde tydperk,

het die grense tussen kulture verval, wat gelei het tot verskeie kontekste waarin twee of meer

kulture dieselfde ruimte deel. Hoe kan die Christendom sulke onstuimige tye navigeer, behalwe

deur die sentraliteit van Gods Woord te benadruk! Dit verenig God se volk, onderwyl dit elke

kultuur waarmee ons in verbinding tree oortuig en transformeer. In die multikulturele konteks,

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veral deur die Westerse en Afrika se wêreldbeelde, spreek Barth en Unger se persoonlikheid van

die demoniese van vermaning en bekragtiging aan die Christenmassas. Ongesonde bygeloof

word uitgedaag, en afwysende skeptisisme word gekasty. Omsigtigheid word gehandhaaf, en die

oopheid van Afrika se wêreldbeskouing word geregverdig. Dus, in die lig van die multikulturele

konteks, is 'n Bybelse persoonskap van 'n persoonlike demoniese realm geloofwaardig, en as

openbaringsgesentreerde standpunt oortref dit huidige etnosentriese uitdrukkings van die

onderwerp.

Soos wat ons 'n paar gevolgtrekkings begin maak het, is Barth en Unger se sterk- en

swakpunte geassesseer. Karl Barth beweer dat die oordra van die Bybelse getuienis sy eerste

belang is, maar betreffende die onderwerp van die demoniese koester hy 'n verwarrende filosofie

wat onvoorspelbaar persoonskap handhaaf. Merrill Unger verf met breë kwashale, en versuim

om die progressiewe wyse waarop die demoniese dwarsdeur die Bybelse teks ontsluier word te

bespreek of daarop te reageer. Een van die sterk punte van Barth se demonologiese voorstelling,

wat demoniese persoonskap insluit, is dat hy die aktiwiteit van die demoniese bó die ontologie

beklemtoon. Hoewel hy in gesprek is met geleerdes en teoloë, lê Unger se duidelike klem en

krag in sy samevatting van die Bybelse teks, met die koppeling van byna elke punt aan talle

tekste.

Laastens, as ons die werklikheid van 'n persoonlike demoniese aanvaar, moet ons reaksie

daarop dit weerspieël. Teologies moet dit ons aanspoor om verder in die rigting van 'n waarlik

persoonlike siening van verlossing. Prakties beteken dit dat ons die konstruktiewe werke van

verlossingspraktisyns, pastore, en raadgewers krities moet ontleed en versigtig moet oorweeg

sodat ons versigtig ons ekklesiologiese praktyke kan aanpas om Bybelse werklikhede te

weerspieël.

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Acknowledgements

I would first like to recognize my parents, for their ceaseless desire to raise up biblically

grounded children, who would employ a bold mouth to proclaim the Word of God in a world

blinded by the deceiver, who would wield a sharp mind to defend biblical wisdom in an age

captivated by skepticism and pluralism, and who would nurture a noble heart to display the

gracious compassion of Christ in our global context. My prayer is that by the empowering

presence of the Spirit I would live up to but a fraction of their hopes.

I thank God for those, especially Dr. Bryan Litfin, who have continued to spur me

onward in theological pursuits, for the strength of the church and the glory of Christ.

I thank God for those, especially Dr. Gerrit Brand, who have faithfully supported and

graciously guided me as I have constructed this thesis.

I thank God for His church, specifically South Loop Community Church in Chicago and

St. Pauls Evangelical Anglican Church in Stellenbosch, which continues to enrich me with

fellowship, leadership, sacraments, prayer, and sound doctrine. My prayer is that I have served

you while you have served me.

Finally, I must thank the Lord Himself, who saw fit to dispense His immeasurable riches

of grace and love upon me, even when I was His enemy. My Stronghold, my Conqueror, He has

proven more than capable in every storm and battle. soli Deo gloria

Scott MacDonald

“…in this place ought those men to be refuted who babble of devils as nothing else than evil

emotion or perturbations which come upon us from our flesh... But it was worth-while to touch

upon this point, also, lest any persons, entangled in that error, while thinking themselves without

an enemy, become more slack and heedless about resisting.”

John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 1, XIV, 19.

“Submit therefore to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you.”

James 4:7 (NASB)

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Table of Contents

1. Demonic Personhood in the Theologies of Karl Barth and Merrill Unger

1.1 Introduction 1 1.2 Personal Background 3 1.3 Research Methodology 4 1.4 Hermeneutical Principles 5 1.5 Terminology 10 1.5.1 “Personhood” 10 1.5.2 “Demon” 13 1.6 Karl Barths Perspective on the Personhood of the Demonic in Church Dogmatics 16 1.6.1 Personhood in Barths Demonology 17 1.7 Merrill Ungers Perspective on the Personhood of the Demonic in Biblical 20

Demonology

1.7.1 Personhood in Ungers Demonology 21 1.8 Similarities and Distinctions 24 1.9 Conclusion 26

2. An Evaluation of Barth and Ungers Perspectives on the Personhood of the Demonic in Light of Contemporary Influential Biblical Studies on Demonology

2.1 Introduction 27 2.2 The Scope of Interaction 27 2.3 Central Biblical Texts in Barths Personhood of the Demonic 28 2.4 Central Biblical Texts in Ungers Personhood of the Demonic 29 2.5 Contemporary Influential Biblical Scholarship and the Personhood of the Demonic 30 2.5.1 The Development of Demonic Personhood 31 2.5.2 Old Testament Thought and Demonic Personhood 32 2.5.3 New Testament Thought and Demonic Personhood 36 2.5.4 Central Texts in Barth and Ungers Perspective on Demonic Personhood in 41

light of Modern Influential Biblical Commentaries

2.6 The Demythological Theme in Contemporary Influential Biblical Scholarship in

Relation to Barth and Ungers Perspectives on the Personhood of the Demonic

44

2.7 Conclusion 47

3. A Critical Analysis of Barth and Ungers Perspective on the Personhood of the Demonic from a Multicultural Perspective

3.1 Introduction 49 3.2 A Definition of Culture 50 3.3 Multiculturalism and a Multicultural Hermeneutic 55 3.4 Reflections on Barth in the Context of Theology and Culture 60 3.5 Reflections on Unger in the Context of Theology and Culture 63

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3.6 Multiculturalism and the Personhood of the Demonic 65 3.7 Conclusion 74

4. The Strengths and Weaknesses of Barth and Ungers Positions toward a Defensible Account of the Personal Nature of the Demonic

4.1 Introduction 76 4.2 Karl Barths Strengths with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic 76 4.3 Karl Barths Weaknesses with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic 78 4.4 Merrill Ungers Strengths with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic 79 4.5 Merrill Ungers Weaknesses with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic 82 4.6 Conclusion 84

5. Conclusion and Suggestions for Further Study

5.1 Introduction 85 5.2 Theological Consequences of a Personhood of the Demonic 86 5.3 Practical Consequences of a Personhood of the Demonic 88 5.4 Suggestions for Further Study 91 5.5 Conclusion 92

Bibliography 93

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1. Demonic Personhood in the Theologies of Karl Barth and Merrill Unger

1.1 Introduction

Why demonology? Why study something that dredges the darkness and exposes its filth?

While the topic lay fallow for centuries in the universities, it has been resurrected since the

middle of the twentieth century. Seized by academics, pastors, and ordinary church-goers,

demonological studies have shaken off the supposedly enlightened taboos of the past and

returned to the theological discourse of our time. Even with notable theologians like Walter

Wink and Daniel Migliore spearheading this new generation of studies, numerous issues in the

realm of demonology have remained insufficiently addressed.

Across Christianity, one often overlooked or assumed element arises. When we discuss

demonology, are we discussing a “what” or a “who?” Should our demonological studies be

conceptually crafted upon an impersonal demonic power or upon a realm of individual, personal

demons? That particular question will be explored in the writings of Karl Barth and Merrill

Unger.

Dismissive perspectives are aplenty with respect to this question. One of the most telling

arenas for this attitude is the “powers.” Theologies concerning the “powers” have become a

significant field since demonologys twentieth century resurrection. Led by Hendrikus Berkhof

and others, these studies often attempt to reshape the historic angel imagery which is connected

to Pauls theology. Berkhof says, “One can even doubt whether Paul conceived of the Powers as

personal beings. In any case this aspect is so secondary that it makes little difference whether he

did or not. He may be using personifications.” [1] Personhood is exiled as an unfitting subject for

extended scrutiny. Walter Wink exhibits this as well when he says regarding personhood, “As

long as these Powers were thought of personalistically… reduced to the categories of

individualism… belief in the demonic had no political consequences. But once we recognize

that these spiritual forces are the interiority of earthly institutions or structures or systems, then

the social dimension of the gospel becomes immediately evident.” [2] Especially in Engaging the

1 Berkhof, Hendrikus. Christ and the Powers, Page 24. 2 Wink, Walter. Engaging the Powers, Pages 77-78.

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Powers, he consistently treats angels and demons as myth, avoiding a detailed look into the

possibility of personhood. [3]

Another common response to the question of personhood is one of “openness.” For

instance, this vagueness surfaces in Daniel Migliores writing on the “powers.” He remarks,

“Traditionally, these powers have been understood as supernatural beings like angels and

demons, but they can also be viewed as powerful forces and structures of our common human

life nations, institutions, systems of law and order, forms of culture.” [4] With this short

statement, Migliore opens this subject to multiple “views” with no obvious desire to investigate

and resolve the ambiguity, though he prefers impersonality. [5]

This introductory chapter will analyze the issue of demonic personhood in the theologies

of Karl Barth and Merrill Unger. In order to assess the topic properly, research methodologies

will be clarified, and terminological parameters will be set. Flowing out of these definitions, a

survey of each authors particular view of the personhood of the demonic will be provided.

Afterward, distinctions and similarities will be detailed in order that their positions may be fully

understood.

I maintain that demonology must be a topic of critical, well-researched analysis. If the

demonic realm is indeed impersonal, we can clearly observe that theologians like Walter Wink

seriously and accurately consider the subject, though some might relegate it to a mere ingredient

in liturgical practice. [6] Perhaps then our current academic treatment of the subject is appropriate,

but if the demonic realm is better interpreted as personal with a disposition of malevolence, a

lack of concentrated reflection would be unwise.

What this thesis is not is almost as crucial as what it is. Whenever a conversation nears

the topic of evil, familiar controversies reassert themselves. The origin of evils existence has

been a gigantic topic throughout the history of theological thought, and the reality of the demonic

in general has surfaced as a controversial debate as well. For the purpose of this study, these

controversies will be kept to the periphery and skirted altogether whenever possible. Thus,

neither evils origins nor the reality of the demonic are our central theme.

3 Wink, Walter. Engaging the Powers, Pages 65-85. For more on myth and demythologization, see section 2.6. 4 Migliore, Daniel. The Power of God and the gods of Power, Page 5. 5 Ibid. 6 Schleiermacher, Friedrich, The Christian Faith, Pages 169-170.

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Before we delve into the topic at hand, the personhood of the demonic, another point of

clarity is necessary. While the reality of the demonic is not a primary theme or issue of

discussion, this thesis will display an underlying and occasionally overt bias toward the reality of

the demonic. Because theological preconceptions are inevitable, stating them up front is a

beneficial point. The perspective of this thesis is that the writers of the Old and New Testaments

were speaking carefully not superstitiously concerning the reality of the demonic. Evil is indeed

real, and it wields a powerful influence, a weighty rule over the created realm. [7] The demonic, a

“sinister matter,” is “in its own way very real.” [8] With this as a starting point, the question then

follows, “Is this demonic power impersonal or personal?”

It should also be mentioned that Barth and Ungers perspective on the personhood of the

demonic should not be considered the academic norm. While the two authors take divergent

paths to a similar conclusion, their advocacy for the personal agency of the demonic world adds

important vigor to the rarely entertained debate surrounding the personhood of the demonic. As

such, this thesis wishes to explore their particular perspectives in assisting this discussion. Let us

cautiously attempt to mine an orderly response to the question of personhood from the

demonology of Barth and Unger.

1.2 Personal Background

The topic of this thesis is “Impersonal or Personal? An Analysis of Karl Barth and

Merrill Ungers Perspectives on the Personhood of the Demonic.” I arrived at this thesis due to

my experiences since the beginning of 2011. I was hired as a media representative for a

worldwide Christian radio program headquartered at a large Evangelical church. [9] Equipped with

a modest theological background, I was often tasked to receive phone calls from dedicated

listeners who asked biblical and theological questions stemming from their circumstances. In

this context, I would often seek to assist them as best as possible over the telephone.

Occasionally this led to conversations where I counseled Christians under apparent demonic

7 Ephesians 2:2, 6:11-12; Revelation 12:7-9. Chapter 2 addresses the particular relationship of these passages to biblical scholarship. 8 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 519. 9 Throughout this thesis, the terms “Evangelical” and “Evangelicalism” will consistently refer to “The movement in modern Christianity, transcending denominational and confessional boundaries, that emphasizes conformity to the basic tenets of the faith and a missionary outreach of compassion and urgency.” Thus, this thesis is choosing to use the terms in accordance with their contemporary theological meaning in the global church. Pierard, R. V. and W. A. Elwell. “Evangelicalism” in Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Pages 405-409.

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attack. These attacks sometimes involved the visual appearance or the audible voice of a

supposed demon wishing to harass and intimidate. In addition to these counseling instances, a

number of coworkers and myself all experienced unusual events firsthand.

I also specifically raise the topic of multiculturalism in my third chapter due to my past as

well. As a resident of Chicago for six years, I attended and became a member of a church

community which contained an eclectic gathering of cultural backgrounds. In this church

context, it was easy to discern that cultural background guided ones view of the demonic. Some

members spoke openly about the demonic while others generally preferred to ignore the topic.

These differences usually manifested along cultural lines. Hence, my theological aim in this

thesis is not to serve myself but the church, with all its diversity in view. “Dogmatics is not a

free science, but is bound to the Church, inside which only it has place and meaning.” [10]

1.3 Research Methodology

In order to approach the question concerning the personal or impersonal nature of the

demonic, this thesis raises the theological contributions of Karl Barth and Merrill Unger,

focusing on Barths Church Dogmatics: Volume III, 3 and Ungers Biblical Demonology: A

Study of the Spiritual Forces Behind the Present World Unrest . [11] These works have been

selected as they offer Barth and Ungers most comprehensive assessments of demonology.

Other works by these particular authors will be occasionally introduced if they are relevant to the

theme at hand. Structured as a literature review, both authors demonologies are analyzed, while

engaging related works by other contributors.

These two conversation partners are selected with a particular intent. Academia rarely

reaches conclusions which posit the possibility that demons are real, personal beings. This thesis

finds that these two scholars hold this particular view and determines that their positions merit

further reflection. With academic training, Unger epitomizes the Evangelical yearning for

radical biblicism. Barth bears a few similarities having “articulated a theological identity

formed out of biblical and dogmatic habits of thought with rigorous consistency and with a

10 McConnachie, John. The Barthian Theology and the Man of Today, Pages 40-41. 11 As this thesis is composed in English, Geoffrey Bromiley and R. J. Ehrlichs English translation from the original German will be relied upon for the purpose of this study. Also, Ungers work will henceforth be referred to as Biblical Demonology for brevitys sake.

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certain exclusivism.” [12] But inevitably, it is impossible “to fit Barth… into any known scheme of

theology, orthodox or liberal.” [13] The interaction and input of these two voices is a dynamic and

unique avenue by which we can instigate this demonological project.

Furthermore, the research included in this study will not strive to address Satanology

itself, though it will be considered in passing as it is definitively related to demonology. Due to

the selected texts and the stated goal, we are not explicitly concerned with the identification and

possible personhood of Satan. The broader category of the demonic is our target. [14]

1.4 Hermeneutical Principles

When investigations toward truth and conclusion occur, hermeneutical standards and

practices are pushed to the forefront. To be clear, principles of interpretation are integral to the

systematic endeavor, but, in this context, we cannot descend too deeply, lest we blither about

“how” and never “do.” A detailed investigation on the Barthian and Ungerian hermeneutics

involved in this project would entail an entire thesis. Our task lies in their theology, in their

demonology, confined to the debate of demonic personhood. As we proceed, hermeneutics will

serve the theological process as this thesis seeks Gods truth through “the true meaning of the

biblical text” and aims to systematically express it. [15]

By setting our goal in the systematics field, we automatically have to extend the project

beyond the context of one particular verse, pericope, book, or authorial collection. Biblical

theology must serve the systematic endeavor. Although each book is specifically written by a

particular human author in time and space, this systematic study must also concurrently treat the

sixty-six books of the Scriptures as divine revelation and discourse, as numerous biblical authors

testify. [16] Thus, clarity of biblical interpretation is primarily found via two avenues, the

12 Webster, John. “Introducing Barth” in The Cambridge Companion to Karl Barth, Page 5. His mention of Barths consistency is likely an overstatement, as we will we see throughout this thesis. 13 McConnachie, John. The Significance of Karl Barth, Page 242. 14 As Satanology and demonology are inseparably linked, the question then follows, “What is their relationship?” In this thesis, Satanology is subjugated to the broader demonological category. Since we are talking about personhood in general, addressing the personhood of Satan alone would fail to adequately answer our thesis question concerning the demonic. If Satan were to be declared personal, we may or may not declare that a personal demonic realm exists, but if we reach a decision concerning the demonic as a whole, then Satanology would be consequently affected. Therefore, Satanology will function in a supplementary manner throughout this thesis. 15 Klein, William. “Evangelical Hermeneutics” in Initiation into Theology: The Rich Variety of Theology and Hermeneutics, Page 325. 16 Isaiah 6:8-13, Jeremiah 1:4, Amos 1:1-3, Haggai 1:1-3, Zechariah 1:1-3, Malachi 1:1, 1 Thessalonians 2:13, 2 Timothy 3:16, 2 Peter 1:20-21. This is obviously not a comprehensive list considering the very phrase “says the

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immediate context of the book in question and the broader context of Gods whole counsel.

Scripture interprets itself far better than any other.

Though many scholars respectfully appreciate the Scriptures and simultaneously maintain

that it is not completely faultless, this thesis advocates a different avenue. Due to the divine

direction behind the biblical text, optimism should be placed upon the Scriptures with pessimism

resting upon the reader. When the two are reversed, even with a respectful attitude, the seat of

judgment rests upon the sinful and corrupt rather than the Spirit-guided witnesses. We should be

wary of ourselves and our reading, not the Word and its intended meaning. Who are we to

contend that we can comprehensively grasp and detail the unity of divine thought in human

terms? A disposition of humility is a theologians highest virtue. However, this perspective

understandably raises objections which cannot be exhaustively repudiated without a separate

work of significant length. [17]

That being said, God has revealed Himself in the Scriptures through the styles and words

of men. [18] The books of the Bible contain numerous forms of literature, and depending on the

methodology and material utilized, the intention should be read through the lens of that particular

style of writing. For instance, a detailing of King Manassehs life should not be casually read as

moral prescription for the modern Christian. [19] Instead, the authors descriptive work on

Manasseh should be understood as a contribution to an overarching theological purpose

throughout the larger work. In turn, the theological intention of that larger work supports the

redemptive (essentially Christological) theme of the canon.

As the Scriptures are divinely wrought by the hands of men, our attitude of humility then

leads us to subjugate ourselves to them; the Word of God has authority. But where exactly does

this authority lie, in God, in the individual authors, in the original autographs, or in the texts

reproclamation in a contemporary event? To some degree, we must respond in the affirmative to

Lord” is used in 25 times in the NASB translation of Malachi alone. The utilization of many of these texts to reach these theological conclusions is not uncommon. (E.g., Henry, C. F. H. “Bible, Inspiration of” and “Revelation, Special” in Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Pages 159-193, 1021-1023.) 17 Apparent contradictions are often raised in an attempt to lower our qualitative expectations regarding the Scriptures, but may I suggest that our reading and framing of so-called contradictions creates confrontations, especially when we are open to accept intrabiblical conflict. 18 Upon a survey of the incarnation of Christ, we need not be excessively pessimistic regarding the divine and human nature of Scriptures. If the perfect God can become thoroughly man, one with humanity yet one with the Holy Trinity; the composition of a book that is one with human words yet one with the eternal Word appears to be a simple task in comparison. 19 2 Kings 21:1-18.

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each. Gods exousia ultimately resides in Himself, as the Creator of the finite, but God

frequently bestows authority upon others. Angelic and prophetic messengers were repeatedly

deputized for the exertion of Gods will and word on earth. [20] This act is the result of the volition

of God alone; “…the person … must have been deputized to do so; he cant just undertake to do

so.” [21] Deputized by God and then superintended by the Spirit, the authors bore Gods

authoritative message and poured it into the autographs, which then retain the authority of God

Himself.

Furthermore, if we consider the authority of God, does not Gods authority rest over all

His creation, regardless of whether they know God or acknowledge God? In the same way, the

authority of the divine words stands, regardless of our level of reflection upon them. [22] So

authority also rests in the words themselves. But they come to bear and exert authority in our

lives not in their silence but in their audible and examined recapitulation. Therefore, Gods

biblical witness is an authoritative work on every level.

Through the Scriptures, God speaks. As theologians, we, of all persons, must carefully

avoid the arrogance that supposes we know better than the Omniscient. When God utters but a

word, we must listen, and we must be slow to respond for fear that we might “darken [Gods]

counsel with words without knowledge.” [23] Meaning, value, and purpose flow from the Spring,

the Source of all truth, God. Gods revelation, as found in the writings of the Old and New

Testaments, stand as the ultimate authority. All other contributions must be crafted and directed

by this singular reality.

Stemming from this reality, Scriptures are granted preeminence as the first voice, for the

Bible is our reliable source for direction, meaning, and hermeneutical clarity. By this assertion,

this thesis does not ignore that we apprehend the biblical material in our context with our culture

as a guide and our mind as a compass. The “hermeneutical inquiry” is inherently marked by

20 Isaiah 6 is a dramatic instance of such deputation. 21 Wolterstorff, Nicholas. Divine Discourse: Philosophical Reflections on the Claim that God Speaks, Page 43. I prefer to broaden his thought on deputation from the biblically-recorded deputized to the authors of the texts themselves. The authority of the contents hinges first upon the proper deputation of the authors who penned the container. 22 On an ethical level, if the Scriptures say that adultery is wrong, it is still wrong for those who are not aware of the command. The validity of the command is not contingent upon Gods thorough communication of it. God is under no obligation to dispense a particular truth to absolutely everyone. Thus the impetus for knowledge and truth is upon us and our acquisition of it, and the Spirit assists us in this. 23 Job 38:2. This verse “makes clear the limits of Jobs understanding…” Balentine, Samuel E. Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary: Job, Page 642.

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“particularity, contingency, and temporality.” [24] We are not “innocent readers without

presuppositions… Our presuppositions about these texts mediate our experience of them. And

our presuppositions about these texts have been formed by historical, social, and cultural

processes.” [25]

Other contexts are not devoid of truth. [26] As a result of Gods creative goodness, cultures,

inherently not synonymous with the biblical information, can and do possess true family values

and other truths, just as a godless mathematician can possess veracious conclusions. One could

propose an equality of input and authority, balancing revelation, context, and reason for

theological formation, but if revelation is not primary, this thesis suggests that it is always

subjugated. While our context does inform our interpretative method, the authoritarian river

primarily flows from revelation.

If we attempt to raise the authoritarian value of our context, innumerable sources with

their competing claims of “truth” risk destroying our Christian identity and force us to assume

arbitrary lines for when and where Scripture, context, and reason may or may not speak. As

many academic theologians continue to elevate the truth claims of the polyphony of cultures and

contexts, religious pluralism has become an intellectual norm, forging a “Christianity” for which

no apostle would have perished.

Hermeneutics not only controls the identity of Christianity but also the identity of a

Christian.

The failure to focus on identity has created enormous problems. The gospel in our time is an unimportant item in peoples lives… Christ is not an accessory to our identity, as if one were choosing an option for a car. He takes over identity so that everything else becomes an accessory, which is precisely what “Jesus is Lord” means. [27]

If we abandon the primacy and centrality of the Scriptures - the words of Christ, His prophets,

and His apostles, we, including the academy and the church, will descend to a Christianity none

of them knew, empowered by a hermeneutical method fueling our perilous voyage.

24 Thiselton, Anthony C. The Hermeneutics of Doctrine, Page 63. 25 Smit, Dirk J. “Reading the Bible and the (Un)official Interpretive Culture” in Neotestimentica . 28:2, Page 309. 26 The issue of multiculturalism is central to this thesis, as it is an emerging contextual reality. A more complete discussion of multiculturalisms impact on hermeneutics will be provided in the corresponding chapter. 27 Snodgrass, Klyne R. “An Introduction to a Hermeneutics of Identity” in Bibliotheca Sacra, 168, Jan-Mar 2011, Page 8.

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This thesis also recognizes the role that meaning (and the search for it) plays in a

theologians hermeneutic. But meaning should not be equated with value or worth. [28] Too often,

such attitudes of theological self-service which scream “It suits my needs” or “It is meaningful to

me” continues to foster the “the age of cafeteria religion” which we currently navigate. [29]

Remember! A bottle means something to a drunk, and a woman means something to a rapist.

What we value should not be immediately correlated with proper meaning. We must avoid

turning theology into anthropology by the glorification of our conscious feelings and

subjectivity. Instead, T. F. Torrance comments regarding a Barthian perspective of revelation

that “God actively reveals Himself… revelation is and ever remains a pure act…” [30] We are

revelation receivers, prone to obfuscations. The problem is us, not revelation. [31]

Therefore, meaning, value, and identity must ultimately be rooted in revelation, even if

we struggle to ascertain it through our numerous biases and perspectives. When approaching the

topic of meaning, this thesis will cautiously evaluate its value through a revelatory filter.

Without this lens, we would easily slip into contextually demanded values without any directing

revelatory agency to correct wrongs. Indeed, ethics and hermeneutics are related in a

“complicated” manner, and as Christians in the historical tradition of the apostles, we ultimately

obey God before people. [32] Thankfully, we are accompanied by the illuminative work of the

Holy Spirit throughout the difficult hermeneutical journey abounding in pitfalls.

Finally, as we are addressing what may be deemed an abstract concept, it may be asked if

we can even use literal language regarding the demonic. For instance, whenever we discuss

God, we are automatically limited by analogous and metaphorical language. This complicates

every discussion regarding the personhood of the God. Only in the humiliation and

condescension of God in Christ do we glimpse the personhood of God unveiled. Brümmer

comments:

28 “It meets my needs” should also not be confused with value. In this age of theological consumerism, ones “needs” is often the driving force behind why someone adheres to a perspective, a theology, or even a religion. But who made us the judge of our needs? When was a particular person, family, or culture ordained as the arbiter of what we require and where we should find meaning? Lest we reject God from the conversation, can we not first listen to what He teaches as our needs, to where He directs us to find meaning, and to what He calls right? 29 Dalferth, Ingolf U. “I DETERMINE WHAT GOD IS! Theology in the Age of Cafeteria Religion” in Theology Today, Vol. 57, Num. 1, Page 6. 30 Torrence, T.F . Karl Barth: Biblical and Evangelical Theologian, Page 42. 31 For this reason, hermeneutics are necessarily a community process. Grasping our frailty and subtle self-service, we must submit ourselves before the Spirit-commissioned community of faith for guidance, perspective, and rebuke. No theology should be divorced from the church. 32 Smit, Dirk J. “Ethics and Interpretation: New Voices from the USA” in Scriptura, 33, Page 19.

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…since God is not like other people, the personal terms used to talk about God cannot have the same meaning that they have with reference to other people and our relations with them. Our language about God is therefore metaphorical in the sense that not all the implications that this language has with reference to other people can be carried over to our talk about God. [33]

But the demonic is not God; they should hardly be uttered at the same time. As they are not

divine and infinite but rather created and finite, they are not bound to metaphorical language.

Like other finite subjects, the Scriptures speak about who they actually are and what they

actually do. With this in mind, we can approach demonology in the biblical text in a similar

manner to anthropology. The Scriptures do not claim to exhaustively detail the nature and

activity of humanity or demons, but the text offers us what God decided as sufficient. This thesis

is not primarily concerned with dominant metaphor identifiers but with the rational and

comprehensible identification of what demons are personal or impersonal. We are more

focused upon reality rather than language, though the two are inseparably linked.

1.5 Terminology

Pursuing terms in the realm of demonology has its perils. The idea of “demon” is

perceived differently by many people, depending on culture, age, and faith. What makes

someone a “person” is perhaps even more debated. Should we use definitions of personhood that

are commonly applied to humanity (or even God)? By endeavoring to search for definitions, this

thesis is conceptually arguing that revelatory definitions are inherently tied to humankinds

perception and perspective. In other words, a person constructs the definition of personhood and

the demonic with ones self as a lens, though continually pursuing revelatory adherence.

In this chapter, the particular terms will be presented in light of each authors particular

position toward them. Then using that information, we can assess whether their ideas concerning

the “demonic” and “personhood” carry a particular perspective.

1.5.1 “Personhood”

Even apart from demonology, forming a proper understanding of personhood is a

difficult proposition. What defines a person? Obviously, ones cultural context dictates and

33 Brümmer, Vincent. “Spirituality and the Hermeneutics of Faith” in HTS Theological Studies, 66(1), Article #891.

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directs ones perspective. For the sake of this evaluation, determining Barth and Ungers

definitions from their works is analytically prioritized. Then we can effectively assess whether

their treatment of demonology leads us to believe whether they are propagating a demonology

bearing an impersonal nature or a personal ontology. [34]

Can someone or something that does not have a body be called a person? [35] Within the

anthropological arena, the question is heavily debated, often framed within the philosophical

“Mind and Body problem.” [36] Some like Guus Labooy assume “an intimate union between mind

and body” which leads to “a concept of person to which… both corporeal and mental predicates

can be prescribed.” [37] Furthermore, he argues that God “created humans as persons, as a bi-unity

of body and soul. For our created reality, personhood is primary, and God will raise the person,

rather than the body or soul.” [38] Adopting an idea of personhood which results from both the

physical and psychical would certainly direct one away from accepting a personhood of the

demonic. [39] In the context of our death and eventual resurrection, others like Anthony Flew

prefer the more Platonic approach which ties humankinds personhood primarily to the

incorporeal substance of the soul. [40]

Though conversation exists regarding whether or not certain demons can take physical

forms, [41] the vast majority of biblical references to the demonic appear to be non-corporeal and

pneumatological, but it is unfair to paint the demonic as unsubstantial from such descriptions. [42]

But Barth himself indicates that the non-physical can be personal with his treatment of God the

Holy Spirit. He consistently refers to the Holy Spirit as a “Whom” or “He” rather than

34 The word “ontology” is being used loosely here; perhaps demons have an undetectable physical being of some sort? No strict ontological correlation is implied between humans and demons. 35 One could also question whether or not the demons have bodies of some sort. Reckoning that demons are fallen angels, Aquinas says regarding angels, “The incorporeal substances are midway between God and corporeal things, and the point midway between extremes appears extreme with respect to either; the tepid, compared with the hot, seems cold. Hence the angels might be called material and bodily as compared with God, without implying that they are so intrinsically.” Aquinas, St. Thomas . Summa Theologiæ, Vol. 9, Question 50, Article 1, Page 7. 36 Labooy, Guus. Freedom and Dispositions, Page 21. 37 Ibid. 38 Ibid, Page 235. 39 Ibid, Pages 278-279. Though Gods personhood, except in the Son, might then be in question as well. 40 Flew, Anthony. Body, Mind, and Death, Pages 5-9. 41 During the temptation of Christ in wilderness, has Satan taken a physical form for the conversation? Also, Leviticus 17:7 and 2 Chronicles 11:15 give rise to the possibility of so-called “goat demons.” Historically speaking, Jewish superstition maintained that demons could manifest in three forms - animals, humans, and angels. Ferguson, Everett. Demonology of the Early Christian World, Page 88. 42 Especially among New Testament writers, the ideas of “evil spirit” and “demon” are synonymous. Luke (8:2) actually employs both terms in one verse to refer to the same phenomena.

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employing a more generic “it,” and at one point Barth discusses the Trinity saying, “God is God

the Spirit as He is God the Father and God the Son.” [43] This is no small admission for Barth,

because this sweeping statement does in some way equate the personal nature of each. [44] To

equate the God-man Jesus with the Holy Spirit in that way greatly elucidates his perspective on

the Holy Spirits personal ontology.

Anthropological personhood in Barths Church Dogmatics is a different matter. While

not directly commenting on humanitys personhood and the composition of personhood, true

humanity is controversially located in ones attitude toward God and His attitude toward us. [45]

Determining humanitys nature through scientific and autonomous resources is an incomplete

errand. According to Barth, these methods only describe the “phenomena of man” and neglect to

discover the “real man.” [46] Humankinds ontology and personal nature are derived from a

relationship with God, from whom all life and existence emanate. He is the ultimate Person.

Thus, as we attempt to address the personhood of the demonic in Barths writings, the

relationship of the divine to the demonic takes center stage.

Merrill Unger, a twentieth century American Evangelical theologian, analyzes the topic

of demonology as a subject demanding reflection and study. Intentionally committing to

demonological study, details are specifically provided concerning demonology. An entire

chapter of his book Biblical Demonology postulates the reality and identity of demons. [47]

In Ungers chapter regarding demonic identity and reality, the issue of personhood is

scarcely raised, save for one short section.

Men in the church and out of it, blatantly assert that there is no personal devil, that the devil is only evil personified, and that whatever devil there is, is in man himself, and there is enough of that variety to answer all theological requirements. It is also confidently declared that no longer can a respectable scholar be found anywhere who believes in a personal devil or demons. Thus this

43 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, I, 1, Pages 532-533. 44 “Barth was motivated by his reaction to the limitations of the modernized psychological understanding of person . Barth challenged the tritheistic idea of the Trinity as three distinct, personal centers of consciousness and will that stand apart from each other. He emphasized that the one God simultaneously exists in three self-differentiated repetitions” or ways of being: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.” Grenz, Stanley J., David Gurentzki, and Cherith Fee Nordling. “Modes of Being” in Pocket Dictionary of Theological Terms, Page 80. The complexities of Barths Trinitarian studies are obviously not able to be entertained at this time. 45 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 2, Page 121. While this position harmonizes well with his Christo-centric theology, it does raise peculiar questions regarding whether non-Christians are somewhat less “real” or less “human.” 46 Ibid, Page 122. 47 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 35ff.

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aggressive skepticism and militant attacks demand an apologetic approach to the problem. For it is obvious that if demons be imaginary and non-existent, then the whole subject belongs to the realm of fairy-tale and folklore, and not to the sphere of Christian theology. [48]

With this pericope as Ungers impetus, he then constructs an argument for the existence of

demons from Scripture, physical nature, human nature, and human experience. In this simplistic

manner, the personhood and reality of demons is amalgamated.

The fusion of the two concepts is important to Unger. As we can observe above, in

Ungers ontology, no biblical demons truly exist unless they are personal beings. Personhood as

a point of critique is bypassed, and his pro-belief, anti-skepticism theological construction takes

shape. He does momentarily reference the topic of personhood again in other chapters, but those

will be addressed at length later.

Therefore, we can conclude that with no clear reference to the personhood of the

demonic, Barths concept concerning personhood in general is not tied to the presence of flesh.

Instead, humanitys realness, who he is and his personhood, is directly tied to a relationship with

the divine. Unger approaches the issue of personhood treating it as synonymous with the

ontological reality of the demonic. If we may paint with a broad brush, if there are no personal

demons, no demons exist in Ungers theology.

1.5.2 “Demon”

When formulating the meaning of the term “demon,” ones temptation is to simply

describe the opposite of an angel. After writing about angels for over forty pages, Barth

immediately ushers in a discussion concerning their opponents with an urgent clarification.

We are forced to do this because a primitive and fatal association has always brought together these two spheres of angels and demons from the days of the Fathers to those of Neo-Protestantism. We shall not bring them into the same close relationship as formerly. [49]

In this manner, his aside into the realm of the demonic is inaugurated. [50] Demons are not to be

considered similar to angels in “origin or nature.” [51] God and His angels have virtually nothing in

48 Ibid, Pages 35-36. 49 Ibid, III, 3, Page 519. 50 Ibid. In fact, Barth would disagree with this thesis very composition. He strongly advocates that demons are basically hoping to be the subject of “systematic attention.” 51 Ibid, Pages 520-521.

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common with the demonic. Barth elaborates by adding that “God is the Lord of the demonic

sphere, and it derives from Him, just as in a wholly different way He is Lord of the angelic

sphere and it too derives from Him.” [52] From this adamant theological posturing, we can deduce

that his angelology will not assist us in discerning his position regarding the personhood of the

demonic.

Originating from his consternation with earlier (patristic and medieval) writings on the

demonic, Barths use of the term “demon” diverges from the traditional usage in a number of

critical ways. As we already observed, demons are disassociated with the angelic realm. But

Barth adventures further. He asserts their existence but says that they are neither divine nor

creature. [53] They are the necessary result of Gods affirmation. This is a direct result of his

theology of “nothingness.” [54] Before we can truly address Barths position toward the

personhood of the demonic, we must understand this key literary context which shapes his

demonological writings.

After Barths extensive discussion concerning the nature of Gods Lordship over the

created realm, he identifies something which is out of place. He calls this an “alien factor.” [55]

While he still places it under Gods providential vision, he elaborates saying, “This opposition

and resistance, this stubborn element and alien factor, may be provisionally defined as

nothingness.” [56] As this term is not self-explanatory, “nothingness” is fleshed out. It is not

merely negation or absence. [57] It is “utterly distinct from both Creator and creation, the adversary

with which no compromise is possible, the negative which is more than the mere complement of

an antithetical positive…” [58] While God is indeed Lord over it as well, “nothingness is that from

which God separates Himself and in face of which He asserts Himself and exerts His positive

52 Ibid. 53 Ibid, Page 523. 54 Nothingness is the result of Barths Christo-centricism. “…the theology of Barth is avowedly Christo-centric. For Barth, at least, that does not mean that the topics of theology are limited to a study of the person and work of Christ but rather that all theology finds its focal center in Christ and that all knowledge of God is obtainable only through Christ.” Kantzer, Kenneth. “The Christology of Karl Barth” in The Bulletin of Evangelical Theological Society, Page 25. However, “Logocentricism” is probably the preferable description of Barths theological thrust. Ward, Graham. Barth, Derrida and the Language of Theology, Page 13ff. 55 Barth, Karl. Christian Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 289. 56 Ibid. 57 Ibid, Page 349. 58 Ibid, Page 302.

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will.” [59] With this philosophy underpinning his view of evil, Barths conclusion concerning

demons is straightforward: “They themselves are always nothingness.” [60]

As his book title conveys, Unger primarily seeks the definition of “demon” from a

biblical directive. Concerning their origins, the traditional theology is advocated. Satan revolted

against God and spread rebellion amongst the angels. [61] Demons are created beings that were

once in Gods service and presence. He cautiously advocates for this view as overwhelming

biblical clarity on the matter does not exist, politely disagreeing with those who speculate about a

pre-Adam creation or an ante-diluvian reproductive origin of the demons. [62]

After a loose sketch concerning their origin, Unger offers a three-fold understanding of

the nature of a demon, which assists us in discerning exactly how he defines the term. A demons

nature is spiritual, intellectual, and moral. [63] To evidence their incorporeal nature, passages from

the gospels are utilized which use demon ( daimon ) synonymously with spirit ( pneuma ). After

citing five references, he concludes “Demons and evil spirits are therefore one and the same

thing.” [64] Building on his citations of the gospel narratives, Ephesians is drawn into his argument

for the spiritual nature of the demons, believing that these “powers” and “spiritual forces” are to

be interpreted as demons. [65]

A demon is also a being of expansive intellect. This intelligence takes many forms.

Prominently, they possess cosmic knowledge, recognizing Jesus, knowing His Sonship, obeying

Him, and corrupting doctrine. [66] Unger is quick to illuminate this argument. Even though they

are intellectually capable and understand their own doom, their knowledge is in no way salvific.

59 Ibid, Page 351. 60 Ibid, Page 523. By attributing the demonics origin and nature to nothingness, Barth is refusing to challenge the pure identity and creative quality of God. The utilization of nothingness as a philosophical prop further illuminates the character of God. The Lords creation is not tarnished. This is further clarified by a 1957 chapel message. Barth said, “Bad, ugly, and evil, and dangerous things exist. The world is full of them. But what is bad was certainly not created by God. It is the nature of what is bad, ugly, and evil not to have been willed or created by God. It may be known because it has nothing whatever to do with Jesus Christ and his grace. It is alien to the structure and meaning of the Fathers house. It can come forth only from our corrupt hearts and understandings. It can derive only from the devil, who is not a second creator. Being rejected and denied by God, and set on his left hand, it is something that we can reject, avoid, fear, and flee. The fact that there are bad things many, many bad things does not alter the truth that Gods creation is good. Neither we nor the devil can alter this.” Erler, Rolf Joachim, Reiner Marquard, and Geoffrey W. Bromiley, eds. A Karl Barth Reader, Pages 90-91. 61 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Pages 15-16. 62 It is likely that Unger understands Adam as a literal historical figure. 63 Ibid, Pages 62-68. 64 Ibid, Page 63. 65 This subject is debated heavily; what or who are these powers? See section 2.5.3 for more information. 66 Ibid, Page 66.

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“They have a distinct realization that Jesus is Lord of the spirit-world, but their confession does

not involve a saving trust, or a willing submission.” [67] Demonic knowledge is vast but inherently

steeped in rebellion. [68]

This leads us to Ungers last category concerning his description of the demons their

moral nature. He writes concerning their consistently depraved nature, highlighting their

perpetual desire to disseminate spiritual maladies and physical afflictions. [69] By formulating and

spreading pernicious teachings, men are lead “not only to unmoral, but to immoral conduct.” [70]

In addition to the moral degradation they perpetuate and accelerate, their ability to enter a being

or “demonize” someone often causes psychological problems and bodily injury. [71]

In sum, Barth crafts the term “demon” as something which is independent of the created

order yet under Gods rule as a hostile and substantial nothingness. Ungers position argues that

a demon is a created being, a fallen angel, in permanent, irreconcilable rebellion against God.

From a rigid reflection upon the texts of Scripture, Unger, as he perceives the text, discerns that

demons are inherently immaterial, intelligent, and immoral.

1.6 Karl Barths Perspective on the Personhood of the Demonic in Church Dogmatics

Karl Barth, a preeminent Christian theologian of the twentieth century, serves as a unique

and insightful contributor to the field of demonology. Barths proportional brevity in relation to

the length of his Church Dogmatics does not necessarily translate to a lack of importance placed

upon the subject. It is not a cursory treatment of the topic, and his perspective stands out due to

the particular path by which he accesses the often ignored topic.

Before we begin our analysis, we should proceed further than merely mentioning Barths

succinctness concerning this topic. As we pursue this topic further, we must concede that Barth

disagrees with the very nature of this study. Delving into demonology is a dangerous matter, and

67 Ibid. 68 This is in keeping with Aquinas when he said, “… we must firmly maintain, in keeping with Catholic faith, that the will of good angels is established in goodness and the will of the devils fixed in evil.” Aquinas, St. Thomas. Summa Theologiæ, Volume 9, Question 64, Article 2, Page 289. 69 Ibid, Page 67. 70 Ibid. 71 While the traditional term “possession” is still commonly used in many Christian circles, “demonize” or “demonization” will be utilized throughout this thesis, in an effort to avoid any confusion regarding demonic “ownership.”

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Barth even mentions the negative effects it had on Martin Luther. As we begin, we should

recount a portion of Barths warning.

Why must our glance be brief? Because we have to do at this point with a sinister matter about which the Christian and the theologian must know but in which he must not linger or become too deeply engrossed, devoting too much attention to it in an exposition like our own. [72]

One of the few to address Barths demonology, G. C. Berkouwer clarifies Barths statement,

saying, “[Demonology] could again receive the appearance of great power only if we were to

give much attention to it and treat it as a matter still deserving of respect.” [73]

Though Barth is emphatically warning us against reviewing demonology in excess, have

we gone too far in the other direction? From Barths perspective, the doctrine concerning

demons is something necessary. Have we left demonological studies as an ignored topic graced

with little to no reflection whatsoever? Let us revisit the topic today, reflecting on the issue of

personhood.

1.6.1 Personhood in Barths Demonology

Since Barth understands personhood through the lens of ones relationship to God and

since he describes demons as something hostile and independent of creation though under Gods

dominion, is he predominantly implying that demons are personal or impersonal?

As we previously established according to Barths theology, we cannot point to the

angelic beings. He vehemently argues that angels are a different category, unrelated to demons

ontologically. They only relate in that they oppose one another. Angels are Gods ambassadors,

never independent of Gods work and presence. [74] Due to this strict relationship, angels “have no

profile or character, no mind or will of their own.” [75] Yet, angels are “creatures” not

“emanations.” [76] This information cannot be distilled into a theological form to which we can

relate demons. In Barths theology, his writings concerning angels only serve to distinguish how

the identity and personhood of an individual is formed. Ones relationship to God is the defining

point for assessment.

72 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 519. 73 Berkouwer, G. C. The Triumph of Grace in the Theology of Karl Barth, Page 376. 74 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 479. 75 Ibid, Page 480. To those who would deny the existence of angels, Barth polarizes the issue saying, “To deny the angels is to deny God Himself.” (Page 486) 76 Ibid, Page 480.

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What exactly is the demonic realms relationship to God? First, “God is the Lord of the

demonic sphere.” [77] It is perhaps an uncomfortable notion, but Barth does not turn back from his

Augustinian/Calvinistic fervor for Gods sovereignty. All is under His domain. Barth builds on

Gods supremacy by insisting that the demonic “derives from Him” as well. [78] Of course, this

derivation is completely distinct from creation.

Second, though demons are derived from God, they are not His creation.

God has not created them, and therefore they are not creaturely. They are only as God affirms Himself and the creature and thus pronounces a necessary No. They exists in virtue of the fact that His turning to involves a turning from, His election a rejection, His grace a judgment. [79]

Essentially, they are a byproduct of the creative process. They find their ultimate derivation

from God in His ultimate No, but they do not receive the care that He bestows upon His

creaturely realm. They are always rejected, always evil, as they have no access to Gods eternal

Yes of love and redemption. [80] Demons can “only exist in the attempt to rage against God and to

spoil His creation.” [81]

Third, because of their existential rebellion, Barth paints a demonic sphere that is always

opposed by God and His angels. Even though it still submits to His will, it “does not cease to be

the demonic sphere and therefore a sphere of contradiction and opposition which as such can

only be overthrown and hasten to destruction.” [82] His judgment is ever upon them.

If that is the demonics relationship to God, what is their relationship to nothingness, as

Barth has consistently linked the two topics? After arguing that demons are derived from God, he

reminds us that demons are derived from nothingness. [83] Nothingness is basically equated with

Gods creative No. Nothingness is derived from God; thus demons can be said to both be

derived from nothingness and God. But Barth goes further, saying, “They are nothingness in its

77 Ibid, Page 520. 78 Ibid. 79 Ibid, Page 523. 80 Perhaps this is an advantageous place to return to an earlier question: if we rejected Barths doctrine of an uncreated demonic, to whom do the demons bear more resemblance - God, angels, or humanity? By far, we must conclude that fallen humanity, rebellious to the core and antinomian by nature, remains the demons closest relative. We are linked by rebellion. While humankinds relationship with the divine is always metaphorical except in the person of Jesus Christ, perhaps demons should be considered as finite creatures that are relatable and comprehensible? 81 Ibid. 82 Ibid, Page 521. 83 Ibid, Page 523.

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dynamic, to the extent that it has form and power and movement and activity.” [84] In itself,

nothingness is amorphous, powerless, without direction or aim. Demons are nothingness

enabled, and they are the “exponents” of the kingdom of falsehood. [85]

In fact, because of their relationship to nothingness and their inherently rebellious nature,

demons are more independent and “free” than angels. Briefly evoking a comparison that he

disparages, Barth mentions the loyal conduct of the angels in that they never act contrary to the

direct command and pleasure of God, and writes,

He would be a lying spirit, a demon, a being which deceives both itself and others in respect of its heavenly character, if he were to try to profit from his nature and position, deriving any personal benefit, cutting an individual figure, playing an independent role, pursuing his own ends and achieving his own results. A true and orderly angel does not do this. [86]

The implication of this statement is that demons actually have personal, selfish, individualistic

ends, while angels only behave in accordance with the Lords purposes.

Barths position, as conveyed in Church Dogmatics, assumes and indicates a personal

demonic ontology. These uncreated beings are directly derived from nothingness, which is

directly derived from God. Underlying his personal demonology, Barths receptive attitude

toward the text, even in the midst of his overriding philosophy of nothingness, guides his

outcome. Having criticized Rudolph Bultmann for arbitrarily selecting what to demythologize

from the biblical witness, Barth parts ways with traditional demonology where the biblical

material is sparse and advocates a strong philosophy of nothingness. [87]

This somewhat surprising conclusion seems to mirror Berkhofs interactions with Barth.

Barth apparently had once accused Berkhof of “mythologizing” the topic of the powers. Berkhof

notes that Barth must not be “bothered” by that anymore, saying, “[Barth] is now combating the

modern spirit whose rational-scientific world view has no eye left for the power of the

Powers.” [88]

To conclude that Barth, a central theological figure in Protestant thought, implied the

reality of personal demons is a controversial conclusion, but if we look to other assessments of

the topic, we find similar hypotheses. Vernon Mallow, who composed a riveting analysis of the

84 Ibid. 85 Ibid, Page 527. 86 Ibid, Page 481. 87 Barth, Karl. “Barth on Bultmann and Demythologizing” in Modern Theology: Karl Barth, Pages 86-87. 88 Berkhof, Hendrikus. Christ and the Powers, Page 10.

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demonic theme in Edwin Lewis, Karl Barth, and Paul Tillichs theologies, unfortunately does not

tackle the Barthian issue of demonic personhood directly, but he summarily submits that “Barth

does not hesitate to state that there is a real devil with his legion of demons.” [89] Also, Paul Jones,

an associate professor at the University of Virginia who specializes in Barthian theology, allows

for the possibility that Barth aligns himself with a personhood of the demonic. He says, “…if the

devil is ever a person for [Barth], its a macabre distortion of what personhood truly is -- as

conceived in light of God's being…” [90] But he would prefer to lean toward the idea that the “talk

of demonic personhood” may be a “domestication of evil -- a way of downsizing just how

threatening that which opposes God truly is…” [91] While Jones conclusion is intriguing, it is

flawed to an extent, considering that it does not account for Barths attribution of the

theologically heavy word “being” to the demonic realm, on top of other personal indicators. [92]

However, from Jones assessment, this thesis conclusion which argues that Barth expressed a

demonic personhood is not unfounded or academically implausible. Instead, a careful digestion

of Barths demonology outlines a demonic that is personal in being. [93] This conclusion will be

further supported as we continue.

1.7 Merrill Ungers Perspective on the Personhood of the Demonic in Biblical Demonology

Merrill Unger, an Evangelical theologian with doctorate degrees from both Dallas

Theological Seminary and Johns Hopkins University, has composed a number of works on the

subject of demonology. [94] As evidenced by his three demonological works, he places a fair deal

of importance in incorporating demonologys presence into the twentieth centurys systematic

and practical theologies. Unger states,

Biblically considered, it looms large on the sacred page, and especially in the New Testament [it is] accorded remarkable prominence. It forms, together with

89 Mallow, Vernon R. The Demonic: A Selected Theological Study: An Examination into the Theology of Edwin Lewis, Karl Barth, and Paul Tillich, Page 83. 90 Jones, David. Personal correspondence, July 25, 2012. 91 Ibid. 92 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 481. 93 Throughout the research process, substantial disagreement with this conclusion was unable to be located, likely because the topic of demonic personhood is not a common study. Mallow fails to look into the issue in any depth, and Jones briefly addresses the issue because I directly inquired. 94 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology. Unger, Merrill. Demons in the World Today: A Study of Occultism in the Light of Gods Word. Unger, Merrill. What Demons Can Do to Saints. Our focus rests upon Biblical Demonology, per section 1.3 . As Unger both studied and taught at Dallas Theological Seminary, his background is rooted in the dispensational heritage of C. I. Scofield and John Darby.

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angelology and Satanology, an indispensable branch of systematic theology, dealing with the realm of evil supernaturalism. [95]

“Evil supernaturalism” is the fulcrum for Ungers analysis of the demonic.

1.7.1 Personhood in Ungers Demonology

Enlightening the worldwide phenomenon of supernatural evil and its related practices is

Ungers ultimate goal. His systematic engagement with biblical demonology serves to undergird

the reality of demonization, Satanism, divination, necromancy, and other forms of dark ritualism.

The issues of government, heresy, and eschatology are also informed by his studies. Though

“demonological phenomenon have been found to be almost universally prevalent,” Unger does

admit that the innumerable supernatural practices present a problem of abounding confusion and

complexity, but as such, we should have a “discriminating grasp” concerning biblical

demonology, being careful to allow for faulty research and inaccurate conclusions. [96]

Unger is eager to preclude argumentation against the very nature of addressing the

demonic. As they appropriately apply to the issue of personhood in Biblical Demonology, let us

briefly review his short apologies. He addresses four “problems” - the silence of revelation, the

accuracy of interpretation, the prevalence of superstition, and the preponderance of doubt. [97]

In response to the supposed silence of revelation, Unger argues that the problem is falsely

portrayed. While some phases of demonology lack biblical content, the overall topic is robustly

represented throughout Scripture. In other words, we cannot approach concrete biblical

conclusions concerning the origins of the demonic and a few other subtopics, but “this is no

barrier to a comprehensive presentation of the subject (of demonology).” [98]

A more substantial problem in Ungers perspective is the accuracy of interpretation.

Though neglect has somewhat stalled and destabilized the topics analysis, the main culprit is

extreme interpretations, rooted in “ultra-rationalism” and “extravagant superstition.” [99] He

advises that further research is essential, as demonologys “treatment in the average systematic

theology is exceedingly sketchy, if it is given any space at all.” [100]

95 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 1. 96 Ibid. 97 Ibid, Pages 2-8. 98 Ibid, Page 2. 99 Ibid, Page 3. 100 Ibid.

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Accepting Scripture as the revealed truth, the prevalence of superstition, with its endless

rituals and chthonic imagery, is also a pressing problem. Unger argues that too many people

“have lived and died in the clutches of appalling fear and absurd superstition, under thralldom of

evil supernaturalism.” [101] Such distortion has not been limited to the educationally deprived; it is

also replete among the leaders of society, with Talmudic writers being some of the worst

offenders. [102] These overwhelming excesses which are weaved throughout the fabric of humanity

add further frustration to the Christian systematic endeavor. [103]

Finally, Unger opines an obvious problem concerning a theology of demons. A

preponderance of doubt exists regarding the demonic. Most difficulties originate from the

unnatural nature of evil supernaturalism. No independent test or naturalistic observation can

construct a comprehensive scientific conclusion. “Knowledge of the supernatural can only come

through supernatural revelation, since it is above and beyond natural law.” [104] The problem is

only further conflated by the Spiritless attitude in which most skeptics approach the subject. [105]

Flowing out of these problems, when Unger develops his brief discussion regarding the

personhood of the demonic, his perspective integrates these four issues. The answer to each

concern is plainly a well-researched biblical demonology, which he tries to deliver in an

intellectual yet approachable manner. [106] Thus, we will look at his argumentation.

As we previously mentioned, in Ungers theology, demonic reality and demonic

personhood are equated. No “demon” exists apart from their conception as sinful, immaterial,

personal beings. When Unger begins his section on the nature of demons, he comments,

101 Ibid. 102 Ibid, Pages 32-34. 103 Ibid, Page 29. “Without the chart of revealed truth to guide, it would be an impossible and hopeless task to try to steer a straight course through the intricacies and complexities of heathen thought and practice. With such amazing complication of detail, and often with such refined and subtle intermixture of truth and error, the student of religion proceeding on mere naturalistic hypotheses, without the infallible guide of revelation, is like a vessel without chart, rudder, or compass, tempest-tossed on a reef-strewn sea.” 104 Ibid, Page 7. 105 1 Corinthians 2:14. In this text, Paul divides the Corinthians into two groups. “The spiritual person has achieved a level of spiritual maturity, but the merely psychic person is still in an infantile phase of development, unable to know the gifts (things) of Gods spirit because such ethereal matters can be discerned only spiritually.” While to firmly posit that skeptical endeavors are “infantile” in the demonological field would be overly harsh, to admit that spiritual perceptivity is a methodological necessity in this realm would not be ridiculous. Without the Holy Spirit, how can we expect to comprehend the truth into which He guides us? Horsley, Richard A. Abingdon New Testament Commentaries: 1 Corinthians, Page 61. 106 Ungers book Biblical Demonology is derived from his Th.D. dissertation at Dallas Theological Seminary. Ibid, Page vii.

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But it must not be supposed that because spirits are immaterial, they are any less personal. Demons, as well as all other created spiritual beings, possess personality, and are everywhere represented as intelligent and voluntary agents (Mark 5:10; Luke 4:34). [107]

Within his ontological conversation concerning the immaterial nature of the demonic, he slips in

this terse statement where demons are bluntly portrayed as personal beings. In his later work

Demons in the World Today, he elaborates on his occasional references to demonic personhood

in Biblical Demonology . In three short paragraphs, he explains that demons have “all the

elements of personality such as will, feelings, and intellect.” [108] As referenced in Biblical

Demonology, this thought is built upon the Synoptic thought of Mark and Luke.

The Gerasene demoniac narrative is one of the iconic New Testament passages

concerning the demonic. In Biblical Demonology, it is cited at least seventeen times. Unger

references Mark 5:10 in particular, “And Legion asked Jesus many times not to send them out of

the area.” [109] Presumably, he selects this as a proof text in this instance as Legion is a persistent

negotiator. Furthermore, Legion and the rest of the demons he represents are not mere mental

aberrations as they somehow transferred into and demonstrably affected the nearby herd of

pigs. [110]

Much like Mark, Luke 5:34 records the words of a demon who apparently knew Jesus of

Nazareth as the “Holy One of God.” This unusual display of superior knowledge is quoted, not

as the testimony of a lunatic, but as the spirit worlds admission of Jesus special nature. Unger

accepts these passages as written with no qualification. He does not suppose or entertain that the

author fabricated or falsely interpreted the situation. His biblicism voids the questions.

Unger avoids all attempts at demythologization; instead, he wishes to convey the biblical

material as received. Demons are real, personal beings irreparably bent upon destruction and

rebellion, though subservient to the command of God. [111] The Bible is not silent concerning their

being, and it consistently distinguishes them as independent agents. While religions and cultures

107 Ibid, Page 65. 108 Unger, Merrill. Demons in the World Today, Page 23. 109 Authors translation. 110 Mark 5:11-13. 111 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 74. “Although granted a large sphere of activity, and exercising a powerful and malignant ministry, demons, like their leader Satan, are nevertheless strictly under divine control and have a definite part in the divine plan. The span of their evil machinations is strictly determined, the sphere of their wicked operations is definitely set, and their doom is inexorably sealed. There is no unhealthy dualism in Biblical demonology.” See pages 67-68 for more on their “depravity and complete moral turpitude…”

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offer superstitious accounts and descriptions, the Scriptures avoid fantastical and outlandish

superstitions. [112] Doubt about their being and personality remains only for those who do not

properly discern the content and consistency of the biblical accounts of the demonic.

1.8 Similarities and Distinctions

When we compare Karl Barth and Merrill Ungers contributions to demonological

studies, the distinctions are many. An entire chapter might begin to catalogue their

methodological and contextual differences. But concerning the personhood of the demonic, a

couple points move to the forefront.

The major distinction is the means by which personhood is conferred. Is it indirectly

derived from God, or is it a direct creative work of God? Barth posits three statements which

lead us to conclude that he favors indirect derivation. He confirms that the demonic finds its

source in God. “God is the Lord of the demonic sphere, and it derives from Him…” [113] This

statement is later broadened with an affirmation that demons “derive from [nothingness]. They

themselves are always nothingness.” [114] Finally, Church Dogmatics also mentions that demons

are not Gods creation. [115]

The strongest relationship mentioned is the tie of the demonic to nothingness. Demons

are not only derived from nothingness, but they actually are nothingness, in personal form.

Nothingness itself is derived from God but not like His creatures which exude and bear His

affirmation and presence. Therefore, Barth directs us toward an understanding of the demonic

(including its personhood) which is indirectly derived from God.

In contrast, Ungers theology maintains that Satan and his angels were a direct creation of

God before they rebelled. [116] Possessing a conceptual conflation of ontological reality and

personhood, Unger views the demonic as having its original root in the divine, though it has been

112 His assessment of superstition is found in pages 3-6. With their ridiculous stories, Unger essentially designates the elaborate demon management systems of ancient and modern times as superstition. Yes, the biblical tone is different, but Unger does not seem to sense the utter insensibility of the biblical tone as well. People perceive the biblical narratives as ridiculous too! If Jesus were to exorcize the demonized in the streets of a Western city today, it would be seen as bizarre to most. Thus, his label of “superstition” merely describes the diverse demonological perceptions and practices that have propagated throughout the world, in contrast to the significantly distinct biblical portrait. 113 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, Page 523. 114 Ibid. 115 Ibid. 116 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 16.

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ostracized and exorcised from Gods acceptance. Demons (as fallen angels) are the result of a

direct creative work of God, though their eventual rebellious state is not condoned.

The demons relationship to God is dramatically different. Ungers “demon” is a

carefully crafted creature of God who has deviated toward destruction. Barths “demon” is the

thoroughly corrupt byproduct of Gods good creative activity. These “demons” personhoods

differ accordingly. One has received a good personhood from God and warped it by following

Satans folly. The other has come into being as an uncreated person forged out of evil, derived

from God but not rooted in Him.

While other points could be compiled, the central similarity is their agreement on the

personal ontology of demons, flowing from a receptive attitude toward biblical revelation.

Unger is upfront about his biblical adherence. He reads the text, reasons that demons are

portrayed as intelligent individual spirits, and concludes that they are such. [117] In response to

those who suggest that spirits are literary personifications of physical afflictions, Unger retorts,

“This ingenious, but false, theory is completely incompatible with the simple and direct

attribution of personality to the demons (as much as to men, angels, or God), and, if carried out

in principle, must subvert the truth and integrity of the Holy Scripture itself.” [118] But he does not

address those who would perceive the demonic as a significant reality yet impersonal.

Barth is more subtle, but he too primarily accepts the reality and personhood of demons

because of the biblical material. Though Barth is deeply affected and directed by philosophical

currents, D. F. Ford comments, “The criterion by which Barth wants to be judged is that of

fidelity to the Bible.” [119] Concerning the demonic, he interacts with revelation, especially in his

footnotes. [120] After one lengthier discourse on how the truth of God unmasks the practices of the

demonic, Barth offers, “This, then, is what Holy Scripture has to tell us concerning demons. It

certainly does not say that they do not exist or have no power or do not constitute a threat. It is

quite evident that their existence and nature are very definitely taken into account…” [121] As we

already postulated, their nature is indeed personal in his demonology. Where does this

117 This reasoned conclusion is reached amongst the influences of Ungers theological heritage in the Evangelical community. He is not a hermeneutical island; he quotes other scholars frequently. 118 Ibid, Page 91. Unger then specifically references Mark 5 as one passage that loses coherence if such a theory is applied. 119 Ford, D. F. “Conclusion: Assessing Barth” in Karl Barth Studies of His Theological Methods, Page 199. 120 His limited rationalism which George Hunsinger describes as “reason within the limits of revelation alone” appears to not be so limited concerning the demonic. Hunsinger, George. How to Read Karl Barth, Page 49. 121 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, Pages 528-529.

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ultimately originate? It courses from the Scriptures, though dressed and shaped by philosophical

inflows.

1.9 Conclusion

In this chapter, we have laid out a considerable base of literature review by which an

analysis of the personhood of the demonic can occur. Within the commonly bypassed question

regarding whether we should view demons as impersonal or personal, this thesis specifically

designated two particular conversation partners, Karl Barth and Merrill Unger. After selecting

these two primary interlocutors, terminology was defined through their particular paradigms,

emphasizing their understandings of “demon” and “personhood.” Barth defines “personhood”

through ones relationship to the divine and a “demon” as something real which is both hostile

toward and independent of Gods created realm. In contrast, Unger correlates his concept of

personhood to the issue of reality, and a “demon” is a fallen incorporeal being of profound

intelligence and unfathomable wickedness.

We then turned to the personhood of the demonic itself. Though disagreeing on major

background issues concerning the origin and nature of the demonic, both authors ultimately

affirmed the personhood of the demonic. Though not a primary subject of their systematic

endeavors, Barth and Unger nearly treated the subject of personhood as an assumed element.

We concluded that their greatest similarity lie in their receptive attitude toward the biblical

material which played a fundamental role in their overall demonological contribution.

Therefore, as we carefully move forward following the close of this introductory chapter,

a pressing question arises from Barth and Ungers agreement on the personhood of the demonic.

Since biblical studies played such a central role in forming their conclusions, how does recent

biblical scholarship relate and engage with their writings? Is there any substantial support for

their position?

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2. An Evaluation of Barth and Ungers Perspectives on the Personhood of the Demonic

in Light of Contemporary Influential Biblical Studies on Demonology

2.1 Introduction

In the last chapter, we sought to define “personhood” and “demon” through a literature

survey of Karl Barths Church Dogmatics and Merrill Ungers Biblical Demonology . After

exploring their definitions, we assessed their positions regarding the personhood of the demonic,

as to whether they preferred an impersonal or personal perspective. Subsequently, both Barth

and Unger were found to advocate for the reality of demons as personal agents, due to their

reading of the biblical material.

Since their demonologies rely heavily upon biblical studies, what does contemporary

influential biblical scholarship have to contribute to this analysis of Barth and Ungers view of

demonic personhood? Does this scholarship lead us to conclude that the biblical material

advocates the existence of personal demonic beings? What role does the popular hermeneutic of

demythologization play? Due to this standing wealth of interrogatives, we must venture to seek

answers which will further our analysis of Barth and Ungers personhood of the demonic.

Therefore, we will first address the stated primary authority of Barth and Ungers

position. We will briefly introduce the revelatory material they utilize in order to construct their

personhood of the demonic. Following this, tracing the issue of demonic personhood in

contemporary influential biblical scholarship becomes our primary concern. After discerning the

overall attitude toward the issue of demonic personhood, Barth and Ungers primary texts will

then be reassessed, along with interaction with the topic of demythologization. Finally, we will

offer support and criticism for Barth and Unger from that recent scholarship, while also allowing

Barth and Ungers works to defend their hypotheses.

2.2 The Scope of Interaction

In order to achieve our stated ends, we must narrow the scope of the biblical scholarship

which we will pair as interlocutors with Barth and Unger. The first criterion we will utilize is

“contemporary.” This thesis will primarily engage recent biblical and theological works, penned

subsequently to the publication of Church Dogmatics and Biblical Demonology . Also, another

criterion is that the commentaries, articles, and books quoted must be of considerable influence

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in contemporary studies, widely read or academically published. But it should not be

misconstrued that this chapter is a complete compilation of every contribution to the

demonological field that could possibly relate to this thesis. Rather, these articles, dictionary

offerings, and critical commentary materials are selected as representative of the greater whole

within the academic realm.

Finally, while demonological/spiritism studies exists in numerous religious and

sociological contexts, the scholarship assessed in this chapter will be Christian and biblical,

intentionally including more than a single strand of Christian thought. By choosing Christian

biblical scholarship for the analysis of Barth and Ungers demonological ontology, this thesis is

not asserting that other religious contributions are unworthy of study. Thus, let us first glean but

a few of the central texts from Barth and Ungers demonologies as we begin to delve into

contemporary biblical scholarships contribution on the matter of demonic personhood.

2.3 Central Biblical Texts in Barths Personhood of the Demonic

As we engage biblical scholarship with Karl Barths demonology, it is crucial that we

grasp the biblical material which undergirds his theology. This is a daunting task due to the path

by which he arrives at his perspective. Barth does not simply state a theological position and

then proof text his point with a list of biblical references (as an Evangelical, Merrill Unger is

much more affiliated with this style of theological composition). While Barth states that his

demonology is staunchly rooted in Scripture, the reality is that his argumentation is logically tied

the biblical text, not directly linked. [122]

Why does Barth write about demons? He declares their reality but also their drastic

dissimilarity from the angels, saying, “The two spheres do not belong together either by origin or

nature.” [123] But then he mentions that the demonic horde and the angelic host do intersect

concerning their activity! This operation-oriented opposition leads us to Barths direct citing of

biblical information. After trying to dismiss the pandemonium of problems surrounding the

usage of “angel” to describe Satans servants in Matthew 25:41, Revelation 12:7, and 2

Corinthians 12:7; he still seeks to disassociate the two parties yet admits,

In the few biblical passages in which angels and demons are seen together at all (as in the “war in heaven” of Rev. 12:7f. or the brief encounter at the temptation

122 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 529. 123 Ibid, Pages 519-520.

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in Mk. 1:12), they are always understood to be in radical conflict. This radical conflict ought to have been regarded as a radical and essential determination on both sides. The devil and demons ought never to have been seen or understood otherwise than in this essential conflict. [124]

Ergo, it is clear, methodologically speaking, that the Bible speaks powerfully into his theological

formation. [125]

As we previously established, Barth thinks that demons are indirectly derived from God,

almost as an eddy formed by a passing ship. Demons are a consequence of Gods creative work,

and “they are nothingness in its dynamic, to the extent that it has form and power and movement

and activity.” [126] What texts shall we examine to correlate such statements? Barths next

sentence says, “This is how Holy Scripture understands this alien element.” [127] But we are left on

our own to discern exactly how he arrived at such a “biblical” conclusion. It may be better said,

“This is how Barth understands this alien element in Holy Scripture.”

We can conclude that having a robust understanding of demonic personhood does clarify

and support his biblical conclusions concerning angelic and demonic activity. But he does not

overtly support his argument from a biblical passage that personhood is derived from ones

relationship to the Creator and that demons are uncreated offspring, derived from God.

However, in general, his brief treatments of biblical texts concerning demonology distinguish the

implication that he accepts the texts basic ontological implications. Demons exist but should

not be associated with angels, except in the context of conflict.

2.4 Central Biblical Texts in Ungers Personhood of the Demonic

Merrill Ungers Biblical Demonology, as evidenced by the title, is littered with scriptural

references in order to support his theses. [128] His strict biblically-founded style is briefly

expounded in his defense of the reality of the demonic. He argues,

The evidence of revelation is put first, not because it is expected more effectively to impress the skeptic (he seems unimpressed by any Scriptural declaration), but

124 Ibid, Page 520. 125 Barth additionally cites Romans 8:38 and John 8:44 during his treatment of the demonic (Pages 520, 531). Genesis 6:1-14, Jude 6, and 2 Peter 2:4 are only mentioned in order that he might dismiss them as “uncertain and obscure.” Ibid, Page 530. 126 Ibid, Page 523. 127 Ibid. 128 His Scripture index spans pages 245-250. He cites over two thirds of the sixty-six canonical books throughout his composition.

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because intrinsically it is the most important witness. Demons do exist, first and foremost, for God in His Word says they exist. [129]

This priority continues to permeate his argumentation. He later comments, “When Luke writes

that Satan entered into Judas (Luke 22:3), he most certainly implies that the dynamic of his

crime and suicide was Satan or demonic agency. The burden of proof, therefore, rests upon the

skeptics…” Scripture speaks, and he demands others to elucidate otherwise.

In Ungers most direct statement concerning the personhood of the demonic, he loosely

corroborates his conclusion with a pair of biblical references. Obviously, no particular text in the

revelatory witness amounts to a systematic demonology. The behavioral descriptions of

narratives serve as his verification. He says, “Demons… possess personality, and are

everywhere represented as intelligent and voluntary agents (Mark 5:10, Luke 4:34).” [130]

Throughout his demonology, the Synoptic testimony is centrally featured, though well supported

through Old Testament literature and epistolary theology. But what does recent influential

biblical scholarship have to offer to the issue of the personhood of the demonic?

2.5 Contemporary Influential Biblical Scholarship and the Personhood of the Demonic

The personhood of the demonic is not treated as an important theme in biblical

scholarship. [131] Perhaps certain interpretive, demythologization exercises are thought to best suit

the demonological field, but too often, the topic remains an assumed element, either with

demythologization or literalism previously accepted. Thankfully, biblical scholarship does offer

information which shapes and aids the subject. Thus, we will begin by assessing the

development of the idea of “demons” and then navigate Old and New Testament scholarship

through the lens of demonic personhood. Lastly, we will engage a number of prominent

scholars commentaries on the specific texts referenced by Barth and Unger in support of their

demonologies.

129 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 36. 130 Ibid, Page 64. 131 It could be argued that via the discussion concerning Satan, which has been set outside the limits of this particular study, demonological personhood is frequently discussed, but it is the opinion of this thesis that demons and their personhood remain underdeveloped. But even after an examination of Breytenbach and Days article on Satan, the identity of Satan (or “the satan ” depending on the textual construction of the passage they are examining) is questioned. Personhood is less of an issue, especially since Day links the meaning of the Satan with ancient Akkadian terms which denote “a human legal opponent” or “a deity acting as an accuser in a legal context.” Breytenbach, C. and P. L. Day. “Satan” in The Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (DDD), Page 727.

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While it is a topic of importance, this thesis cannot address at length the hermeneutical

disparity which exists in demonological studies resulting from diverse paradigm affiliations. We

recognize that some authors, believing in the reality of a personal demonic realm, prefer to

harmonize the varying contributions to demonological thought by the numerous biblical genres

and texts. In such cases, a canonical and cohesive demonology is sought. In other cases, authors

prefer to cite the subjects diversity with the biblical testimony as evidence of mythical inclusion,

advocating that numerous cultural manifestations of demonology are present in the canon rather

than one divine cosmological thought. Essentially, some prefer to highlight biblical unity, and

some prefer to emphasize biblical diversity.

2.5.1 The Development of Demonic Personhood

Since the conception of the word “demon” (from the Greek daimon, daimonion ),

personhood was implied. [132] In classical Greek thought, the imagery conveyed by “demon”

conjured up thoughts of full-fledged deities, capricious demigods, or souls of the deceased “who

now invisibly watch over human affairs.” [133] They were an unseen reality which dwelled in

chthonic lairs or heavenly abodes. More “persons” existed than empirical observation could

indicate, though myths and religious annals varied in the description of their power and number.

It would be an egregious error to not mention that daimon and daimonion had an impersonal

cacophony of usages as well. Alongside their reference to gods and eventually “personal

intermediary beings,” daimon could occasionally depicted stars, consciences, or simply a divine

portion of the anthropological. [134]

Though the framework of personhood is implied in the concept of the demonic (when

referring to beings), the moral nature of those beings was often ambiguous. “The word

translated demon in the literature preceding and contemporary with Scripture is not always

negative.” [135] After Homer and others maintained an essentially neutral understanding of the

word, it is best understood that “the exclusively negative charge associated with demons

doubtless represents a secondary development reflecting an understanding that opposes them to

132 Twelftree, Graham. “Demon” in The New Interpreters Dictionary of the Bible, Volume 2, Page 91. 133 Riley, G. C. “Demon” in The Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (DDD), Page 235. 134 Foerster, Werner. “ Daimon ” in The Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Pages 2-3. 135 Dictionary of Biblical Imagery, Page 202.

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the gods.” [136] Throughout the Ancient Near East, moral qualifiers were still commonplace in

order to denote that a particular demon was “evil.” Zoroastrianism was the prominent exception,

and this Persian dualism became more prevalent throughout the intertestamental period. [137] Even

as late as Lukes authorship of Acts, neutral uses of “demon” were acceptable. [138] But let us

specifically focus on the personhood of the demonic in each testament. [139]

2.5.2 Old Testament Thought and Demonic Personhood

Before we begin to interact with the biblical scholarship concerning the Old and New

Testaments, a canonical perspective is essential. While we can delve into the particular

complexities of each individual author and genera in relationship to demonic personhood, the

nature of revelation itself dictates that a particular level of divulged information results in a

particular level of clarity. With further revelation, a topical theology is increasingly clarified.

Hence, the author of Hebrews offers insight into Old Testament mysteries and ambiguities. It is

no surprise that demonic personhood continues to be increasingly illuminated throughout the

progressing revelations of the Old and New Testament. [140]

The issue of demonic personhood in the Old Testament is multi-faceted. “The Hebrew of

the OT, as the other Semitic languages of the ancient Near East, had no single, comprehensive

term for demonic figures as did the ancient Greeks.” [141] Due to this issue, the identification of

“demons” has proved more problematic. Joanne Kuemmerlin-McLean admits that this has

resulted in inconsistency and adds, “The most generally accepted understanding is of demons as

evil spirits who live in ruins and the desert and are responsible for illness and natural

disasters.” [142] But scholarship remains fragmented as to the exact amount of demons or demonic

figures in the OT. With some having historically opted for an Old Testament demonology

136 Hutter, Manfred. “Demons and Spirits: I. History of Religion (Ancient Near East and Antiquity)” in Religion Past & Present, Page 747. 137 Ibid. See section 4.5 for more on Zoroastrianism. 138 Pervo says that Acts 17:18 is the only instance in the New Testament where daimonia is “in a nonpejorative sense.” Pervo, Richard I. Acts: A Commentary, Page 428. 139 As we proceed, we will interact not only with articles related to our task but also with critical commentaries. No effort was exerted to selected favorable commentaries; rather, the primary prerequisite was their academic quality, in that they engaged with other scholars, the original languages, and cognates. 140 Barth also remarks about the progressive clarity of the demonic from the Old to the New Testaments. He strongly argues that this is a result of Gods continuing triumph and the “kingdom of God coming from heaven to earth.” All that opposes the Christ is “driven from the field” and exposed more clearly as it flees. Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics . III, 3, Page 529. 141 Aune, D. E. “Demon” in The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, Page 919. 142 Kuemmerlin-McLean, Joanne K. “Demon” in The Anchor Bible Commentary, Volume 2, Page 139.

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trifurcated between angelic, animalistic, and human type demons; such endeavors seems

ambitious when there appears to be no clear overarching OT perspective accessible for easy

systemization. [143] A bifurcation does not appear helpful either. [144] This thesis posits that it is only

by the fruition of the New Testament that we ascertain enough insight for an adequate

demonology and a proper response to it. A survey of a few major demonic terms identified in

the Old Testament (bringing to light any specific material regarding their personhood) is in

order, but we must try to avoid ambitious systematic conclusions.

Demonic personas do present as animal-like creatures throughout the Old Testament.

Spirits of the wilderness and deserted places are described as goat demons ( seirim ) and wild

beasts (Isaiah 13:21, 34:14). [145] Apparently, cultic worship grew up around these figures

(Leviticus 17:7, 2 Chronicles 11:15). Strangely enough, this imagery continues into the

Apocalypse (18:2). Understood as beings, their presence is the direct result of divine judgment

in Isaiah and the subject of condemnation of false worship in Leviticus, but it would be

presumptuous to align such beings as personal manifestations of evil from the Old Testament

text alone.

The worship of other gods is often considered demonic. [146] Psalms 106:37 says, “They

even sacrificed their sons and their daughters to the demons ( shedhim ).” [147] In other instances

like Deuteronomy 32:17, this concept of false worship sets up these gods as actual demons.

However, like the animalistic demons of the OT, these references do little to elucidate a

particular personhood attributable to demons. They are beings but vaguely so. [148]

Perhaps the most intriguing Old Testament texts involve various spirits ( ruach ). In 1

Kings 22, Micaiah recounts a vision of a heavenly scene to Ahab and Jehoshaphat, wherein God

is determining Ahabs end. In this instance, a “deceiving spirit” agrees to trick Ahab to his

appointed death through the mouths of prophets. Then God guarantees the spirit that his mission

will prove successful! While bearing some resemblance to the throne room scene of Job, we are

143 Ferguson, Everett. Demonology of the Early Christian World, Page 88. 144 Kuemmerlin-McLean, Joanne K. “Demon” in The Anchor Bible Commentary, Volume 2, Page 139 145 Riley, G. C. “Demon” in The Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (DDD), Page 237. 146 Eshel, Esther, and Daniel C. Harlow. “Demons and Exorcism” in The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism, Page 531. This OT thought became increasingly pronounced through the interpretive nature of the Septuagint. 147 New American Standard Bible (NASB). 148 Dickason, C. Fred. Angels: Elect and Evil, Page 152. By no means does this section comprehensively categorize every possible reference to the demonic in the Old Testament literature. Dickason offers a number of others, but we must be careful to accept the original text without overvaluing the interpretation of the LXX translators.

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at a loss to exactly determine this spirits origin and nature, but the spirits activity is well defined, shaped by its verbal abilities, immoral qualifications, and locational specificity. [149]

In another text where a spirit is commissioned by God for His purposes, Saul is troubled

by an evil spirit.

Now the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from the Lord terrorized him. Sauls servants then said to him, “Behold now, an evil spirit from God is terrorizing you” … So it came about whenever the evil spirit from God came to Saul, David would take the harp and play it with his hand; and Saul would be refreshed and be well, and the evil spirit would depart from him. [150]

Confirming the absence of dualistic influence in the Tanahk, this evil spirit is again present as an

aspect of Gods judgment against the reign of Saul. Because of the reaction of Sauls advisors,

the removal of the Spirit of God and the arrival of the evil spirit left little doubt that something

was wrong, which they correctly diagnosed as an evil spirit. [151] This spirit is then temporally

affected by the audible influence of Davids harp; the apotropaic music furnished relief to Saul.

Personhood is not a remarkable feature of this particular incident, nor can we discern a direct

link to the demonic without integrating the testimony of other canonical works.

One other instance involving a spirit is even more unusual and difficult to interpret. In

Job 4:12-21, the author records Eliphaz encounter with the supernatural (v12-16) and the

message delivered by the spirit (v17-21). The encounter is especially dramatic.

Now a word was brought to me stealthily, And my ear received a whisper of it. Amid disquieting thoughts from the visions of the night, When deep sleep falls on men. Dread came upon me, and trembling, And made all my bones shake. Then a spirit passed by my face; The hair of my flesh bristled up. It stood still, but I could not discern its appearance; A form was before my eyes; There was silence, then I heard a voice... [152]

149 By “locational specificity,” it is meant that the spirit was present before God, and then it was not. The text does not convey it as a general rule, law, or force which is metaphorically omnipresent, ambiguously present, or absent. Instead, the text conveys that this deceiving spirit was locationally before God, commanded by God, and eventually brought about the fulfillment of its earthly task, considering Ahabs death at the end of the passage. 150 1 Samuel 16:14-15, 23; NASB. 151 The relationship of rulers and the supernatural is an unusually common theme throughout Scripture. 152 Job 4:12-16, NASB.

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In his opening salvo against Job, Eliphaz recapitulates a horrific nighttime visitation as the

primary content of his response. He “claims a privileged revelation that gives him special insight

concerning the nature of humankind.” [153] But is this frightening exchange from God? While

Eliphaz evidently considers the event to have divine origins, the context of Gods eventual

rebuke of Eliphaz in Job 42:7 opens the possibility that this spirit was acting deceptively, thus

explaining the terrifying circumstances. [154] This unique instance does not by any means define a

spirit as a person, but it is peculiar that while “spirit… is never used of an apparition in the OT…

here the spirit is given a semblance of form.” [155]

Due to the demythological currents in modern theology, depersonalization of such

“demon-like” figures in the OT is common practice. For instance, Adrian Hastings submits, “In

particular, there is no reason internal to Genesis for thinking the serpent in the Garden of Eden

(3:1-15) was a spiritual being in disguise…” and he concludes, “it was simply a snake.” [156]

While he himself understands the text as conveying a mere snake, it would be unwise to

conclude that the text itself is arguing that point, especially considering the snakes role in the

protoevangelium, the radical inbreaking of deception, the snakes unusual ability to speak, and

the subsequent interpretation of this text in Jewish thought. [157]

In conclusion, the OT text does not advocate nor deny a personhood of the demonic per

se, but it does describe other persons. The existence of personal entities beside God and

humanity is a given, but to declare a “personhood of the demonic” in the OT would be

presumptuous. [158] The passages themselves do not demonstrate an overarching demonological

theme to which we could attribute personhood, though the LXX and other writings translate and

interpret one. The OT is content to display a variety of beings/spirits which manifest as powerful

153 Balentine, Samuel E. Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary: Job, Page 110. 154 Note Eliphaz use of “breath/spirit” in verses 9 and 15 in chapter 4. 155 Pope, Marvin H. The Anchor Bible: Job, Page 37. 156 Hastings, Adrian. “Devil” in The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought, Page 164. 157 Outside of Genesis, another instance of an animal speaking is found in Numbers 22. That conversation between Balaam and his donkey also originated with supernatural intervention. 158 In the theological arena, this conclusion is not without dissenters. In an attempt to “write off” the reality of demons and intermediate beings of any kind, Labooy states, “I conclude that it runs counter to the ethical-religious intentions of the OT to fill the space between God and man with intermediaries. Nevertheless, in the NT, these syncretistic figures acquire power over people, in spite of Moses and the prophets. From this perspective, we can say that the (syncretistic) demons constitute a category that is primarily relevant for the people in question in a mythical and psychological sense, but then only in their understanding and experience. Therefore, they are the ideal extras in the final scene. However, none of this implies real existence. Seen in this way, the OT can then be allowed to speak the last word: In the OT perspective, which should be accepted as normative, they do not exist.” He then unreservedly demythologizes the demonic realm, with virtually no interaction with the biblical text or scholars. Labooy, Guus. Freedom and Dispositions, Pages 277-278.

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malevolencies which sit under the authority of the one God, directed by His command and

indicative of His judgment. Classifying them under one heading as “demons” is not plausible

given the scholarship in this field.

2.5.3 New Testament Thought and Demonic Personhood

The New Testament witness toward the personhood of the demonic shares a strong

affinity and similarity with the previous demonological thought of the Jewish Scriptures, though

sharply devoid of their wealth of ritualistic superstition commonplace by the time of the NT.

The Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament links their demonological structures

consistently, saying, “The demonology assumed by Jesus and the Synoptics is clearly that of

Ancient Judaism… the Catholic epistles reflect the ancient Jewish mythological theme… all

strata of the NT are in agreement in adopting the structures of ancient Jewish demonology.” [159]

Utilizing Greek terms, “they presuppose the ideas about demons that were current in the Jewish

world of their day. For them, demons stand between God and humans; they are the opponents of

the former and harmful to the latter.” [160] This establishes that the authors of the New Testament

were indeed grounded in ancient Jewish didactic currents, but does this link the testaments?

In the shadow of an OT demonology lacking a “tidy development,” the NT thought on

the subject is surprisingly helpful and cohesive, offering clarity and substance in the context of

demonologys “soteriological implications.” [161] G. F. Twelftree says concerning spiritual powers

in the Bible, “While the NT picture is more developed than that of the OT, there is significant

continuity between the Testaments.” [162] Simply put, the witness of the Christian writers describes

a demonology which preserves and expands upon the OT demonological vaguenesses without

imposing harsh conflict. As the text of the NT speaks openly about the demonic, let us peruse

through recent scholarship regarding each major authorial grouping and investigate their view

toward the personhood of the demonic.

The Synoptics gospels speak repeatedly and clearly about the demonic. Jesus ministry

reportedly supersedes the exorcism norms from that time. Avoiding the use of apotropaic

methodologies, “Jesus simply orders the demons to leave their victims. This picture stands in

159 Böcher, O. “ Daimonion ” in The Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, Pages 272-274. 160 Röhl, Wolfgang G. “Demons” in The Encyclopedia of Christianity, Pages 794-795. 161 Twelftree, G. F. “Spiritual Powers” in New Dictionary of Biblical Theology, Pages 796-797. 162 Ibid, Page 796.

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stark contrast to the exorcisms of the world of antiquity…” [163] How often did Jesus perform such

unusual exorcisms? While we cannot know for sure, it does seem to be a central feature of His

ministry as “the first three gospels relate seven distinct instances of Jesus performance of an

exorcism.” [164] This significant portion of biblical material grants a particularly robust offering of

information concerning demons themselves. They are “thought of in thoroughly personal terms:

they know secrets such as the identity of Jesus; they know their fate, give an account of

themselves, and can be brought to silence (Mark 1:24, 34 par. Luke 4:34, 41; Mark 3:11; 5:7;

par.; cf. Jas 2:19).” [165] Even the violent movement of the demonized in Mark 1/Luke 4 is directly

linked to the demon.

In a sense, the exorcism narratives of the Synoptics portray demons as if they are

“animating a puppet from the inside.” [166] Evidenced by a myriad of physical and mental

maladies, the authors definitively identify demons/spirits as the source of the ills. They are the

invisible cause to the visible effects. The unseen evil spiritual world directly disturbs the

tangible realm. Additionally, pericopes like Mark 5s account of Jesus conversation with

Legion lend credence to the argument that the original authors intended demons to be understood

as powerful personal beings.

Lukes letter to Theophilus, the book of Acts, carries on many of the same traits and

descriptions of the Synoptics, though exorcisms are only described with relation to pneumata not

daimonia . [167] As a further development of the Synoptic recordings of public recognitions of

Jesus by demons; the knowledge, authority, and identity of Jesus now serves the Christian

leadership in the book of Acts. Not only Paul (16:18) but numerous disciples “heal and exorcise

successfully in the name of Jesus (3:6, 16; 4:7, 10, 30)…” [168] The phrase “in the name of Jesus”

is also illuminated as being more than a mere exorcism formula by the sons of Sceva who

received a rude response and a physical beating from a demonized man. The verbal exchange

163 Guelich, Robert A. “Spiritual Warfare: Jesus, Paul and Peretti” in PNEUMA: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, Vol. 13, Num. 1, Page 39. Apotropiac items do not frequent the biblical page with regularity, but Acts 19:11 does detail one unusual instance where objects related to Paul were empowered and causing miraculous results. 164 Emmrich, Martin. “The Lucan Account of the Beelzebul Controversy” in Westminster Theological Journal, 62, Page 268. 165 Böcher, O. “ Daimonion ” in The Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, Page 272. 166 Riley, G. C. “Demon” in The Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (DDD), Page 239. 167 Daimonion is used once by the Athenians in Acts 17:18, but it appears to be a neutral use of the word. 168 Böcher, O. “ Daimonion ” in The Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, Page 273.

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between the sons of Sceva and the evil spirit continues to convey a demonic realm which is

knowledgeable and personal.

The Pauline corpus provides a wrinkle in the NT demonological fabric. Though replete

with references to Satan, the devil, spirits, and angels; daimonion only shows up in 1 Corinthians

10 concerning idol worship and 1 Timothy 4 concerning deceitful doctrine. Unlike the Synoptics

and Acts which record narratives, Paul lends the demonic no voice. Instead, demons are

portrayed within the didactic nature of his epistles. Thus, as a subject matter, Pauls works

illuminate them as the party ultimately “responsible for false teaching…” because “competing

gods are demons.” [169]

Pauls theology builds a framework of cosmic powers, rulers, and authorities upon this

“demon/competing god” thought. Aside from God and humanity, Pauls worldview “is also

disturbingly full of other personal agents of power who work harm against us…” [170] Avoiding a

dualistic worldview, these powers are fragile and have been disarmed by the cross. [171] While

they continue to exist under the authority and victory of Christ, their destruction is certain. [172] As

for why this Pauline theological thread is not more prominent in popular preaching, some

suggest that “the gods of this world have blinded the Church to its own scriptures with respect to

the principalities and powers.’” [173]

With writers who are comfortable and committed to discussing demonology, it is

commonplace to see these powers equated with demonic realities on a one to one basis. “Pauls

mature doctrine interpreted demonic opposition to the gospel in terms of angelic Principalities,

Authorities and Powers… Throne and Dominations… These personal and cosmic forces had,

however, been brought under subjection by God…” [174] Along those lines, the Pauline “elements”

( stoicheia ) of Galatians 4 are also occasionally correlated with demonic forces. Indeed, extra

biblical writings from before Pauls time, such as the Testament of Solomon, further these

169 Kollmann, Bernd. “Demons and Spirit: III. New Testament” in Religion Past and Present: Encyclopedia of Theology and Religion, Page 749. Riley, G. C. “Demon” in The Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (DDD), Page 240. 170 Neyrey, Jerome H. “Bewitched in Galatia: Paul and Cultural Anthropology” in The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, Page 88. 171 Colossians 2:15. In Wilsons summary of this brief section of the letter to Colossae, he summarizes, “The bond that stood against them has been canceled, through the cross of Christ, who has triumphed over all the powers that once brought fear into their lives.” Wilson, R. McL. Colossians and Philemon, Page 214. 172 1 Corinthians 15:24-27. 173 Wylie-Kellermann, Bill. “Not Vice Versa. Reading the Powers Biblically: Stringfellow, Hermeneutics, and the Principalities” in Anglican Theological Review, Vol. LXXXI, Num. 4, Page 668. 174 Woods, Richard. “Demons” in The New Dictionary of Theology, Pages 275-276.

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arguments as they use “elements” and “demons” to refer to the same entities. [175] In sum, a power

or element is a demonic person, so to speak.

But when we assess the biblical material itself, a more sustainable conclusion, especially

considering the lack of personal indicators, might be that these powers are actually structures and

forces completely controlled or merely manipulated by the personal demonic realm. Romans

8:38-39, which contains both demons and powers in the same list, directs us toward a more

nuanced definition than simple equation. For instance, if we consider the relationship of the

demonic to heresy, Paul did not insist that false teaching is a demon in 1 Timothy 4, but rather,

he indicates that heresy originates from demonic sources and is sustained through demonic

oversight. A firm conclusion would be hasty, but Pauls theology of the powers could finger a

demonic scheme rather than a demonic agent (though Ephesians 6:11-12 does require special

attention). The powers are vaguely set up as “spiritual powers in the heavenlies who [stand]

behind human activity and institutions.” [176] But further study into this matter is merited.

The book of James has one passage which references the daimonia . James 2:19 reads,

“You believe that God is one. You do well; the demons also believe, and shudder.” In the

Anchor Commentary series, Luke Johnson links this passage to the gospel narratives in which

the demons recognize and identify Christ. [177] It is even proposed that the text alludes to the

practices recorded in Jewish literature and the corresponding items which cause demons to

shudder. [178] But the shuddering itself is likely the result of fear.

Concerning the personhood of the demonic, this passage does appear to equate the ability

of belief in a human capacity with the demonic ability to believe. Obviously, one is redemptive

in nature and the other is simple admission. But the resulting fearful shuddering evidences

something like personal behavior.

The Johannine writings confirm the demonological contributions of the rest of the NT.

First John 4:1-4 identifies false prophets as originating from spirits, presumably evil since they

are set up in contrast to the divine. The gospel of John grants insight into unusual circumstances.

In chapters seven through ten, Jesus has to repeatedly defend His nature, for they accuse him of

having a daimonion . While the other gospels select narratives which highlight His miraculous

175 Arnold, Clinton E. “Returning to the Domain of the Powers: Stoicheia as Evil Spirits In Galatians 4:3, 9” in Novum Testamentum, Vol. XXXVIII, Num. 1, Page 58. 176 New Dictionary of Biblical Theology, Page 801. 177 Johnson, Luke Timothy. The Anchor Bible: the Letter of James, Page 241. 178 Dibelius, Martin. James: A Commentary on the Epistle of James, Page 160.

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repudiation of evil, Jesus in the book of John responds with doctrine and dialogue. Regardless,

Jesus is rejected, as “the pneuma of Jesus is suspected of being of diabolical origin…” [179]

Through these passages, it presumably confirms that false teachers and less reputable miracle

workers were associated with demonization.

Revelation confirms earlier demonological thought, though it is translated into the

imagery-driven apocalyptic genre. We observe standard biblical themes regarding the demonic,

such as 9:20, in which the text “designates pagan gods as daimonia …” [180] The text says, “The

rest of mankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands,

so as not to worship demons, and the idols of gold and of silver and of brass and of stone and of

wood, which can neither see nor hear nor walk…” [181] In context, demons are listed as having

stolen worship. The exact relationship between demons and idols is not distinguished, as the

“works of their hands” clearly refers to the idols of various substances. [182]

Also, the ancient theme of demons haunting ruins and desolate places, recapitulated by

Jesus in Matthew 12:43, resurfaces again in Revelation 18:2 regarding the ruins of Babylon.

Overall, the plethora of demonic mentions in Revelation does little to develop the concept of

demonic personhood, due to the wealth of vision-related anthropomorphisms and other figurative

methodologies. The genre itself is not advantageous or conducive for establishing ontological

realities, but constructing an argument that Revelation detracts from a personhood of the

demonic is difficult.

One final theme that surfaces in the remainder of the Catholic Epistles is the disobedient

angels. In keeping with Genesis 6:1-4 and the Jewish tradition concerning angelic interference

in the ancient world; the imprisoned spirits of 1 Peter 3:19 “are probably fallen, malevolent

angels.” [183] Combined with Jude 6 and 2 Peter 2:4, a case for NT continuity with the Genesis

6:1-4 text can be made. Though we can conclude that spiritual forces are the oratory audience

and the recipients of divine chastisement (by some sort of divine condescension) like personal

179 Böcher, O. “ Daimonion ” in The Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, Page 273. 180 Ibid. 181 NASB. 182 One could read this and conclude that demons are the result of human construction, but since it is a vague text, one could just as easily argue that demons have seized upon the opportunity created through idolatry or fostered the growth of idolatry altogether. However, the latter explanation seems to fit with conceptual picture of the demonic in Revelation. 183 New Dictionary of Biblical Theology, Page 800.

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beings, the trouble which demands further study is to whether these disobedient angels should be

conflated with the pernicious demons, but this issue lies outside our task.

In the NT writings, we observed a clear category of personal, spiritual beings labeled as

demons. The majority of the NT contributors not only mention demons, but they describe them

in personal terms. Recent biblical scholarship largely acknowledged this biblical reality. [184]

Having surveyed biblical texts and corresponding scholarship concerning the personhood of the

demonic, let us now turn to the specific texts utilized by Barth and Unger.

2.5.4 Central Texts in Barth and Ungers Perspective on Demonic Personhood in light of

Modern Influential Biblical Commentaries

Earlier, we asserted that Barth and Unger develop their theology of demons from their

receptive attitude toward the biblical text. Following that assertion, we briefly included a few

texts which underpin their perspective. In this section, we will examine the opinions of a few

scholars on those particular verses.

In Barths Church Dogmatics, Revelation 12 is cited more than once as a proof text to

further his logical reasoning. Barth is undeterred in his biblical acceptance, as he cites epistles,

gospels, and the apocalypse with espoused realism. In response to the demythologization

project, Barth argues, “It would no doubt suit [demons] very well to be grouped with the

angels… and in this exalted company to be demythologised, to have their reality denied, to be

interpreted away.” [185]

In contrast, the text itself, in its descriptive vision-relaying manner, does little to imply

personhood to the dragon/Satan and his angels, and commentators offer little as well. David

Aune, in the Word Biblical Commentary, directs his attention to the origin of this “mythic

narrative in vv 7-9…” [186] Jürgen Roloffs commentary on chapter 12 advocates that “Revelation

sees here in Satan the mysterious power that from the beginning of human history personified

resistance against God…” [187] Ergo, the text regurgitates the mythical battle between good and

evil, and Satan, though presented in personal terms, is not a personal being but a representation

184 E.g., Woods, Richard. “Demons” in The New Dictionary of Theology, Pages 275-276. Neyrey, Jerome H. “Bewitched in Galatia: Paul and Cultural Anthropology” in The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, Page 88. Böcher, O. “ Daimonion ” in The Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, Page 272. 185 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics . III, 3, Page 521. 186 Aune, D. E. Word Biblical Commentary: Revelation 6-16, Page 663. 187 Roloff, Jürgen. Revelation: A Continental Commentary, Page 148.

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of rebellion in the created order. But problems with this conclusion exist in the text. Let us

examine it a little more closely.

A great deal of interpretive direction is implicit in Revelation 12. Verse 5 ushers us into

understanding the male child as being the person of Jesus, the victorious King and Messiah.

Though debate continues as to the exact identity of the woman, verse 17 does lend itself to the

idea that the woman and her offspring represent actual persons (whether corporate or individual

is insignificant for this discussion). Is it not then possible that the other participants in this

cosmic drama amount to personal beings as well? No theologian should argue that God is

symbolic for something other than Himself in this passage. So God, the woman, and the child

are clearly symbolic for persons. What grounds exist in the text itself to lend credibility to an

impersonal interpretation for any of the participants? In response to Roloff and Aune, perhaps

Revelation does not exemplify the figurative nature of Satan and intermediary beings throughout

Scripture. Perhaps Revelation affirms cosmic realities, including God, through the veil of

apocalyptic literature.

Alvin Plantinga provides a suitable excursus at this point. He remarks:

Many philosophers… have complained that it is extremely implausible, in our enlightened day and age, to suppose that there is such a thing as Satan, let alone his cohorts… Whether or not one finds the view in question plausible or implausible will of course depend on what else one believes; the theist already believes in the existence of at least one non-human person who is active in history: God. Accordingly the suggestion that there are other such persons that human beings arent the only sorts of persons God has created may not seem at all implausible to him. [188]

In other words, as theists, we have no reason to rashly dismiss the interpretation that these texts

portray unseen persons. They remain plausible.

In Ungers Biblical Demonology, Luke 4 and Mark 5 feature prominently. In Luke 4:33

37, we observe Jesus casting out a demonic spirit. Introduced as a spirit of an unclean demon,

Luke might be “establishing… his basic vocabulary for demon possession” so he can use these

words interchangeably in a negative manner. [189] Darrell Bock paints the scene as a “personal

188 Plantinga, Alvin. Quoted in Keith Ferdinandos Triumph of Christ in an African Perspective: A Study of Demonology and Redemption in the African Context, Page 373. Originally from J. Tomberlin and P. van Inwagens (editors) Alvin Plantinga Profiles 5, Page 43. (Dordrecht; D. Reidel, 1985.) 189 Nolland, John. Word Biblical Commentary: Luke 1-9:20, Page 206. With Lukes one neutral use of daimonion in Acts 17:18, Nollands suggestion makes sense.

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confrontation.” [190] Citing the early church father Clement and others, Bock finds that the

situation paints the demon as feeling “opposed and threatened.” [191] The remarks made by the

demon reveal an emotion of “surprise and/or displeasure.” [192] The demon apparently knew who

Jesus was, unusually identifying Him as the “Holy One of God.” The New American

Commentary deduces, “We are not told how the demon knew Jesus identity, but the assumption

is that they possessed supernatural knowledge and thus recognized him.” [193] But the crux of the

narrative lies in the restoration and freedom that Jesus “the Holy One of God” offers

humanity in His authority over the demon. The result of the encounter depicts the awe of the

crowd in light of Christs words, and “the demon openly admits defeat by throwing the liberated

man into the midst of the crowd as it leaves him, and by doing this without hurting the man.” [194]

Mark 5:1-20 is often reflected upon as the prototypical deliverance passage. Subtly

mocking contemporary Western theologys aversion toward this story, Donald Juel of Princeton

University comments that he “never heard it read in church... probably because there are all sorts

of uncomfortable things about the story unclean spirits who talk, drowned pigs, and people

who respond to miracles by asking Jesus to leave. [195] ” Yet he continues onward, retelling the

passage without demythologizing in this instance.

Though categorically classified as a “tale” or as a “miracle story,” the biblical exegesis is

fairly straightforward (even with Morna Hookers assertion that it is the combination of two

stories). [196] Not alluding to the Gentile background of the demonized or the spatial proximity to

the tombs, Adela Collins remarks that the demon “is unclean because of its origin.” [197] She adds

that when the man kneels before Jesus, “the reverential gesture is probably an act initiated by the

unclean spirit.” [198] The demon is recognizing Jesus power and status. [199]

In her comments on the text, Dr. Collins continues to highlight personal characteristics

concerning the demons involved. Further into her analysis of Jesus and the demons

conversation, the demons plea for mercy from torment also indicates “that exorcism is painful

190 Bock, Darrell. Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament: Luke 1:1 9:50, Page 431. 191 Ibid. 192 Ibid. 193 Stein, Robert H. New American Commentary : Luke, PC Study Bible formatted electronic database. 194 Bovon, François. Luke 1: A Commentary on the Gospel of Luke 1:1-9:50, Page 163. 195 Juel, Donald H. “Plundering Satans House: Mark 5:1-20” in Word &World, Vol. XVII, Num. 3, Summer 1997. 196 Hooker, Morna. Blacks New Testament Commentaries: The Gospel According to St Mark, Page 143. 197 Collins, Adela Yarbro. Mark: A Commentary, Pages 266-267. 198 Ibid, Page 267. 199 Ibid.

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or at least distressing for the spirit.” [200] When Jesus permits their relocation into the nearby

swine, He apparently wins the war of wits with ease, as the demons who wished to remain in the

area were instead plunged into the Galilean lake. [201]

Of course, she is not arguing that she believes in personal demonic beings; she is simply

acknowledging that the text is framed in the context of a personal encounter. Other writers

would prefer to further distance themselves from the notion of a personal demonic ontology.

Thus, Robert Guelich says regarding Legions lack of resistance, “The demon has abandoned

all attempts to use his own power to gain control.” [202]

While some commentators advocate that this passage demonstrates the supernatural

nature of these demons, others take another route. Building upon the “possession” motif, it can

be argued that no distinction can be made between the demons and the inhabited man. Henry

Turlington leans this direction and comments concerning the conversation chronicled in Mark 5,

“The response of the man and the unclean spirit are not separable.” [203] This allows the reader to

arrive at psychological explanations of the demonic rather than supernatural and personal

definitions.

Overall, Barth and Unger are not ostracized through the lens of recent scholarship.

Instead, they read the passages as is, and they indirectly (Barth) or directly (Unger) form there

theological perspectives concerning the demonic and their personhood. They maintain that the

personal exchanges of the Scriptures are informative concerning our understanding of reality,

unlike some contemporary scholars who have no problem admitting that the text conveys

personal exchanges but then disconnect the text from our understanding of reality through

demythologization.

2.6 The Demythological Theme in Contemporary Influential Biblical Scholarship in

Relation to Barth and Ungers Perspectives on the Personhood of the Demonic

From the scholarship presented over the past paragraphs, common themes arise. While a

spectrum of theological perspectives exists regarding the ontological reality and independent

personhood of the demonic, the analysis of the biblical texts themselves provides a fairly

200 Ibid, Page 268. 201 Ibid, Page 271. 202 Guelich, Robert A. Word Biblical Commentary: Mark 1-8:26, Page 279. 203 Turlington, Henry. The Broadman Bible Commentary, Page 308.

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coherent and consistent consensus concerning exactly what the text aims to indicate. On a

whole, scholars generally have no problem admitting that the Bible conveys a world view which

increasingly includes personal beings (described as demons or other synonymous designations)

who stand as malevolent toward God and His created order, though submissive to divine rule.

However, that admission is then couched in the need for demythologization, disconnecting the

portrayal of personhood from ontological reality.

Formally originating with Rudolph Bultmann in 1941, “the task of demythologization

is... the elimination of the illusion of objectivity through the translation of myths into the

appropriate language of existential participation…” [204] But has this “translation” rendered the

angelic and demonic figures of the Old and New Testaments to the ontological category of

unicorns and every other imaginary creature? Who is qualified to unilaterally draw the

mythological lines?

Karl Barth reacted strongly in his Church Dogmatics concerning the rise of

demythologization, even as he felt pressure in academic circles against being too

“mythological.” [205] He rejects the value of demythologization in relegating the demonic world

into a non-existent entity. Barth thinks the demons would appreciate such a perspective. Yet

demonology, according to Barth, does require demythologization, but he defines it differently.

Barth says:

The demythologisation which will really hurt [demons] as required cannot consist in questioning their existence. Theological exorcism must be an act of the unbelief which is grounded in faith. It must consist in the fact that in the light, not of a world-outlook but of Christian truth, they are seen to be a myth, the myth which lurks in all myths, the lie which is the basis [of] all other lies, so that a positive relationship to them, an attitude of respect and reverence and obedience, is quite impossible. [206]

This theological exorcism is a part of Barths program to dissuade the Christian from having any

relationship with the demonic. Demons are not supposed to be viewed positively in any way,

and a belief in them similar to our relationship toward God and His angels is unbefitting. Thus,

204 Fergusson, David. “Demythologization” in Religion Past & Present, Page 754. 205 Berkhof, Hendrikus. Christ and The Powers, Page 9. Berkhofs work on the powers was nearly published in Theologische Studien due to the wishes of Karl Barths secretary. She later had to inform Berkhof that Barth “had reasons not to let this text appear in the series.” Barth eventually apologized for the rejection, explaining that “He felt that [Berkhof] was mythologizing the Powers too much, and that he could not approve of such a publication at a time when his own theology was under the crossfire of Bultmann and his disciples.” 206 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, Pages 521-522.

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even though he mentions the reality of demons and describes them as personal beings, Barth

reminds us “that the realism of the Bible in this respect consists exclusively in the clarity and

vigor with which we are comforted and warned and set on our guard against this sphere, but

called away from it rather than to it...” [207]

Merrill Unger also repudiates the undergirding philosophy beneath the academically

prevalent hermeneutic of demythologization. Accepting the existence of a supernatural realm,

Unger argues for the inadequacy of natural, scientific investigation on the subject, for “the

supernatural realm is above natural laws of the physical universe and involves a sphere of reality

beyond the control of scientific experimentation and strictly scientific inquiry.” [208] Branding

those who attempt to guide and source their demonological studies without a revelatory

foundation as “handicapped” and “unqualified,” the biblical worldview of the supernatural

“furnishes the only true criteria for understanding and evaluating the diverse and perplexing

phenomena in this field.” [209] Naturalistic pursuit without the Holy Spirit is “inevitably

foredoomed to failure and deception.” [210]

Addressing the issue of biblical criticism and exegesis in a brief article, Unger poses a

question, “Is there a valid scientific approach to biblical criticism?” [211] He says “yes,” and

qualifies, “But it must not attempt to foist the purely naturalistic methods and presuppositions of

physical or mathematical science upon the higher realm of personality and spirit where the Bible

operates.” [212] Unger consistently seeks the inclusion of the supernatural in our approach to the

biblical material. When we skip this valuable ingredient, the repercussions are obvious

“…spiritual barrenness, empty intellectualism, and endless confusion…” [213] One can see this

attitude in Ungers response to Friedrich Strauss.

Unfortunately, Unger does not directly interact with Bultmann and the concept of

demythologization, but Strauss is mentioned. In the context of Merrill Ungers defense of the

reality of demonization, he speaks of “Strauss and the mythical school” which attest “that the

whole narrative of Jesus expulsions of demons is merely symbolic, without actual foundation of

207 Ibid, Page 522. 208 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 6. 209 Ibid. Pages 6-7. 210 Ibid, Page 7. His reasoning here depends heavily upon 1 Corinthians 2:14. 211 Unger, Merrill. “Scientific Biblical Criticism and Exegesis” in Bibliotheca Sacra, January 1964, Page 61. 212 Ibid, Pages 61-62. 213 Ibid, Page 62.

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fact.” [214] To this widespread thought, Unger responds, “…in the Gospel accounts, the plain

prosaic narration of the incidents as facts, regardless of what might be considered as possible in

highly poetical and avowedly figurative passages, would make their statement here, in pure

prose, not a figure or a symbol, but a lie.” [215] Demanding widespread symbolism where realism

is apparently intended leads us to the conclusion that the writer speaks mistruth, not figurative

didactics.

With specific reference to demonology and the personhood of the demonic, Barth and

Unger, with varying levels of emphasis, accept the revelation concerning malicious spirits as

conveying reality, avoiding theological and philosophical imposition upon the text. Indeed,

many Western theologies have accepted this philosophical concept from Bultmann and done

what Barth warned every demon wanted. [216]

2.7 Conclusion

In this chapter, we sought to analyze Karl Barth and Merrill Ungers surprisingly united

position regarding the personhood of the demonic, in light of biblical scholarship. In order to

achieve these ends, we first clarified the scope of the scholarship utilized as interlocutors. After

narrowing our scope to contemporary and influential sources, an identification and brief sketch

of central biblical texts in Barths Church Dogmatics and Ungers Biblical Demonology helped

provide a platform to engage with biblical scholarship. In our discussion with biblical

scholarship, we specifically approached the topic of demonic personhood in Old and New

Testament scholarship, concluding with a narrow analysis of the particular texts which feature in

Barth and Ungers demonology. Arising from biblical scholarships moderate affirmation of

demonic personhood, we addressed the hermeneutical prevalence of demythologization,

including Barths redefinition and Ungers dismissal of it. We finally observed that Barth and

Unger, though faced with a few criticisms, stand with the weight of a great deal of recent

scholarship behind them. [217]

Through this study, we have again confirmed that Barth and Unger rely heavily upon

revelatory material to support their conclusions. Upon examining contemporary biblical

214 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 90. 215 Ibid. 216 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, Page 521. 217 The strengths and weaknesses of their positions will be discussed in chapter four.

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scholarship, most authors either advocated that the biblical material suggested a demonic

personhood or described demons in the revelatory text as personal beings. Through the writings

of Barth and Unger, we also raised the possibility that Western scholarships interpretive

practices may benefit the demonic realm and cause critics to doubt biblical value and veracity

altogether. In the following chapter, we will pursue Barth and Ungers theology of demonic

personhood with specific reference to a multicultural context.

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3. A Critical Analysis of Barth and Ungers Perspective on the Personhood of the

Demonic from a Multicultural Perspective

3.1 Introduction

In the last chapter, we sought to engage biblical scholarship regarding the personhood of

the demonic. Through the lens of Barth and Ungers demonologies, we examined recent

influential scholarship on the Old and New Testaments depiction of demons. A conclusion was

reached that biblical studies generally confirmed that the intention of the revelatory material was

to convey a worldview which included malevolent personal supernatural beings.

This chapter will aim to analyze Barth and Ungers perspectives regarding the

personhood of the demonic in light of a multicultural context and hermeneutic. Why introduce

multiculturalism? Why embark on such a perilous road? As it will be argued throughout this

chapter, the multicultural dynamic is a nearly unavoidable aspect of human existence in this age.

Then let us, as bearers of Gods revelation, understand our audience, ponder the hermeneutical

complexities of communicating in a multicultural context, and finally offer a well-rounded,

biblically-consistent theology of demonic personhood attuned to the intricacies of the world we

inhabit.

We begin this journey by first defining culture itself, followed by a lengthy explanation

of multiculturalism and the hermeneutical results of a multicultural world. Utilizing the

multicultural perspective, Barth and Ungers demonologies, specifically considering demonic

personhood, will be sifted for Western impositions upon the biblical worldview. In response, a

multicultural perspective, a way forward, will be proposed. Support and criticism of Barth and

Unger will be provided as needed.

The topic of multiculturalism is of particular interest to me. Formerly a six-year resident

of Chicago, I attended and became a member of a church community which contained an eclectic

gathering of cultural backgrounds. The church was located near large communities of Chinese

Americans, African-Americans, and Caucasians. This demographic diversity translated into our

church context, with no single group forming a majority in our fellowship. While such diversity

proved to enhance our unity in Christ and further our appreciation for one anothers heritage, it

was easy to discern that cultural background influenced ones view of the demonic. Some

members spoke openly about the demonic while others generally preferred to ignore the topic.

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These differences often manifested along cultural lines. Furthermore, these ecclesiological

experiences were further duplicated through multicultural contexts during my undergraduate

studies.

3.2 A Definition of Culture

As we tackle the issue of multiculturalism, particularly concerning its hermeneutical

implications with regard to Barth and Ungers perspective on the personhood of the demonic, we

must first define “culture” itself. Mercy Oduyoye and Hendrik Vroom attest, “Cultures are

patterns of meaning, value and normativity: ways in which social life is structured, both in

respect to freedom and lack of freedom, communion and hierarchy.” [218] Byang Kato simplifies

that definition, saying, “Culture is the whole system of living made up of what society knows

and does.” [219]

Throughout this chapter, a particular emphasis will be placed upon the African

manifestation of cultural studies, simply because culture has proven to be an issue of interest and

emphasis in African theological circles. Due to the missionary heritage accrued over the past

centuries, Kwame Bediako and others have lamented the history of “European value-setting for

African Christianity.” [220] Now that the African theological movement has taken great strides to

throw this off, “the theological meaning of the pre-Christian past becomes an unavoidable

element in all major African theological discussion.” [221] But does this “unavoidable element” of

African religious background create a proclivity toward certain errors?

Kato signals a few of these common “pitfalls.” As African Christian theologians have

tirelessly wrought theologies which diverge from past “European value-setting,” it is easy to

agree with Kato that “Africa has come of age.” [222] But what is the result? “Now the temptation

is to magnify all that is African, especially in cultural and religious heritage. It is felt that as the

West boasts of modern technology, Africa can boast of a long-standing history. It is even

wrongly held that as Christianity is a religion of the West, Africa should be proud of her

218 Oduyoye, Mercy Amba, and Hendrik M. Vroom. One Gospel - Many Cultures: Case Studies and Reflections on Cross Cultural Theology, Page 4. 219 Kato, Byang. African Cultural Revolution and Christian Faith, Page 7. 220 Bediako, Kwame. Theology and Identity, Page 237. 221 Ibid. 222 Kato, Byang. Theological Pitfalls in Africa, Page 12.

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religious heritage. [This] tends to universalism.” [223] While culture helps form the contextual

bridge by which the gospel can be communicated, we cannot permit culture ancient or modern,

African or Western to dictate the reshaping of the biblical material, specifically the news and

work of Christ.

For claritys sake, the term “gospel,” as used throughout this thesis, refers to the biblical

definition of “gospel” set down by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15. The gospel is (1) Received, (2)

Exclusive, and (3) Supernatural transcendent and immanent in the Person of Christ alone. One

possesses the gospel upon the reception of and reliance upon Christ Himself by faith, while

acknowledging the sin He exposes, the redemption He offers, and the judgment and vindication

He will one day bring. The historical nature of Christs incarnation, death, and resurrection are

inseparable from this. Because He was raised in history, our coming story includes our literal

resurrection as well. Indeed, if the dead are not eschatologically raised, if our salvation is not

defined by actual events in space/time, then we should recapitulate Pauls cry and live out our

meaningless days as Epicureans (v32). The gospel is factually grounded in past, present, and

soon-to-be consummated realities and contextually bound to historical and locative events.

Holding the gospel high, we can proclaim, “It is not neo-colonialism to plead the uniqueness of

finality of Jesus Christ. It is not arrogance to herald the fact that all who are not in Christ are

lost. It is merely articulating what the Scriptures say.” [224]

Let us return to the issue of culture. What role does culture play in the hermeneutical and

theological process? We cannot avoid the question. Cultures relationship with hermeneutics is

nearly indistinguishable. “We all apply hermeneutics - that is principles of interpretation

whenever we engage in any communication process… we employ hermeneutics, even though in

our own culture and in familiar surroundings we are usually completely unaware of the process.

We decode what we hear and settle on its meaning.” [225] Because of our cultural context, we have

particular hermeneutical presuppositions with which we operate. These are inherently engaged

when we enter the theological arena.

This is where we must resist the temptation to dilute theology into a merely sociological

and anthropological activity. Leaning heavily upon Gordon Kaufman, Kathryn Tanner argues

223 Ibid, Pages 12-13. 224 Ibid, Page 16. 225 Klein, William. “Evangelical Hermeneutics” in Initiation into Theology: The Rich Variety of Theology and Hermeneutics, Page 320.

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that “Theology is a particular version of this search for meaning, for a pattern of fundamental

categories that will, as cultures do, orient, guide, and order human life. The adequacy of

theology can therefore be judged by how well it performs these general cultural tasks.” [226] This

completely neglects theologys necessary relationship with revelation. Without that relationship,

theology becomes anthropocentric instead of theocentric, virtually social anthropology.

Commenting on the relationship of theology and secular knowledge, T. F. Torrance says:

…because theology has problems that overlap with philosophy and other sciences (including cultural studies) , it must subject itself to rigorous control and the discipline of self-critical revision in order to ensure that it is really being good theology, and not some debased brand of theology that confuses its task and its subject-matter with those of philosophy and or some science of nature. Thus, while recognizing its own peculiar nature, and pursuing it with unceasing vigilance and exacting criticism, it must think out its relation with philosophy and natural science and make clear its distinction from them. [227]

In pursuing this “self-critical revision” our primary source ought to be the biblical canon. All

searches for meaning without “good theology,” wherein God speaks to us, become a grasping at

air desiring to cling to something and never attaining a grip. Unless our meaning and purpose

is connected to something heavenly, something eternal; all meaning is temporal and fleeting. We

have no grounds for a certain hope, the faith which has signified Gods people.

Theology is the reception of revelatory information and its reasonable and accessible

translation into a cultural context(s), not to “tickle the ears” of the hearer but to accurately

divulge the needs and purposes of God. In Jesus and His cause, we find objective purpose,

meaning, and hope. Theologys adequacy is not primarily judged upon our reception and the

fulfillment of cultural tasks but upon its faithful contextualization of the Revelators intention

and the successful communication of His truth, containing His perspective and tasks. The

benefits of anthropological purpose and meaning are a derivative of this communication.

Current hermeneutical thought, embodied by Tanner and others, is seemingly obsessed with

flipping the object of theology (from God to humanity) by focusing the theological endeavor

upon our search for meaning. Yes, this does have its place, but first and foremost, we must chase

after God and His revelation that He may be honored. In God, we obtain meaning.

226 Tanner, Kathryn. Theories of Culture: A New Agenda for Theology, Page 64. 227 Torrance, Thomas F. Karl Barth: Biblical and Evangelical Theologian, Page 51. Clarification added.

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Though the agents involved in revelations original transmission were indeed human,

within a particular context, the Holy Spirit preserved the words of God in the prophetic office. [228]

In the same way, we should be careful to not exclude His influence even now. Does the Spirit no

longer work? In fact, we recognize that the Spirits relationship to us and the Word of God has

not eroded. [229] Yet we must continue to be vigilant, for spirits which do not guide us into truth

are many. [230]

As we consider culture, we must also clarify that it is not morally removed. Though

humanity was originally crafted in a perfect cultural context, corruption is introduced. “…

Because humanity is sinful, culture bears the imprint of human sinfulness. However beautiful,

great and highly cultivated it may be it is affected by human sin.” [231] On some level, all cultures

enshrine false thinking and behavior; they install human corruption as a communal norm. It is a

fools errand to assert that a perfect culture exists apart from the first or second Eden. [232]

Therefore, we cannot pursue ends which would rewrite the cultural studies of the past century

and conclude that some cultures are not civilized while some are. Instead, every culture, when it

encounters the true and living God through revelation, is left challenged and transformed, for

“not all Christian values are compatible with the values of any given culture…” [233]

Considering the Niebuhrian baggage attached to the word “transformed,” this thesis is not

employing that term to assert that Christianitys primary communal purpose is to transform

228 2 Peter 1:20-21, Romans 3:2. Addressing the meaning of the 2 Peter text, Kelly articulates that human will was only ever involved in the revelatory process, whether in cooperation or “under compulsion,” because they were influenced by the Holy Spirit. Kelly, J. N. D. A Commentary on the Epistles of Peter and of Jude, Pages 324-325. 229 John 14:6, 15-17, 26; 16:12-15. Beasley-Murray comments on 14:17, saying, “In contrast to the world the disciples are to know the Paraclete because he will remain alongside you… and will be in you…” The passage simultaneously affirms “the presence of the Spirit with the disciples, while yet recognizing that the latter points to the Spirits inner presence in individual believers…” Concerning 16:13, Beasley-Murray continues to exegete the work of the coming Paraclete, “… the truth has been made known by Jesus to the disciples, but their grasp of it has been limited; the task of the Paraclete will be to lead them that they may comprehend the depths and heights of the revelation as yet unperceived by them.” Beasley-Murray, George R. Word Biblical Commentary: John, Pages 257258, 283. 230 1 John 4:1-4. “The author takes for granted the existence of a variety of spirits… the community is warned not to submit itself to the various spirits, but to maintain a critical distance from them, that is, to test them.” Strecker, Georg. The Johannine Letters: A Commentary on 1, 2, and 3 John, Page 132. 231 Nieder-Heitmann, J. H. An Analysis and Evaluation of John S. Mbitis Theological Evaluation of African Traditional Religions, Page 106. 232 The first Eden, with Adam and Eve, depicts a singular culture with distinguished roles and ontological equality. The second Eden, the new heavens and earth, does not display the abolition of diverse cultures but the marvelous uniting of every culture in Christ. Thus, the first Eden is a vision of the perfect culture in relationship to God and others, and the second Eden is a vision of the perfect multicultural context in relationship to God and others. 233 Oduyoye, Mercy Amba, and Hendrik M. Vroom. One Gospel - Many Cultures: Case Studies and Reflections on Cross Cultural Theology, Page 4.

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cultures. In contrast to a militant perspective, cultural transformation is a natural result of a

rendezvous between Christian revelation and human culture. Even by carrying out one

command of Christ, such as “love your enemies,” cultures are affected, and the world is

changed. [234] But Christians on every level desire that Christian ethics, as exemplified through

Jesus and His apostles, should lead us toward cultural service in some regard. Should those who

have been bestowed with the words of life be silent and still while a culture perpetuates systems

of repression against women and attitudes of normalcy toward child abuse? To these and other

injustices, we bear the biblical witness with divine authority to identify evil for what it is. Will

we not defend the downtrodden? When we remove revelation from centrality, judgments and

criticisms of cultural norms often manifest as one culture intolerantly accusing another. Only

Gods utterance offers a foundation by which we can employ a moral compass in the global

cultural marketplace fraught with injustices amongst the richness of its innumerable wares.

The canonical texts are also shaped by the cultural currents during their composition.

“Gods self-revelation in the Bible was recorded faithfully by the biblical writers, who used

whatever cultural materials they had at their disposal.” [235] Biblical writers, such as John with

logos theology, often expropriated cultural/religious terms of their day in order to coherently

convey the surpassing nature of Christ. Because God chose to reveal Himself at particular times

to specific people in certain contexts, culture remains an issue from start to finish in the

Christians relationship with Gods Word. We must understand the biblical cultures to

accurately ascertain the intention of the divinely superintended authors, and we must be

acquainted with current cultures in order to translate the gospel truth, while not subjecting the

latter to the former. [236] But our concern lies with the hermeneutical implications on the backend

of that process.

234 Matthew 5:44. What a unique and convicting statement! The “love your enemies” text from the Sermon on the Mount “is a classic example of Jesus exegesis of the Torah; far from breaking with the Torah, he interpreted it in terms of Jewish hermeneutics of the time in order to propose a startlingly innovative interpretation...” Betz, Hans Dieter. The Sermon on the Mount: A Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount, including the Sermon on the Plain (Matthew 5:3-7:27 and Luke 6:20-49), Page 309. 235 Lak, Yeow Choo. “Christianity in a Southeast-Asian Metropolis: Cross-Cultural Hermeneutics” in One Gospel - Many Cultures: Case Studies and Reflections on Cross Cultural Theology, Page 22. 236 Even with the cultural context which flavors the revelatory writings, the perspicuity of the Bible is remarkable. Humanitys ability to observe, form hermeneutical conclusions, and develop applicational consequences allows everyone to access the truth with a reasonable amount of accuracy, while simultaneously allowing for the possibility of a new understanding based upon other canonical contexts and ANE cultural insights.

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3.3 Multiculturalism and a Multicultural Hermeneutic

We stand at the gateway to a new era, wearing the traditional garb of our fathers and

employing the thoughts crafted in the context of the past. The distance which once slowed and

separated global discourse has rapidly shrunk and virtually vanished, and Christian theological

thought cannot ignore the consequences. It is not a question of “will we respond to this changing

environment or not?” Rather, we must ask “how will we respond?” “There are methodological

implications for undertaking theology in light of the sheer expansion of data brought about by

globalization, inculturation and non-Western theologies.” [237] Before we approach the

hermeneutical endeavor, let us first assess the situation.

As a resident of the ever-diversifying England, Graham Ward paints the following scene:

I live in the northern part of Manchester, Salford, where the first language is now arguably Punjabi certainly it is arguable the extent to which it is English… My local supermarket will serve you in English, but if you took an average day the staff probably speak more Polish (to each other and their customers) than they speak English. All the local shops, whether… serving pizzas, kebabs… tandoori… milk… cheap vodka, are owned by Punjabi speakers. If I walk less than 200 yards further up the road on which my house is situated, I enter an area of several square miles occupied by Hasidic Jews… These speak a variety of Yiddish dialects. So as a Christian living in that area I cannot live out my faith, in fact I could not even live, without being multicultural. [238]

This vibrant multiculturalism leads to exceedingly profound enrichment, which Ward describes

in his personal experiences in England as “energizing.” [239] Invigorating diversity is increasing

not only on the streets of Manchester but around the globe, in the university and in the church.

One of the foremost scholars concerning culture and its relationship to theological

practice, Tanner argues that cultures are not “sharply bounded, self-contained units.” [240]

Furthermore, she thinks that “the cultures that anthropologists study are never likely to have been

closed systems in fact.” [241] But now, the innumerable cultures of the earth are more evidently

fluid due to our “age of global world systems.” [242]

237 Cartledge, Mark J. and David Cheetam. Intercultural Theology: Approaches and Themes, Page 1. 238 Ward, Graham. “Intercultural Theology and Political Discipleship” in Intercultural Theology: Approaches and Themes, Page 30. 239 Ibid, Page 31. 240 Tanner, Kathryn. Theories of Culture: A New Agenda for Theology, Page 53. 241 Ibid, Page 54. 242 Ibid.

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The danger we face at this level is the inner urge to return. Faced with the daunting

reality of being swallowed up into the multicultural façade, will our theology retreat to the

narrow “development of contextual theology” centered upon one arbitrarily isolated cultural

manifestation and persist in resisting a multicultural theology? [243] As Ward says, “…the context

today is multicultural and multi-faith…” [244] We cannot return to ages past when Christian

theologians and pastors could formulate and practice theologies which were crafted and

conditioned by one culture. Too many worldviews operate simultaneously in small areas

communities, universities, and churches. With Yeow Choo Lak, we can agree that in our

changing context, “there is no place for provincialism.” [245]

A great deal of theological energy has been exerted in forming helpful and insightful

American, African, and Chinese theological studies (to name but a few). For instance, in

constructing his African theological composition, Charles Nyamiti says, “… while doing African

theology, we should arrive at the stage where e.g. a Kikuyu theologian freely employs cultural

elements taken from Ghana, Congo, South Africa, etc. and integrates them in his/her Kikuyu

theology for the simple reason that they are authentic African values, and as values they

transcend all ethnics limits.” [246] But do such admirable sentiments portray the hermeneutical

ideals of the past rather than the hermeneutical challenges of the future? Can we truly construct

an “African theology” or an “American theology” any longer? How long will this be the case?

Even if we can outline distinct theologies, should we develop them?

Kato advocated, “The noble desire to indigenize Christianity in Africa must not be

forsaken… But must one betray Scriptural principles of God and His dealing with man at the

altar of any regional theology? Should human sympathy and rationalism override what is clearly

taught in Scripture?” [247] His desire to maintain a focus upon the biblical revelation is

commendable, but the time of “regional theology” is in decline. This is now being

acknowledged.

In recognition of the multicultural era we inhabit, education has sought to be at the

forefront of multicultural issues. “Multicultural education” is a pliable term, “an umbrella term,

243 Ibid, Page 32. 244 Ibid, Page 30. 245 Lak, Yeow Choo. “Christianity in a Southeast-Asian Metropolis: Cross-Cultural Hermeneutics” in One Gospel - Many Cultures: Case Studies and Reflections on Cross Cultural Theology, Page 13. 246 Nyamiti, Charles. Studies in African Christian Theology: Vol. 1, Jesus Christ, the Ancestor of Humankind: Methodological and Trinitarian Foundations, Page 15. Italics removed. 247 Kato, Byang. Theological Pitfalls in Africa, Page 16.

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used to refer to a variety of approved or demanded practices in education establishments.” [248]

Mal Leicester explains that three primary strands exist:

1. Education through many cultures. 2. Education in many cultures. 3. Education for a multicultural society. [249]

Without delving into the plethora of resulting debates, the overall agenda is clear: education

cannot be monocultural or ethnocentric. South Africas education system is confronted by this

on a broad scale, due to the amount of “learners from diverse cultural, linguistic, educational,

and socioeconomic backgrounds.” [250] In a school, all these contexts meet. Yet in Western,

Eastern, and African religious education; do we recognize and account for such diversity in our

theology? Are we guilty of prescribing the wrong remedy for the prevailing symptoms, elevating

one past or current cultural expression of Christianity to a superior position? The simple answer

must be yes; we do this far too often. Then what does a multicultural hermeneutic look like at

the dawn of this new day?

Having been confronted by the current multicultural trend, David Cheetham wisely

reminds us of the necessary eschatological perspective, citing the multitudes from every “nation,

tribe, people, and language” who stand before the Lamb in Revelation 7:9. He calls this the

“multicultural vision of the Kingdom of God…” [251] This adequately reminds us of the ultimate

calling of Gods people. We are not eschatologically destined to the permutations of Christian

theology but rather to unity before Christ. He is our focus and our destiny. Unity in the person,

work, and teaching of Christ is coming soon, even as we struggle for cohesion now.

However, Cheetham is not so concerned with the reality of multiple cultures operating in

one setting. He is concerned with “intercultural theology” which “could easily be described as

merely a global intra-Christian discourse.” [252] Many others have nobly sought the “significant

development of Christian theology in one cultural context through interaction with theologies

developed in other cultural contexts.” [253] This is not our primary focus in this study, and our

248 Leicester, Mal. Multicultural Education: From Theory to Practice, Page 22. 249 Ibid, Page 23. 250 Lemmer, Eleanor, Corinne Meier, and Noleen van Wyk. Multicultural Education, Page v. 251 Cheetham, David. “Intercultural Theology and Interreligious Studies” in Intercultural Theology: Approaches and Themes, Page 43. 252 Ibid. 253 Fulljames, Peter. God and Creation in Intercultural Theology: Dialogue between Theologies of Barth, Dickson, Pobee, Nyamiti, and Pannenberg, Page 173.

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study does not seek to formally address the traditional “Christ and culture” paradigms. Lak says,

“While most theologians have to wrestle with the intricate Gospel and cultures motif, others

have had to go beyond that to deal with the Christ in multi- and cross-cultural contexts

motif.” [254] More and more theologians are being confronted by the latter, and his recognition of

multiculturalisms reality (specifically in Singapore) illustrates that argument.

In this thesis, it is posited that the theologians of the present and the theologians of the

future will not have one cultural context and neither will the parishioners, the students, and the

churches that they serve. In our attempt to move beyond monocultural and intercultural studies,

Walter Hollenweger, from the University of Birmingham, provides the way forward - crucial

material - as he formulated the field of intercultural theology. [255]

Of his seven point list of presuppositions for his argumentation, Hollenwegers fifth

principle says, “The point of contact between our traditions and the new theologies from the

Third World is Scripture.” [256] Without denying that every Christian will select texts and share the

gospel through their particular cultural, traditional lens; this “point of contact” is an advance in

the multicultural communicative dilemma.

Two primary responses arise to the multicultural theological tapestry that floods the

Christian world. On one hand, we may seek to look back to the hermeneutics which seeks to

preserve and enshrine one particular cultural expression of Christianity, preserving and mining it

for its richness. The perils to this perspective are many. If we continue in this path, we may

champion the safeguarding of particular cultural theological strands, but we risk losing touch

with the culturally pluralistic world we now inhabit. Are we the defenders of past isolation or of

254 Lak, Yeow Choo. “Christianity in a Southeast-Asian Metropolis: Cross-Cultural Hermeneutics” in One Gospel - Many Cultures: Case Studies and Reflections on Cross Cultural Theology, Page 15. 255 Hollenweger, Walter J. “Intercultural Theology” in Theology Today, April 1986, Vol. 43, Num. 1, Page 29. “Intercultural theology” as a discipline is defined as “(1) All theologies are contextually conditioned. (2) There is nothing wrong with theology being contextually conditioned. (3) It may take others to show us how conditioned, parochial, or ideologically captive our own theology is. (4) Even if once we could ignore such voices, now we can no longer do so. (5) The point of contact between our traditions and the new theologies from the Third World is Scripture. (6) Only in creative tension with the widest possible perspective can we develop theologies appropriate to our own particular situations. (7) Since within the church the ultimate loyalty is not simply to nation, class, or culture, the universal church is uniquely suited to provide the context in which the task of creative theologizing can take place.” While this field proves to be absolutely critical for theological communication across Christian cultural barriers in academic settings, the ramifications of the fifth point seem to be lost in the midst of the methodological chatter. 256 Ibid. His seven point list is included in the previous footnote.

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future unity? [257] On the other hand, we may adventure forward to a hermeneutics which

recognizes the multicultural intersection of the peoples. Yes, distinctions remain. So we must

ask: how will Christian hermeneutics and the resulting theology find unity and inspire unity in

such times?

As Hollenweger suggests, we must renew our focus, not upon the particular cultural

manifestations, but upon the Bible itself. The Scriptures and the Holy Spirit who accompanies

them are what bind us together. The Bible is what unites us in the midst of the numerous

expressions of Christian theology and elucidates which theologies are not truly Christian. An

unwavering fastidiousness to the Bible and its teachings is what bridges the cultural divides

present in our Christian communities - universities, churches, and homes. The Bible, with its

grand multicultural eschatological hope, is what will continue to maintain cohesion between the

numerous theological traditions. Without disregard for the cultural distinctions that exist, we

must emphasize that which unites us, the Scriptures and the Trinitarian God of salvation it

espouses Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. [258] The further we drift from this One God, His works,

and His perspective as superintended by the Holy Spirit in the revelatory composition of the Old

and New Testaments, the further we drift from true unity. We lose our point of contact, not only

with one another, but with our Heavenly Father for “God alone is the ground and source of

authentic Christian doctrine.” [259] Thus, revelation from God is what binds us together, to God.

With a biblical prioritization response to the multicultural context in which we live, we

avoid the error of letting “theological content [be] determined by the cultural milieu, as happened

in western theological liberalism.” [260] We can successfully skirt “the peril that threatens churches

of every age and culture as they seek to appropriate and communicate the message of the gospel

257 By using the word “isolation,” the intention is not to denigrate our past but rather to state the pasts reality. As cultures throughout history were far more isolated, the present globalization fervor demands a shift in our hermeneutical paradigm. 258 Some may perhaps choose at this point to claim the cultural dependency of this argument as I have referenced Trinitarian theology. While it was formulated in the Greco-Roman context, I would assert that the Trinitarian theology, though expressed in and through cultural parameters, was not manufactured but recognized, sourced from the revelation of Scripture. Therefore, in a hypothetical attempt to translate Christianity into another culture, we should not aim to deprive it of Trinitarian theology, but instead convey it with different language. In a multicultural context, Trinitarian questions and therefore Trinitarian biblical theology is the natural result of biblical study. Some theological questions are not determined by the context in which the Bible is received. They are determined by the very context of Scripture itself. Trinitarianism arises in such a manner. 259 Thiselton, Anthony C. The Hermeneutics of Doctrine, Page 62. 260 Ferdinando, Keith. Triumph of Christ in African Perspective: A Study of Demonology and Redemption in the African Context, Page 406.

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in their own contexts.” [261] Our Christian multicultural agenda must “ensure that its theology so

reflects the biblical emphases that it is the authentic New Testament gospel in its depth and

completeness that it is communicating.” [262]

Though fervent in its desire for biblical grounding, the Evangelical perspective does not

fit the above prescription. The confession must be made that, as a Christian movement, it does

not adequately delve into the multicultural context and reflect upon it. William Dyrness says,

“…large segments of evangelicalism remain untouched by these conversations. The continuing

failure to integrate expanding multicultural experience into a consistent understanding of culture

and cultural engagement still bedevils the evangelical movement.” [263] But with its radical desire

for the whole biblical truth to stabilize its faith and theological direction, perhaps it is better

prepared to respond to this multicultural context not to “take back culture” but to speak the

transformative reality of redemption through Christ alone into every culture?

As we return to the focal point of this thesis (the personhood of the demonic as defined

by Karl Barth and Merrill Unger), the multicultural hermeneutic outlined here in 3.3 will be

utilized. Recognizing the numerous cultural currents which now simultaneously exist, we will

attempt to identify cultural elements in Barth and Unger which may be imposing a Western

worldview instead of propagating a biblical worldview. Once these elements are identified, we

will then proceed to offer a multicultural understanding of the personhood of the demonic,

highlighting particular cultural tendencies which either support a biblical perspective or lead us

farther away from it.

3.4 Reflections on Barth in the Context of Theology and Culture

As we begin our endeavor into Barths cultural dimensions through his demonological

project, we must first state a glaring issue with Karl Barths theological method in general.

Robert Palma, in his detailing of Barths theology of culture, says that “there can be no facile

typing of Barths theological understanding of culture.” [264] Through his estimation of Barths

diverse interactions and engagement with culture, Palma wonders if Barth could be placed

261 Ibid. 262 Ibid. 263 Dyrness, William A. “Evangelical Theology and Culture” in the Cambridge Companion to Evangelical Theology, Page 155. 264 Palma, Robert J. Karl Barths Theology of Culture, Page 6.

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“somewhere between the Christ and Culture in Paradox model and the Christ the Transformer

of Culture model?” [265]

Peter Fulljames rightly roots Barths theological expression back into his view of the

supremacy of Scripture. We serve Christ, and “it is the Bible who witnesses to Jesus Christ.” [266]

In the resulting interpretation, all ends must lead to Christ. The hermeneutical endeavor must be

grounded in Him. [267] Throughout Church Dogmatics, Barth focuses on this goal. A major issue

of theology is “the relation of revelation to the Being and Person of God Himself. In Gods self

revelation in the Bible… God speaks to us in Person. In other words, revelation is God-in-his revelation, God-in-his-Word.” [268] Thus, he offers “a theology which is an ontology for it is an

account of God as He is in relationship with all things.” [269] This includes his assessment of the

demonic.

With this ontological attitude toward theological formation, culture does not play an

intentionally central role in Barths demonology. By rooting everything into Christ, revelation is

designed to serve as the focal point of his dogmatic project. With that method, he does convey

the biblical emphasis which is not upon the demonic itself but upon their activity and defeat in

relationship to Christs victorious rule. Also, his perspective concerning personhood in general

is profoundly biblical, especially in light of the Genesis creation narrative. Adam was a living

being - a person not because of his role in culture/society but because of his relationship to

God. Essentially, God, the ultimate Person, made and declared a person to be. Therefore, a

person is. But a few aspects of Barthian demonology are more related to Western cultural

philosophy than to biblical parameters. Without attempting to exhaust every topic of discussion,

we will examine a pair of issues.

In Barths demonology, nothingness is a key subject of discussion. In fact, Geoffrey

Bromiley sums up Barths thought saying, “[Demons] belong to nothingness.” [270] Because of this

prevalent concept of nothingness “the third order” - which we have already addressed at length,

265 Ibid. These models are shaped by Reinhold Niebuhrs landmark work Christ and Culture . 266 Fulljames, Peter. God and Creation in Intercultural Theology: Dialogue between Theologies of Barth, Dickson, Pobee, Nyamiti, and Pannenberg, Page 15. 267 Ibid, Page 16. 268 Torrance, Thomas F. Karl Barth: Biblical and Evangelical Theologian, Page 43. 269 Ibid, Page 18. 270 Bromiley, Geoffrey W. Introduction to the Theology of Karl Barth, Page 154.

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he begins down some frustrating and perhaps self-contradictory paths. [271] This is exemplified in

Barths argument that “… God has not created [demons], and therefore they are not

creaturely.” [272] Yet this theological conclusion is most certainly the result of Western

philosophical underpinnings rather than the Scriptures which alludes that demons were created,

though they probably selected and subsequently championed malevolence. [273] At one point, he

actually argues that nothingness is how the Scripture understands the demonic - “this alien

element.” [274] Yet no support is given.

Barth also demands that there is no relationship between the angelic and demonic realms.

Demons are not fallen angels; they are not of the same kind. He compares their relationship to

“nonsense” which “does not denote a particular species of sense, but that which is negated and

excluded by sense…” [275] Barth brushes over the implications of passages such as Revelation

12:7 and Matthew 25:41 in order to angle his readers to this end. Throughout his treatment, the

emphasis is continually and rightfully placed on the “radical conflict” as the demonic must

always be portrayed in light of their defeat. [276] But the means by which he attains such a “radical

conflict” is in doubt from a biblical standpoint.

Concerning this whole issue of the demonic, Bromiley illuminates that Barths stand

concerning the uncreated nature of demons and his repudiation of an angelic fall is problematic.

In light of the handful of texts which suggest otherwise, Bromiley says:

Unfortunately he does not back up the objection with any direct biblical material. His interpretation stands, then, under the shadow cast by these verses. They do indeed suggest an “angelic catastrophe” as Augustine put it. Nor would it seem that Barths understanding is totally compromised if this be their meaning. Yet he takes a firm stand on the issue and in so doing lays himself open to criticism at a vital point: Is he really obeying scripture as the criterion of dogmatic purity and truth? [277]

The logical response is no. His Western philosophical background hijacks his demonology away

from his rigid desire for revelatory primacy to such a point that scholars like Bromiley are left

271 Mallow, Vernon R. The Demonic: A Selected Theological Study: An Examination into the Theology of Edwin Lewis, Karl Barth, and Paul Tillich, Page 64. 272 Barth, Karl . Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 523. 273 Romans 8:38-39. Demons are included in Pauls list of created things. The text emphasizes that the forces and powers listed “are all creatures, just as humans are, and no creature has the power to contend with God.” Jewett, Robert. Romans: A Commentary, Page 554. 274 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 523. 275 Ibid, Page 524. 276 Ibid. 277 Bromiley, Geoffrey W. Introduction to the Theology of Karl Barth, Page 155.

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saddened. Bromiley summarizes, “When he has done so much to restore angels (and demons) as

a theme of serious theological enquiry, it is a pity that the whole discussion should end with so

questionable a thesis and procedure.” [278] For being a man who wants to be judged by his “fidelity

to the Bible,” his demonology is a rare misstep. [279]

3.5 Reflections on Unger in the Context of Theology and Culture

Watered by the Evangelical tradition, Merrill Ungers theology bears the earmarks of this

widespread teaching. Though occasionally a point of contention, “a high view of Scripture has

always been part and parcel of Evangelical thought.” [280] Sometimes this manifests as the doctrine

of biblical inerrancy, and while it is not directly affirmed in Biblical Demonology, inerrancy

theology is clearly assumed throughout. His perspective of biblical superiority exudes

throughout every one of his demonological works.

…Whereas the Scripture account of the origin and reality of evil supernaturalism offers a solid and substantial basis of explanation for the widespread persistence and manifestation of Satanic and demonological phenomena from the most ancient times to the present, naturalistic speculations can but inadequately attribute the facts to mans religiously superstitious mind, or to some similarly unsatisfactory basis. [281] Demons do exist, first and foremost, for God in His Word says they exist. [282] The Word of God attests the reality of evil supernaturalism through the career of both Satan and his myriads of helpers called demons or evil spirits (Luke 10:17, 20). [283] It is high time for believers to see Satan and demonic powers in their true light and full Scripture perspective. [284]

Even with this revelation-oriented perspective, Evangelical hermeneutics still recognizes

the need for cultural studies, especially with reference to the past. [285] In order to properly

understand the Bible, one must “walk in their sandals to understand their writings as they

278 Ibid. 279 Ford, D. F. “Conclusion: Assessing Barth” in Karl Barth Studies of His Theological Methods, Page 199. 280 König, Adrio. “Evangelical Theology” in Initiation into Theology: The Rich Variety of Theology and Hermeneutics, Page 101. 281 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 17. 282 Ibid, Page 36. 283 Unger, Merrill. Demons in the World Today, Page 8. 284 Unger, Merrill. What Demons Can Do to Saints, Page 12. 285 There is a “growing and sophisticated conversation about culture [that] has taken root among evangelicals…” Dyrness, William A. “Evangelical Theology and Culture” in the Cambridge Companion to Evangelical Theology, Page 154.

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would have.” [286] The other side of the equation however, is less structured, as Evangelicals often

try to present the words of Scripture as plainly as possible, and if that particular passage

confronts or confirms the prevailing culture, so be it. Daniel Treier observes,

Contextualization has become a fairly popular way for evangelicals to describe their

theological encounter with Scripture in culture(s), consistent with their persistent commitment to

Bible translation.” [287] Terms and concepts of the prevailing context and language are utilized in

the expressing of the truth, but nothing is above the rebuke of the biblical material. The intention

of the Bible must be taught for that is what is true; all else submits, conforms, and agrees. [288]

Ergo, concerning the field of demonology, “The fact of Christians engagement in an on-going

battle with the devil and his cohorts is a biblical fact which evangelical theology attests to.” [289]

Evangelicalisms ongoing problem with the issue of culture is again replayed in Ungers

theology. William Dyrness accurately comments concerning Evangelical theology:

Throughout their history evangelicals have displayed ambivalence toward their cultural context. The world was either something to be won over in the name of Christ, or to be avoided as a source of temptation, but it could also represent a resource to be exploited in pursuit of their evangelical calling. As a result, their relationship with culture has been ambiguous, marked more often by vigorous campaigns against particular evils believed to threaten Christian living… than by thoughtful engagement with the complexities of culture. [290]

Ungers relationship to this summary is close. As Unger attempts to affirm a biblical perspective

utilizing whatever resources are available to him (primarily Scripture), he does engage wholesale

with cultural issues, but only in an attempt to usher away skepticism, remove cultural

superstitions, and validate biblical propositions concerning the reality of evil supernaturalism

(including the worldwide presence of occultism). He prefers to remain where certainty can be

grasped, saying:

Since demonological phenomena have been found to be almost universally prevalent among people of various religions and of varying degrees of culture, from the remotest ages of antiquity to the present, it is practically impossible to interpret accurately and to evaluate properly the religious phenomena and

286 Klein, William. “Evangelical Hermeneutics” in Initiation into Theology: The Rich Variety of Theology and Hermeneutics, Page 328. 287 Treier, Daniel J. “Scripture and Hermeneutics” in The Cambridge Companion to Evangelical Theology, Page 44. 288 Ibid, Pages 323-324. 289 Ampong, Ebenezer Adu. Deliverance in Ghanaian Neo-Pentecostal Ministries: A Critical Assessment from an Evangelical Perspective, Page 87. 290 Dyrness, William A. “Evangelical Theology and Culture” in the Cambridge Companion to Evangelical Theology, Page 145.

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practices of various peoples, which frequently are confusingly involved, without a discriminating grasp of this subject.” [291]

Gaining this “discriminating grasp” is pursued in the words of Scripture which charts the course

between skepticism and superstition. [292]

Merrill Unger, even with his biblical centrality, still weaves non-biblical contributions

into his demonology. [293] In his case for the reality of the demonic realm in Biblical Demonology,

he inaugurates his argumentation with scriptural material and then continues with evidence from

physical nature, human nature, and human experience. [294] From these influxes alone, culture and

his cultural conceptions of the human and natural world are quietly inserted. Yet his devotion to

the scriptural revelation continues to shape and guide these secondary sources.

In Ungers Biblical Demonology, one theological misstep habitually surfaces, one which

Barth vehemently sought to discard for its unbiblical “nature.” [295] Traditional demonology has

consistently defined demonic ontology prior to demonic activity. While ontological priority

might be a suitable practice for Theology Proper, the biblical testimony, en masse, does little to

outline the demonic hordes origin or nature. Instead, it consistently and overtly witnesses

demonic activity in relationship to Bibliology, Theology Proper, Christology, Anthropology,

Eschatology, and so on. We consequently gain insight into who they are. [296] In the case of the

demonic, a biblical perspective should emphasize activity before shouldering ontologys tasks. [297]

3.6 Multiculturalism and the Personhood of the Demonic

Utilizing the previously outlined multicultural emphasis upon revelation, how then

should we approach the personhood of the demonic? How should we dialogue concerning the

291 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 1. Sadly, it appears that he still operates under the older Western impression that there is a hierarchy of culture. 292 Ibid, Page 8. 293 He and Barth are quite united in their oversight of their own cultural presuppositions. 294 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Pages 36-39. 295 Whether or not Barth avoided this fault is up for debate, especially considering how the ontological reality of nothingness overshadows the architecture of his demonology. 296 Matthew 12:43-45 is a helpful example of the principle stated above. While describing the activity of an expelled demon, we are granted the knowledge of a gradation of evil among these ambient spirits. The fact that the demon returns with seven others “more evil than itself, to lodge in the same person…” is critical to the point Jesus is arguing. The “last state… of the person has become worse than the first state…” Jesus miracles had helped, but the “evil generation” showed no repentance or commitment to Him and His cause. So they were left worse off than before. Hagner, Donald A. Word Biblical Commentary: Matthew 1-13, Page 357. 297 Since this thesis is an analytical work on previously constructed systematic demonologies, there is no harm in pursuing an ontologically driven endeavor. If this was an article attempting to offer a new biblical demonology for others analysis, a structural reorientation to prioritize demonic activity before ontology would be pursued.

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personal supernatural beings, especially considering the massive worldview gaps between the

Western and African minds?

First, the Bible must speak, and we must listen. Regarding the study of demons, the

African worldview will face less direct confrontation. Keith Ferdinando, a preeminent scholar in

the realm of demonology in the African context, remarks, “Indeed in key respects African beliefs

are closer to a biblical paradigm than is western rationalistic scepticism.” [298] The cosmological

views of the Bible offer “a perspective more sympathetic to African beliefs” than the paradigms

of the West. [299] Thus, an African who maintains that “the invisible and visible worlds are not…

two separate spheres but… different dimensions of a single indivisible reality…” has less of an

intellectual journey than a Westerner when he encounters the biblical material. [300] But the Bible

transforms everyones understanding of the world, with each culture and person being affected

differently.

Unfortunately, even some Africans would prefer to title a great deal as superstition,

saying, “The Devil, satyrs, fauns, the legendary inhabitants of the Golden Age and the noble

savage of the Age of Enlightenment are other imaginary creations of Western man.” [301] But are

not the Devil (and perhaps satyrs) a part of biblical cosmology? Can we steal one part of the

Christian world (Jesus) without the whole? Who are we to determine what is true, real, and

relevant? In this regard, syncretism, polytheism, and naturalism await the adventurous.

These attempts at an intellectual rejection of the revelatory witness with its recordings of

supernatural phenomena are more commonly a Western activity. But how wise are these

endeavors? Ferdinando comments, “Most peoples, for most of history, have believed in spirits,

witchcraft and sorcery.” [302] The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal mentions that “belief in spirits

is widespread in the ancient and modern world.” [303] If we narrow the subject to apparitions and

necromancy, in overtly skeptical Western Countries, another source alleges that an increasing

298 Ferdinando, Keith. Triumph of Christ in African Perspective: A Study of Demonology and Redemption in the African Context, Page 5. 299 Ibid, Pages 378-379. 300 Ibid, Page 27. 301 pBitek, Okot. African Religions in Western Scholarship, Page 35. 302 Ferdinando, Keith. Triumph of Christ in African Perspective: A Study of Demonology and Redemption in the African Context, Page 376. 303 Stein, Gordon. “Spiritualism” in The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal, Page 713.

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number of adults over the past century and a half have seen an apparition of some kind, nearly

one third of those most recently polled. [304] The paranormal is not out of style.

In a global context, a multicultural forum would present the modern skeptic as being the

odd one out. Should they not bear the burden of disproving the norm? [305] In the revealing light

of the biblical material, the case against the skeptic grows greater. As Ferdinando candidly

posits, “Biblical supernaturalism contrasts sharply with western skepticism…” [306]

While the biblical material regarding the demonic may prove profoundly plausible in a

multicultural context, personhood is a different discussion. Specifically within African

traditionalism, there are major distinctions between it and the Western worldview. In his work

The Living Dead and the Living God, Klaus Nürnberger comments:

In the West, a person is characterized by communicative competence on one hand and definite personality traits on the other… However, the concept of “personal” may be understood quite differently in traditionalist Africa. The individual is part of a greater structure of relationships in which each element impacts the other according to relative proximity and relative “weight.” The decisive ingredients are “presence” and “authority.” Ones identity is not defined so much by ones individual personality traits as by ones location in the communal hierarchy and the impact of this “status” on everything else in ones life world. [307]

But do either personhood positions, though culturally widespread within their respective

environments which increasingly junction and blend, bear out how God wishes us to understand

ourselves? Perhaps these particular cultural manifestations of the nature of personhood reflect

the results of living as persons. As in, because we are persons, we “love our neighbors as

ourselves,” and serve our Christian community because we are a body together not apart. [308] But

ultimately we are persons because God made us to be persons, in community with Him. [309] The

304 Guiley, Rosemary Ellen. “Apparitions” in The Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits, Page 15. She leans heavily upon the polling of the University of Chicagos National Opinion Research Council (NORC). According to Guiley, the last poll on apparitions was completed in 1987, and forty-two percent of American adults surveyed admitted some form of contact with the dead, with seventy-eight percent of those who had contact reporting an apparition of some kind. 305 Ibid. 306 Ferdinando, Keith. Triumph of Christ in African Perspective: A Study of Demonology and Redemption in the African Context, Page 379. 307 Nürnberger, Klaus. The Living Dead and the Living God: Christ and the Ancestors in a Changing Africa, Page 31. 308 Mark 12:31, 1 Corinthians 12:12-31. Regarding the figure of the body in 1 Corinthians 12, Conzelmann believes “that Pauls attack is directed against the practice of individuals disassociating themselves from the body, that is, against enthusiastic individualism.” Together, we are whole. Being apart is never supposed to occur. 309 Genesis 1:26, 2:7. We are who we are, persons, because of God who made us in entirety, and even from the context of Eden, we are not supposed to be alone. Essentially, God creates a person who is displayed as a person in

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resulting cultural theories as to what amounts to “personhood” are simply derivative outworkings

of our personhood as grounded in Gods creative work.

Let us begin to turn to the issue of demonic personhood. Nürnberger broadens this

discussion on personhood to more than simply the human and divine. He says:

But this network of human relationships is not restricted to the human community. In fact, there are no clearly defined boundaries between the self, the other and the whole. Therefore we do not find a sharp distinction between the personal and the impersonal that one finds in Western thought patterns, just as there is no clear distinction between the immanent and transcendent. Reality is one vast system of relationships. In this sense, the whole of reality is “personalized.” When a calamity strikes, the first question is always, “Who did it?” The cause can be sorcerers, witches or their (non-human) “familiars.” [310]

As we continue to let the African cultural context offer input into our discussion concerning

personhood, Herbert Bucher, in his analysis of Shona cosmology, says, “Power is wielded both

by tangible persons and by invisible entities, which latter are however, no less real an experience

than the former.” [311] Though these “invisible entities” do not directly correlate to the malevolent

demons of the Bible, their conceptions of ancestral territorial spirits, with their indispensable role

in the community power systems, certainly allows conceptual space for unseen demons with

personhood.

It should be mentioned that Nürnberger falls into the common problem of letting ones

needs dictate the discussion. Speaking about the unfortunate nature of many Christian Africans

religious duplicities, he asserts, “…the Christ they came to know through the message of the

missionaries, subsequent religious leaders, even their own reading of the Bible, does not seem to

have covered their most pressing spiritual needs.” [312] As we already posited in chapter one,

seeking to remedy “needs” is too often a false avenue. Perhaps instead of seeking Christ as the

response to their needs, the religiously bifurcated African (or Westerner) ought to seek Christ

that He may define both his needs and solutions. But Nürnberger chooses to limit the level of

dialogue permissible saying that “dialogue between Christian and African religions should not

and through community. Bill Arnold says on Genesis 2:7, “The living being is not some disembodied component of the human being, distinct from his physical existence; a soul comprising one portion of a persons whole being. Rather the living being denotes the totality of the human.” Arnold, Bill T. Genesis, Pages 57-58. 310 Nürnberger, Klaus. The Living Dead and the Living God: Christ and the Ancestors in a Changing Africa, Page 31. Nürnberger proceeds to indicate myriads of other possible causes. 311 Bucher, Hubert. Spirits and Power: An Analysis of Shona Cosmology, Page 189. 312 Ibid, Page 40.

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happen… at the level of ontological speculation.” [313] The result is that the Bible is not allowed to

define the players and needs, and it is left only to submit the moldable clay of Christ who may or

may not fit into an Africans situation.

As we continue to move toward tackling the issue of demonic personhood in light of a

multicultural context, we must again recall the preeminence of revelatory information. John

Mbiti writes:

Any viable theology must have a biblical basis… nothing can substitute for the Bible. However much African cultural religious background may be close to the biblical world, we must guard against references like “the hitherto unwritten African Old Testament” or sentiments that see any final revelation of God in the African religious heritage. [314]

Yet, while this brief statement appears to place emphasis and priority on the influx of biblical

material into a formidable Christian theology, it remains to be seen if this plays out in practice.

In light of theological formation around the world, it must be conceded that Christian theology

can be formed with the Bible and without African cultural input. In reverse, a truly “Christian”

theology cannot be constructed with African cultural input and without the Bible. The cultural

information and context is interchangeable (though not superfluous); the biblical/revelatory

contribution is essential. [315]

J. H. Nieder-Heitmann rejects anyone who would attempt to completely rescue any

cultural element from transformation, “Sin has totally permeated mans being, religion and

culture. Religion is a systematic unity and every element revolves around the axis of a religion.

For these reasons there are no unblemished values in African Religion(s) which can be separated

from the dead and rotten elements.” [316] Such is true in every context. Since culture is an

interwoven, interconnected tapestry, any change or influx creates a new whole. Too many seek

to rescue, prune, and redeem their religious heritage, when in reality it stands wholly affected.

As Amos chided ancient humanity for following the idolatrous religion of their ancestors, as Paul

so passionately declared that the Colossians were free from “philosophy which depends upon

human tradition and the elemental spiritual forces this world rather than on Christ,” we too must

313 Ibid. 314 Mbiti, John S. Bible and Theology in African Christianity, Page 59. 315 In no way is this statement seeking to demean the richness of cultures contributions to the Christian experience. 316 Nieder-Heitmann, J. H. An Analysis and Evaluation of John S. Mbitis Theological Evaluation of African Traditional Religions, Page 104

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be prepared for the consequences of accepting the Word of God. [317] But why should we worry?

What is a new perspective and a fresh attitude toward our culture when, as Paul says, we gain

Christ, “who possesses all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge?” [318]

As the oceans that divide the Western and African cultures evaporate with Christians of

both (and other) backgrounds converging in churches, universities, and communities; how then

will we aim to provide a multicultural Christian response (especially to the personhood of the

demonic) where one culture is not elevated by pejorative perspectives and prejudicial posturing?

We must let biblical revelation speak truth into our conceptions of the malevolent spirit world (or

lack thereof). The Bible must lead as our primary source of truth and unity in a multicultural

world. It stands as “the final judge of every culture.” [319]

Such a bold perspective between the Bible and culture easily garners criticism as being

narrow and unaccepting. A bibliocentric and Christocentric attitude can and does tend to err

toward a disposition of cultural engagement marred by laziness, ignorance, and

dismissiveness. [320] But the abuse of a position does not negate its validity. Revelatory priority

still stands. In a multicultural situation, criticism of each particular culture which composes the

context is inevitable. “Once multiculturalism is more widely accepted, then the much needed

internal critique of traditions and customs will accelerate.” [321] This is not a curse but a blessing.

After we accept the multicultural reality, the issue then changes. As Christians who are directed

by the revelatory truth of the Bible, shall we let another culture or our own culture determine the

corrections that should be embraced? This thesis urges us to embrace the Word of God, first and

foremost, and in our pursuit of biblical Christianity, our relationship and perspective toward

culture will consequently transform.

317 Amos 2:4; Colossians 2:8, authors paraphrase. Amos indicts Judah not only because they had turned from the true God but because they had accepted false ones. This led to a traditional, generational rebellion. “The action of the parents becomes paradigmatic to their children. The sons follow their parents in being led astray by idol worship.” Paul, Shalom M. Amos: A Commentary on the Book of Amos, Page 75. 318 Colossians 2:3, authors paraphrase. The exclusivity of Colossians 2 is jarring. “Just as the right understanding of the community is dependent upon Christ alone, so also Wisdom… and knowledge… have their ground only in him.” The Greek term pantes “bans all exceptions, so that all attempts to search out other sources of knowledge besides Christ are vain and false.” Christ is exalted by Paul due to the dangers of deceivers in verse 4 and captors in verse 8. Lohse, Eduard. Colossians and Philemon: A Commentary on the Epistles to the Colossians and to Philemon, Page 82. 319 Kato, Byang. African Cultural Revolution and the Christian Faith, Page 42. 320 The opposite is far worse. A culture-centric theology lends itself to “laziness, ignorance, and dismissiveness” toward Gods revealed truth. This position flirts with a Christ-less Christianity, the far greater evil. 321 Katsiaficas, George, and Teodros Kiros. The Promise of Multiculturalism, Page 7.

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This conclusion is not supposed to leave the multicultural context devoid of cultural

richness. Once the Scripture has taken its place as the central invigorator and director of the

Christian faith, we do not and cannot leave our cultures. We cannot obliterate our pasts. But in

the glorious light of our Savior, we rejoice in our cultural diversity within the unity we now have

in Christ. We are not divided, for there is no longer “Greek and Jew, circumcised and

uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave and freeman, but Christ is all, and in all.” [322] Let us

abscond from such misleading titles as Christian Africans or Christian Westerners, and be

radically united with Christ, in identity and activity. We have been inseparably united to the

person and work of Jesus Christ.

The time has come to turn directly to the issue of demonic personhood in a multicultural

context. In our desire to let God speak and to let His Word shape our needs, practices, and

solutions; we have already highlighted the Africans spiritual (non-skeptical) worldview as

helpful in approaching Gods supernatural revelation. Indeed, in a diverse context, they have

much to offer in their fresh biblical perspectives which will further ground us in the Scriptures,

as it was meant to be read. But what cultural tendencies may arise which would serve as

stumbling blocks toward a cohesive multicultural community?

One of the most controversial topics, especially in African theological circles, is

regarding ancestors, which form a vital part of the African worldview. Simply put, they “are still

a part of the family.” [323] In relationship to the issue of personhood, we should remember

Nürnbergers assessment, “…the whole of reality is personalized.’” [324] Personhood does not

bear the brunt of scrutiny; rather, the issue of “demonic” does. This specifically is raised

concerning the Africans relationship with their ancestors. So Nürnberger comments,

“…ancestors should never be mistaken as being part of the demonic realm, as has sometimes

been done in missionary and evangelistic circles. According to the biblical witness, ancestors

have been normal human beings when they were alive… They cannot be anything else in

322 Colossians 3:11, NASB. “What separates men from one another in the world which of course still exists has been abolished in the community of Jesus Christ.” The author of Colossians “speaks about men of completely diverse origins who have been gathered together in unity in Christ through allegiance to one Lord. True, they also continue to live in the roles that the world assigns to them as Greeks or Jews, slaves or free. But where the Body of Christ exists and where his members are joined together into a fellowship, there the differences which separate men from one another are abolished.” Lohse, Eduard. Colossians and Philemon: A Commentary on the Epistles to the Colossians and to Philemon, Pages 143-145. 323 Steyne, Philip M. Gods of Power: A Study of the Beliefs and Practices of Animists, Page 80. 324 Nürnberger, Klaus. The Living Dead and the Living God: Christ and the Ancestors in a Changing Africa, Page 31.

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death.” [325] After an examination the biblical text, he concludes in a plenary fashion, “As far as the

authority of the deceased is concerned, therefore, the messages of the Old Testament and the

New Testament leave no room for doubt; nothing, absolutely nothing, should ever assume

authority over Gods people, or be given space to stand between God and His people.” [326] Thus,

the Christian led by revelation does not lose his ancestors, but instead, his relationship to them is

drastically reshaped. Especially within a Christian context; Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and the

pantheon of faithful believers, as recounted in Hebrews 11, do not serve as present authorities or

intermediaries but as relevant examples and encouragements in our present situation. [327] This

cultural issue is simultaneously affirmed, corrected, and transformed. In a multicultural context,

a biblical perspective of the ancestors would add to the richness of theological understanding,

speaking into the past paradigms which still operate amongst those of other cultures. No doubt

many of a more Western persuasion could be reminded of the biblical value and theological

importance of our spiritual forbearers.

Since we have properly bifurcated the subjects of ancestors and demons, we must turn to

the spirits themselves. Gerrit Brand observes “…it is doubtful whether African Traditional

Religion ever knew of an absolutely evil spirit, comparable to the figure of Satan. It is, in any

case, abundantly clear that most African spirits whether ancestors of non-human spirits are,

like humans, regarded as morally ambiguous.” [328] How far is this ambiguousness from the

biblical revelation? If we consider (1) the spirit of Job 4:12-21, (2) Satans ability to disguise

himself in 2 Corinthians 11:14, and (3) the Johannine command to test the spirits in 1 John 4:1-4;

ambiguity seems to be an inherent dynamic of the biblical recording of spiritual interactions. [329]

But the Scriptures see fit to delineate and distinguish the actuality of the spirit world, not merely

our perception of it. Evil spirits (demons) exist, exerting varying levels of perverse influence in

this realm. Therefore, we must approach ambiguous circumstances with caution!

325 Ibid, Page 14. 326 Ibid, Page 62. 327 Probably the most remarkable outworking of this engagement of revelation with culture is concerning Abraham. Indeed, as Christians, he is our ancestor, and we are his seed. 328 Brand, Gerrit. Speaking of a Fabulous Ghost: In Search of Theological Criteria, with Special Reference to the Debate on Salvation in African Christian Theology, Page 100. 329 For more on Job 4:12-21, see section 2.5.2. For more on 1 John 4:1-4, see section 3.2. As for the text in 2 Corinthians 11:14, debate does exist as to whether it reflects one instance of Satanic disguise or his “habitual activity.” But from the passage itself, no reason is apparent which would limit Satans masquerade to one instance, just as his servants (human false apostles) continue their fraud. For more on this discussion, see Thrall, Margaret, E. II Corinthians: Volume II, Pages 695-696.

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Another issue, as we have repeatedly addressed throughout this thesis, is the skeptical

proclivities of the Western mind in the Christian context. Though it might be an understatement

to classify it as merely a “tendency,” Ferdinando summarizes, “Western scholarship has tended

to be skeptical toward African claims about both spirit and occult attack…” [330] Possession,

witchcraft, and other manifestations of a malevolent, accessible, and personal spiritual realm are

often relegated to the psychological sphere. Of course, the logic of such bold skepticism is

tedious, as the denial of every so-called spiritual or demonic event requires far more

investigation and faith than the openness and acceptance of the possibility. The odds are not in

skepticisms favor. [331] Ferdinando concludes, “… the case for the predominantly skeptical

western approach has not been established.” [332]

In a multicultural context composed of but not limited to African and Western Christians,

the biblical material concerning the demonic, on a canonical level, harshly rebukes this Western

skepticism while not necessary confirming the entire perspective of the African Christian.

However, this rebuked skepticism does serve a valid biblical function. While others may lean

toward being too accepting in a diverse context, this skepticism may prove helpful to the whole

in dispelling and remedying the overall ambiguity of the spirit realm. Ergo, as Christians who

are first and foremost directed by the testimony of Scripture, a chastened skepticism should no

longer deny the demonic but clarify it.

Therefore, in a multicultural context, the path to unity while avoiding ethnocentricism

and isolationism is found in a biblical adherence which transcends and transforms our

relationship to our cultures. This is profoundly crucial concerning our approach to the

personhood of the demonic and the spirit realm in a diverse setting. In multicultural churches

and communities, the reading together of the biblical information concerning the demonic

becomes paramount. By this, cultural superstitions are dispersed, and cultural skepticism is

reshaped. Accepting the Scripture as our primary guide, we, of every people and tongue, are left

330 Ferdinando, Keith. The Triumph of Christ in the African Perspective: A Study of Demonology and Redemption in the African Context, Page 372. 331 For a skeptic to be validated in his dismissive attitude toward the reality of the demonic realm, every single instance must be thoroughly disproven beyond the level of reasonable doubt. Undermining such skeptics only requires one instance of the “so-called” demonic which provides a unexplainable level of curiosity-provoking evidence. As Christians, should not the biblical narratives of Jesus ministry in the Gospels provoke us to openness instead of driving us to skepticism? 332 Ferdinando, Keith. The Triumph of Christ in the African Perspective: A Study of Demonology and Redemption in the African Context, Page 378.

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with the distinct biblical theology that the demonic realm is indeed personal in description. To

those who experience it, caution and sobriety is ordered, that they might avoid remedies which

do not find their root in the authority and testimony of Christ. To those who do not knowingly

encounter demonic personalities, faithfulness and watchfulness is commanded that they might

pursue the cause of Christ in a world ruled and manipulated by the enemys servants.

3.7 Conclusion

As we conclude this chapter, let us recapitulate the divulged argumentation. In order to

analyze Barth and Ungers perspective concerning the personhood of the demonic in a

multicultural context, groundwork had to be laid. Culture itself was initially described,

particularly focusing on its relationship to the gospel and hermeneutics. Primarily utilizing

African theological compositions, we advocated that “Africans need to formulate theological

concepts in the language of Africa. But theology itself in its essence must be left alone. The

Bible must remain the basic source of Christian theology.” [333] Avoiding tendencies to champion

solely “Western” or “African” theologies, we ultimately resisted any attempts to simply attribute

theology as being another manifestation of cultural processes and goals. Because theology is

ultimately concerned with the proper reception and comprehension of the revelatory material and

hermeneutically conveying it into our cultural context, theology and culture are indeed related,

but the revelatory weight of the Word of God lends theology the strength to speak into our

cultures and to transform (affirming and rebuking) our relationships with them.

Having established a revelation-centered understanding of culture, multiculturalism and

its impact upon hermeneutical and theological arenas was investigated. With increasing

diversity in churches, Christian communities, and universities in limited geographical areas,

Gods people can no longer function as isolated cultural manifestations of Christianity, because

multiple cultures are present. How do we find Christian cohesion? Some might attempt to

service one cultures particular needs, and yes, some division may be necessary in order to

bridge linguistic gaps. But our emphasis must lie on the elevation of the biblical perspective in

the midst of a multicultural community. Christ, as revealed in the Scriptures, unites.

As the overarching foil for our analysis of the personhood of the demonic, Barth and

Ungers perspective toward theology and culture was integrated into the discussion. We

333 Kato, Byang H. “Theological Anemia in Africa” in Biblical Christianity in Africa, Page 12.

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concluded that while Barth desired to have a theology which was biblically derived, his

demonology is essentially “hijacked” by his Western philosophical presuppositions. Even

Bromiley was left saddened by Barths demonological conclusions. Somehow through it all, he

maintains a demonic realm which is personal, remaining true to a biblical perspective, yet the

demonics uncreated origin and its relationship with nothingness is incongruent with the

revelatory material.

Merrill Unger constructs a demonology that is far more biblical. However, he quickly

succumbs to the ever-popular Evangelical mistake of failing to fully define the roles of other

sources which inevitably surface in any theology. In Ungers case, he elevates biblical authority

yet allows traditional (cultural) paradigms to define the very system with which he approaches

the personal demonic beings described in Scripture. Thus, unlike the Bible, he formulates a

demonology that is grounded upon their ontology, when revelation ushers in demonic themes

through their activity. Only through demons activities do we begin to discern their ontology.

We then turned to multiculturalism and the personhood of the demonic. In a diverse

context, the Bible must speak, and the African perspective is largely affirmed by the Bibles

primarily personal understanding of the spiritual world. Yet the African spiritual world is not

beyond biblical transformation for the African Christian in a multicultural context. After

properly dividing the subject of the ancestors from the malevolent spirits, spirits in general

require caution and testing due to the remarkable level of ambiguity in biblically recorded

instances. Western Christianitys tendency toward skepticism is also transformed in light of the

biblical material. Revelatory acceptance instead of empirical presumptuousness is required, but

a skeptical mindset still lends itself to usefulness balancing and correcting those who might be

far too oblivious and ambitious with their relationship to unseen evils.

Therefore, we can conclude that when we accept the biblical material concerning the

personhood of the demonic in chapter two, it transforms the multicultural Christian communitys

perspective toward the demonic. The Bible affirms and rebukes, leaving us united and enriched

by our contextual perspectives yet grounded and directed by a singular understanding and

response to the personal malevolent spirit realm.

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4. The Strengths and Weaknesses of Barth and Ungers Positions toward a Defensible

Account of the Personal Nature of the Demonic

4.1 Introduction

Now that we have outlined and interacted with the pivotal topics of recent biblical

scholarship and the multicultural context, we will draw out some concerns and affirmations from

those theological avenues with regard to the demonological contributions of Karl Barth in

Church Dogmatics and Merrill Unger in Biblical Demonology . Since we concluded in chapter

two that the majority of authors advocated that the Bible does envision intermediary beings

which act malevolently and that these beings progressively manifest as personal demons, we

must then ask if Barth and Unger have strengths and weaknesses in these areas. Also, since we

affirmed in chapter three that our increasingly multicultural context demands a biblical emphasis

in order to avoid cultural preferences over one another, we must also investigate any strength or

weaknesses which may turn up in Barth and Ungers theology of demonic personhood when it is

challenged by the multicultural context.

As we confront Barth and Ungers writings with our assessments from the recent biblical

scholarship and the multicultural context, we must be reminded: no work of scholarship, no

cultural study is absolute. Their criticisms and encouragements toward Barth and Unger should

not be unreflectively swallowed, for their perspectives are flawed, just as the perspectives of this

thesis are certainly defective in places. With that in mind, let us first delve into Barths

theological offerings.

4.2 Karl Barths Strengths with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic

While Barths theology does not address the personhood of the demonic at length, it is

briefly mentioned. As we have seen, this arises because of his overwhelming desire to maintain

a biblical perspective. His stand against demythologization, in the Bultmann sense of the word,

is quite contrary to the academic thought at that time. But overall, we observed that Barths

demonology as a whole is swamped with philosophical convictions. Therefore, the strengths and

weaknesses of Barths demonological positions are tenuous and debatable, as one cannot always

discern what source (whether Scripture, reason/philosophy, or culture) is grounding his

theological decision.

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When we narrow the topic to simply demonic personhood, Barths biblical

presuppositions shine. Speaking from a Barthian perspective, it is likely an over-step to

designate demons as fully ontological beings, though he might inadvertently refer to them as

beings. [334] But as uncreated “beings” derived from nothingness, “which ultimately traces back…

to God,” they are most certainly real. [335] Barth has no problem describing them in personal

ways. [336] They are essentially nothingness in personal form. With such an arguably non-biblical

(and eisegetical) concept of nothingness which would easily lend itself to a completely

depersonalized view of evil, why would Barth reach a personalized conclusion?

His biblicism demands this conclusion. Indeed, the Bible describes demons as a part of

the kingdom which stands opposed against God. Barth aggressively asserts:

…it is for the Bible no mere figure of speech or poetic fancy or expression of human concern but the simple truth that nothingness has this dynamic, that it is a kingdom on the march and engaged in invasion and assault… a kingdom which by the very fact that God confronts it is characterised from the very outset as weak and futile… yet a real kingdom, a nexus of form and power and movement and activity, of real menace and danger within its appointed limits. This is how Holy Scripture sees nothingness. And this is how it also sees demons. [337] Nothingness is falsehood. It exists as such, having a kind of substance and person, vitality and spontaneity, form and power and movement. As such it founds and organises its kingdom. And demons are its exponents, the powers of falsehood in a thousand different forms. [338]

Of course, this reality is always posed in tension. He wishes to cede no ground to those who

“boldly demythologise.” Demons cannot be ignored. But they cannot be respected as true

powers. Their falsehood, their nothingness should never be out of view.

In light of recent biblical scholarship, what is Barths strength? By far, Barths stated

desire for activitys preeminence in the demonic field stands out. Biblical scholarship is quite

uniform on the matter; demonology itself, though frequently referenced, is a supplementary

theme throughout the Scriptures. Barth says well, “…the Bible only touches on this sphere at all

334 “We cannot deny but must soberly recognise that in all these things the demons are constantly present and active. Fortunately the angels are also present and active. But there can be no doubt that the demons are there too, beings which betray their nature by this fatal too.’” Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 528. He even utters the term “demonic being” two pages later. 335 Mallow, Vernon R. The Demonic: A Selected Theological Study: An Examination into the Theology of Edwin Lewis, Karl Barth, and Paul Tillich, Page 54. 336 Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatics, III, 3, Page 481. 337 Ibid, Page 524. 338 Ibid, Page 527.

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as it shows God and His angels to be in conflict with it… it does not in the least require us to

consider or take this sphere seriously in and for itself.” [339] This perspective floods into his idea of

demonic personhood. While he is completely comfortable discussing anthropology and

Christology with their respective ontological ramifications, demonology is not afforded the same

attention but is discussed with direct reference to their activity of opposition. In his demonology,

ontology is a concern, as he is still defending the doctrine of nothingness, but demonic

personhood occurs more incidentally. [340]

This thesis then moved forward from recent biblical scholarship in order to approach and

integrate the multicultural context into the analysis at hand. Again, Barths strength flows from

his prioritization of the biblical material, at least with regard to demonic personhood. Thus, in a

European context comfortable with Bultmanns demythological project, Barth surprisingly

advocates that the Scriptures assert personal perspectives toward the demonic realm. From the

conclusions provided in chapter three, Barths demonology proves fairly coherent in a

multicultural context, though his philosophical thought concerning nothingness and other

outstanding issues do cause hindrances in attaining communal unity in the Scriptures.

4.3 Karl Barths Weaknesses with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic

After examining biblical scholarship concerning the personhood of the demonic, the

problems with Barths demonological project are quite glaring. Karl Barth, while engaging the

major theological trends and questions of his time, is found to be inconsistent. While claiming a

demonology grounded in Scripture, his perspective in Church Dogmatics rarely returns to it,

leaving the reader to question what scholarship and texts he entertained to construct his

positions. Yes, he offers biblical conclusions, as in a demonic realm that is real, active, and

personal, but though those demonological conclusions may fit within the larger work, they

certainly strike as unusual in his nothingness-dominated demonology. [341] When he does directly

339 Ibid, Page 522. 340 While this is a strength of Barths, this is a noticeable flaw in Ungers demonology. The biblical material relegates the ontology and origin of the demonic as nearly inconsequential. Instead, we are consistently warned to be alert because of their activities. This biblical orientation is not embraced by Unger. He argues for the reality and origin of demons long before he directly assesses their influence and effect in the created realm. In Biblical Demonology, Pages 35-66 address their reality, identity, and description. Page 67 begins Ungers analysis of demonic activity. 341 Bromiley, Geoffrey W. Introduction to the Theology of Karl Barth, Page 155.

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utilize Scripture, the Apocalypse surprisingly stands as a central text, blurring an already difficult

subject with a difficult genre. [342]

Again, we turn to the topic of culture and theology. We will now highlight Barths

primary weakness in his personhood of the demonic in light of the multicultural context, but we

must be careful to not offer an anachronological critique. As in, when he wrote in the middle of

the 1900s, could we declare that the processes of globalism and multiculturalism had begun in

full? How then could we admonish Barth for not taking it into account!

As we noticed, Barths theological relationship to culture is not obvious. [343] As all

theologians do, he clearly operates within a cultural framework, but his stated desire is to be

directed by revelation. This sentiment and his discomfort with demonology combine to offer us

little interaction with cultural ramifications of his demonology. Maintaining a biblical

demonology, especially with regard to personhood, does inevitably lead us to various

confrontation and affirmation situations with the cultural information we are sociologically fed.

Unfortunately, this is not a concern of Barths, and we are left to do this task. But this weakness

is perhaps a strength in a multicultural context, as no particular culture is elevated to being a

primary interlocutor, though he does not identify and engage his own cultural presuppositions.

Instead, he wishes that the biblical material might speak, and it does in part. Now let us shift to

the strengths and weaknesses of Merrill Ungers personhood of the demonic.

4.4 Merrill Ungers Strengths with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic

Biblical Demonology is a direct systematic attempt to compile and analyze the biblical

information regarding the demonic, with the hope of providing meaningful and challenging

application for the Christian in the world. In his endeavor to search out the demonic subject, he

avoids common arbitrary hermeneutical assumptions, desiring that he might remain consistent to

the biblical claims. The end result perhaps overwhelms the reader with references. Fidelity to

the biblical material and what it intended to convey, from a canonical perspective, is a clear

priority. He says:

342 Barth fails to interact with biblical scholars throughout his demonological section (angelology is a different matter). A common, unfortunate error of some systematic theologians is the disconnection of biblical scholarship from the formal theological enterprise. On this subject, he is a perfect example. But Unger completely contrasts Barths absence of interlocuters with a persistent interaction with biblical and theological scholarship. 343 Fulljames, Peter. God and Creation in Intercultural Theology: Dialogue between Theologies of Barth, Dickson, Pobee, Nyamiti, and Pannenberg, Page 15.

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… there is not a hint that Jesus or any of the New Testament writers had the slightest doubt as to the real existence of either Satan or the demons. They believed in their reality as much as in the existence of God, or of the good angels. Only slight investigation is necessary to expose the extreme crudity, destructiveness, and untenability of the rationalistic and mythical view of Satan and demons. It not only jeopardizes the character and truthfulness of the Son of God himself, but challenges the authenticity and reliability of the whole Bible. For if the teachings of Scripture on the subject of Satan and demons are judged mythical, any other doctrine of Holy Writ may likewise be declared mythical at the caprice of the critic, who is disposed to offset his opinions against those of the prophets, apostles, and the Lord himself. [344]

This humble approach, wherein he sets the Scriptures above himself, dictates his approach to the

demonic.

Ungers greatest strength is his unashamed attitude of receptivity toward the Bible.

Because he seeks to simply accept the text instead of reinterpreting it, his personhood of the

demonic, much like Barths, finds few enemies amongst modern biblical scholarship, though he

certainly has less friends in the theological realm considering how strongly he rebukes imposed

textual judgments which stray from the original intention of the author. With the gospels at

center stage, he attempts to describe the phenomena recorded, and he consequently dismisses any

conclusion that would seek to depersonify the demonic. [345] As the previously analyzed biblical

scholarship mostly recognized the personal nature of the demonic confrontations in the gospels

and remained open to the possibility of personhood in other texts, Unger, accepting the

Scriptures as a canonical whole, has no problem viewing the entire demonic theme as personal

even when it is not explicitly revealed.

Again, considering that Biblical Demonology was originally composed in the 1952, we

cannot expect Unger to fully account for the multicultural context in his demonology. But he

does have an eye for diversity. The near universal existence of “demonological phenomena”

serves as an introductory context by which he begins his study. [346] Even with his clearly Western

background, he seeks to encounter the text in such a way that it speaks to the global experience.

Unger does not arrive at his biblical study of the demonic out of unusual curiosity;

demonologys practicality demands that it be a subject carefully parsed.

344 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Pages 36-37. 345 Ibid, Page 41. 346 Ibid, Page 1.

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Some would view the whole subject of Biblical demonology as accidental and essentially purposeless, a mere incursion of popular contemporary superstitions into the Biblical accounts. Others would trace the facts to remnants of animistic or polytheistic belief in the evolutionary process from a more primitive and cruder faith. The emptiness of such baseless naturalistic hypotheses, however, is emphasized by the eminent practicality and intrinsic purposefulness of Biblical demonology. [347]

Of course, his work continues on to address many practical issues after constructing a biblical

framework for the reality, identity, origin, and activity of the demonic realm. A biblical and

practical response is offered in response to possession, magic, divination, necromancy, heresy,

world governments, eschatology, and deliverance practices. [348] His reception of the biblical

material, with its portrayal of demons as active and personal beings, leads him to have a

meaningful voice in the global and multicultural context, as these are relevant issues in virtually

any society.

However, this voice, seeking to remain biblical yet inevitably colored by a Western

cultural lens shaped by historical expeditions into demonology, does not and cannot

unconsciously accept the spiritual practices of the West or the rest of the world which result from

a personhood of the demonic. In an attempt to relay Gods revelation into the global context,

Unger lets the Bible both affirm the reality of experience and challenge our response to it. This

disposition, which places the Bible in the seat of authority, is a profound strength in a

multicultural context. The Christian community ultimately coheres, not according to a

fluctuating set of cultural parameters, but upon the unchanging Word of God.

If we turn directly to the personhood of the demonic, Ungers strength, in relationship to

the multicultural context, is that he accepts the reality and personhood of the demonic from the

biblical material and attempts to apply it in light of the global context. How could he reach a

mythical understanding of the demonic when the Bible does not convey it and the global context

does not bear it out? Believing that demonization is directly or indirectly caused by demons, he

will not ignore:

347 Ibid, Page 25. 348 After arriving at the conclusion that the demonic realm is personal, we should not dismiss the contributions of Migliore ( The Power of God and the gods of Power ) and Wink ( Engaging the Powers ). Rather, the demonics relationship to power, especially human government, is left as a subject requiring even further engagement. Unger says, “In every age of human history and in every phase of daily life demons have played a tremendous and very important role. In no realm is their activity more significant than in the sphere of human government. In this area possibly more than in any other field of their operation their activity has frequently not been clearly discerned or even partially understood.” Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 181.

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Cases both of spontaneous or involuntary and voluntary possession are practically universal in extent, there being no quarter of the globe where such phenomena have not been authenticated nor any class or society, primitive or civilized, where they have not occurred, nor any period, ancient, or medieval, or modern, in which cases cannot be cited. [349]

Unger sees this context, and since God has revealed Himself in such a way that offers victory

over the personal and malevolent spirit world, he proclaims that Gods truth be received and

trumpeted.

4.5 Merrill Ungers Weaknesses with Regard to the Personhood of the Demonic

As we cast a glance upon the primary weaknesses of Ungers personhood of the demonic,

it is likely that the reader has already noticed them as they were exposed throughout this thesis.

Ungers relationship to recent biblical scholarship is fairly amicable. As an Old Testament

scholar with a PhD in Semitics and Biblical Archeology, his respect for the Word of God is

evident. But blind spots do crop up. He does not incorporate the progressive nature of

revelation into his analysis of the demonic, and the vaguenesses of the Old Testament witness

concerning the spirit world are not discussed at length. Indeed, this seems to avoid scrutiny due

to his canonical hermeneutic wherein the New Testament grants luciferous insights, which

reveals a fuller understanding of the Old Testament. [350] While this thesis does not desire to

undermine the centrality of canonical hermeneutics in the Christian religion, the progression of

demonology (and especially personhood) throughout the biblical text does demand interaction

and assessment.

As a brief aside concerning the progression of demonological thought in the Scriptures,

speculation regarding the transmission of ANE thought to Hebrew theology is commonplace in

contemporary scholarship. In reference to Zoroastrianisms influence in the ancient world, G. J.

Riley says, “Circles within Judaism used [the Zoroastrian demonological] framework to revalue

older myths and produced after the Exile the dualistic strains of Judaism visible in post-exilic

349 Ibid, Page 84. Ungers inherently ethnocentric understanding of culture and “civilization” permeates this statement, yet it should sadly be recognized that his perspective was not uncommon at the time of his writing. He cites T. K. Oesterreichs Possession, Demoniacal and Other among Primitive Races in Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and Modern Times (New York: R. Long and R. Smith, Inc., 1930. Pages 131-380) to support his argument. 350 Ibid, Pages 15-16. In this section, he is building a biblical understanding of Satan. His interpretation of the Old Testament texts hinges upon the presence of the New Testament.

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and intertestamental literature and in Christianity.” [351] Yes, an increase in flamboyant

demonological literature, such as the book of Enoch, does surface especially in the

intertestamental period, which may have been influenced by such currents. But those

superstitious works bear little in common with the biblical material, in both the Old and New

Testaments. [352] As an Old Testament scholar, Unger notes, “Even Jewish demonology, in spite of

the chaste and lofty example of the Old Testament Scriptures, has by the time of our Lord

degenerated into a system of almost incredible and fanciful superstition, in sharp contrast to both

Old and New Testament teaching.” [353] It should also be considered that while similarities in

terms and categories may be worthy of study, conclusions which directly assert cause

(Zoroastrian dualism) and effect (post-exilic Hebrew demonology) are ultimately speculative.

Thus, in the midst of such speculation which overtly overlooks the revelatory nature of the

Scriptures, this thesis posits that we should instead place our focus upon our remarkable canon of

sixty-six works, which elucidates an unusually unadorned and perspicuous demonology.

Ungers emphasis is clearly upon the text, but not engaging with the demonological progression

in the biblical material is a noticeable omission.

Ungers personhood of the demonic in light of the growing multicultural context also has

its problems as well. The most prominent is that he fails to state and account for his own cultural

influences as he attempts to present a truly biblical and personal demonology. This lack of self

analysis leads Unger to one of the frequent errors of his time: an archaic idea of culture and the

preeminence of Western culture as true “civilization.” [354]

This lack of reflection is particularly prominent when he discusses “The Character of

Ethnic Demonology” in chapter three. [355] He systematically contrasts the revelation of God the

“true and thoroughly reliable… criterion of appraisal” with the briefly sketched demonological

thoughts of numerous cultures. [356] Yet as he rightly critiques others, he does not pose the

possibility that his own presentation of a biblical demonology, with its blunt acceptance of a

demonic personhood, may be shaded by his cultural relationship to the topic. On top of this

351 Riley, G. C. “Demon” in The Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (DDD), Page 238. 352 Is there a spot in the biblical text which definitively asserts a dualistic cosmology? In the Old and New Testaments, Satan and his demons are consistently portrayed as underlings, subservient to Gods sovereignty and unable to persist in thwarting Gods power. All spirits appear to be under His control. 353 Unger, Merrill. Biblical Demonology, Page 4. 354 Ibid, Page 1. 355 Ibid, Pages 29-32. 356 Ibid, Page 29.

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problem, a more substantial response to mythology, demythologization, and symbolism is

noticeably absent. Understanding culture more broadly, these academic enterprises might

perhaps deserve to be placed under his survey of “ethnic demonology,” but instead, these

subjects barely garner a few paragraphs. [357] But what conclusions can we discern from our

assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of Barth and Ungers demonic personhoods?

4.6 Conclusion

On a whole, Barth and Unger are left relatively unscathed and largely affirmed by

contemporary scholarship in their reading of the biblical material concerning the personhood of

the demonic. The biblical scholarship often implicates that the textual intention is to convey a

personal demonic ontology. While not overwhelmingly supported, Barth and Ungers

theological conclusions from the text are, at least, vindicated as valid. Of course, while the text

seems to indicate demonic personhood, many choose to impose demythological methodologies,

but this interpretive endeavor is not supplied or supported from Scripture. In no way should we

misconstrue Barth and Ungers position as unbiblical.

Furthermore, Barth and Ungers theology of demonic personhood stands up well in a

multicultural context. While their unreflective perspective toward culture does create significant

blind spots, their overwhelming desire to focus upon the biblical texts and to found their

demonologies upon those texts results in a surprising level of unity regarding the personhood of

the demonic. This is a remarkable event considering Barth and Ungers divergent contexts. But

this biblical emphasis translates well into the multicultural context, wherein we can bring our

cultural backgrounds, sit at the feet of Gods Word, be united together, and transformed in our

cultural perspectives.

As we conclude this thesis, we must finally turn to the natural conclusions of accepting

the reality and language of demonic personhood. What theological consequences are there?

What practical ramifications occur? How can we further study and further equip the church on

this issue?

357 Ibid, Page 90.

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5. Conclusion and Suggestions for Further Study

5.1 Introduction

In chapter one, we surveyed the demonological contributions of Karl Barth in Church

Dogmatics and Merrill Unger in Biblical Demonology . We posed the question of whether or not

they advocated for an impersonal or personal perspective toward the demonic. Though

surrounded and crafted by widely differing theological contexts, they both opted to convey the

reality of demons through personal indicators, as they both desired to remain faithful to the

revelatory language of the Bible.

This led us to chapter two, wherein we investigated if the biblical witness, as shown

through contemporary scholarship, indicated and validated a demonic which is personal. While

we did encounter a progressive introduction of demonic personhood throughout the biblical text,

many scholars advocated that the texts which referenced the demonic contained personal

references. Barth and Ungers reading of the biblical material was found to be remarkably valid.

Cultural contexts input into the topic was presented in chapter three. After outlining

culture and the rise of multiculturalism, we assessed the cultural perspectives of Barth and

Unger. Employing a host of African sources, we engaged the plausibility of a personhood of the

demonic in a multicultural context. This thesis asserted that Christian cohesion in a diverse

community is forged through biblical fidelity and that fidelity results in affirmation, correction,

and transformation of every culture represented. From this instruction, we concluded that Barth

and Ungers acceptance of the biblical language of a personal demonic realm was appropriate,

especially in a multicultural setting.

Chapter four then asked analytical questions concerning Barth and Ungers personhood

of the demonic. We assessed their strengths and weakness with regard to the previously

provided input of recent biblical scholarship and the multicultural context. While numerous

flaws were uncovered, both theologians were deemed proficient, as they both operated using

personal references to the demonic due to their biblical perspective, which grants theological

strength and unity to the multicultural Christian community.

Finally, in response to these four chapters, we must now ask, “What are the consequences

of accepting a demonology with personhood?” The range of responses is evident. On one hand,

Barth prefers to theologically demythologize the subject, and on the other hand, Unger offers

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numerous applications, spilling into his other works in the demonological field. But how will we

respond? The theological and practical complications could be discussed at great length,

requiring their own thesis! In that light, suggestions for further research will be suggested. Let

us begin with the theological ramifications of integrating a demonic personhood into our

theological structures.

5.2 Theological Consequences of a Personhood of the Demonic

No theological enterprise should be performed in isolation. A systematic study, such as

this one, cannot be left to stand alone. Can we pursue a consistent and inter-related theological

perspective in order that we can present a cohesive and consistent Christianity, before a watching

world and church? With that question in mind, what theological ramifications stem from

accepting a personhood of the demonic in our systematics? Here are three suggested fields for

reevaluation.

If we accept that the extant narratives of the gospels truly depict our Savior expelling

demonic persons from the demonized, our Christological efforts ought to reflect those realities.

While the primary biblical motifs of Christ the Prophet, Priest, and King should not be

supplanted, Christ the Exorcist should be integrated as a subsidiary motif. Diane Stinton, in her

work Jesus of Africa: Voices of Contemporary African Christology, researched the prevalence of

particular Christological titles. In the study of “Jesus as liberator,” she found that a common

sentiment was, in the words of interviewed clergyman Abraham Akrong, “I think hes liberator

only in the sense of the one who liberates us from demons and witches but not in terms of social,

political liberation.” [358] She later concluded, “Analysis of the oral Christologies reveals almost

unanimous assent to the image of Jesus as liberator, with interpretations generally favoring

personal and spiritual dimensions such as deliverance from sin, fear, and evil powers.” [359] This

common perspective merits further systematic emphasis and investigation in light of a personal

demonic.

Theologies of personhood also need to be widely reevaluated. Throughout this study, we

have rejected that personhood is merely the result of a certain attribute of communicative ability,

intellectual capacity, or social designation. Yes, they are valuable indicators, but they serve to

358 Stinton, Diane B. Jesus of Africa: Voices of Contemporary African Christology, Page 209. 359 Ibid, Page 213.

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identify what already exists with or without them. Concerning humanity, a person is a person

because God created them as one. In the case of the demonic, we only observe the results of

personhood (will, intellect, emotion, and social hierarchy/relationship) sketched by divine

revelation in personal terms, with no biblical creation account included for further clarity.

Reorienting our personhood studies around the ultimate Person would be a logical step. Before

He created, God was the only Person; a Person in a far greater sense than we can ever convey or

articulate. The created spirit realm and humanity bear personhood, not because of empirical and

sociological signs but because of our Fathers gracious act of creation. While other insights are

valuable, a divine perspective is primary.

As a subject of critical study, demonology, by far, bears the strongest relationship with

soteriology, regardless of whether the demonology in question espouses an impersonal or

personal demonic. Works like Gustaf Auléns Christus Victor have championed this strong

tie. [360] But how does a personal demonic realm affect this association? It adds a level of

tangibility to redemption. Yes, the sins which we exhibit everyday have been addressed by the

work of Christ. These are performed by every person everywhere, even now, but as the author of

Hebrews argues, Christ is the sufficient sacrifice and high priest to satisfy the wages of such

behavior. And yes, Christ has dramatically reshaped our affiliation with the world the patterns,

goals, and practices developed by its inhabitants. And yes, Christ has rescued us, ransomed us

from the hateful grip of Satan and his servants. Our salvation is never amorphous. We are saved

from the wrath of the ultimate Person, from the sinful patterns of a world of persons, from the

unsatisfying desires of our own person, and from the schemes of a largely unseen realm of

malevolent persons. All of this is not accomplished by a moral code, a sacrificed animal, or an

intellectual paradigm but the compassionate action of the person Jesus Christ. Thus, our

salvation is plausible, tangible, and consistent. But this consistency is not as clear unless we

maintain the personhood of the demonic. In that light, it may prove beneficial to reassess

soteriology as a personal subject.

360 Aulén, Gustaf. Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of the Atonement. Pages 47-55 especially illuminate the relationship of Satan and salvation. Sadly, his focus primarily rests upon Satan himself, not the wider idea of the demonic.

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5.3 Practical Consequences of a Personhood of the Demonic

Too often, we engage in theological pursuits with little to no relationship to the practical

realm, to the detriment of the churchs health and the gospels spread. Intellectual stimulation

and even self-gratification can be our theological ends. The hope is that even this thesis could

largely remain accessible to the church and beneficial for its nourishment. With that in mind, we

will draw some specific outworkings of a demonic personhood in the ecclesiological context.

One group has affirmed, with near universality, the personal nature of the demonic. So

then, what must we do with the testimony and instruction of exorcists and deliverance

practitioners? Should their empirical contributions be dismissed? While empiricism is a flawed

system because as an inherently naturalistic process it cannot fully account for spiritual factors,

the observations and testimonies of personal encounters similar to the biblical witness should be

evaluated. Theologians such as J. Janse van Rensburg argue strongly for the relevance and value

of empirical research, advocating and participating in qualitative studies into deliverance

ministries.

Throughout the history of the church, godly men have detailed their personal

confrontations with the demonic. Among the church fathers, the accounts are numerous.

Tertullian writes, “For God, Creator of the universe, has no need of odours or of blood. These

things are the food of devils. But we not only reject those wicked spirits: we overcome them; we

daily hold them up to contempt; we exorcise them from their victims, as multitudes can

testify.” [361] Irenaeus was more than comfortable concluding that a “whom” had demonized the

ancient heretic Marcus. [362] The so-called ministry of the “Holy Spirit” through a demonized

woman is discussed by Firmilian in his letter to Cyprian, wherein her deceptions with the aid of

at least one demon and her subsequent deliverance by a Christian exorcist are recounted. [363] A

compilation of the early Christian demonological accounts would be a vast undertaking! But

cataloging the sheer number of contemporary reports would also prove difficult.

361 Tertullian, “To Scapula: Chapter 2” in Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume 3, PC Study Bible formatted electronic database. 362 Irenaeus, “Against Heresies: The Deceitful Arts and Nefarious Practices of Marcus” in Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume 1, PC Study Bible formatted electronic database. 363 Cyprian, “Epistle 74 Firmilian to Cyprian: Chapter 10” in Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume 5, PC Study Bible formatted electronic database.

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Within the past century, numerous deliverance specialists have recorded empirical

offerings on this matter. [364] Kurt Koch, the late German theologian, controversially discussed

hundreds of cases of apparently occultic and demonic activities, describing a demonic realm

which is profoundly personal. [365] In a straightforward manner, van Rensberg recounts the

ministry of André OKennedy, a Dutch Reformed Minister, who conversed in Afrikaans with a

demon who dwelled in a man who could not speak that language. [366] Others, such as Karl Payne,

have sought to not only document the variety of demonic attacks but also to train leaders and

laypersons to systematically utilize biblical principles with restraint and courage, when

necessary. [367] Even Dr. Ed Murphy, from a Pentecostal background, directs readers of his

Handbook for Spiritual Warfare to lead deliverance sessions which keep spirits silent, avoiding

confusion and unnecessary clamor. [368] All of these practitioners and others are responding to the

same phenomena the apparent acts of unseen malevolent persons. Can we dismiss their input

and perspective in light of the work of Christ, Paul, Steven, and others?

Can we also concede our past errors, as a Christian community, in this regard? Aversion

and skepticism toward this topic may be the result of Christianitys unfortunate treatment of the

demonic in the past. Satan and his compatriots have been sensationalized by authors like Danté,

and they have been misconstrued as being far more powerful than they actually are. Erwin

Lutzer corrects this notion saying, “…although Lucifer rebelled that he might no longer be Gods

364 Only a limited number of examples are included for the sake of brevity. Opponents to the reality of the demonic admit that empirical evidence may arise in opposition to their position. “Could demons perhaps be written off on the basis of empirical motives? This is a problematic argument, for our experience of empirical facts is codetermined by a normative world-picture: Proponents of the view that demons exist will probably have empirical arguments of their own. Therefore, we shall have to provide good argumentative justification for maintaining the normativeness of the modern world-picture as far as scepticism about demons is concerned. This could be done by pointing to the achievements of modern science after 1600. The rejection of demonology is part of the broader development: Today, we have better, more successful explanatory theories at hand, namely psychiatric categories. However, this argument would hardly impress the opponent, for in his view, it is precisely natural science that has a blind spot for these kinds of realities.” Labooy, Guus. Freedom and Dispositions, Page 277. 365 Probably his two most famous works are Occult ABC and Christian Counseling and Occultism . As for instances of personal encounters, they are numerous, but one extreme instance is found in Occultism ABC, pages 304-305. 366 Van Rensberg, J. Janse. “A Qualitative Investigation into the So-Called Ministry of Deliverance” in In die Skriflig 44 (3 & 4), 2010, Page 689-690. 367 Payne, Karl I. Spiritual Warfare: Christians, Demonization, and Deliverance . Chapter two contains a pair of more obvious instances of demons acting as individual persons within a human host, but this is far from Karl Paynes emphasis. He is primarily concerned with the contemporary churchs laxity toward the nuanced advances of the enemy against the laity. He says on page 135, “Demonic warfare is usually a battle of mental subtleties and deception that more often than not focuses upon growing Christians.” 368 Murphy, Ed. The Handbook for Spiritual Warfare, Pages 595-599. Dr. Murphys work is perhaps the most thorough presentation of theological and practical insights regarding the demonic, utilizing a plethora of first hand experiences and biblical references.

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servant, he still is.” [369] Gods sovereignty has not been subverted; His children need not fear the

unseen, unnecessarily avoid the biblical identifiers of personhood, or glamorize the churchs

ministries against the demonic. From the scholarship we assessed, the realm of the demons, with

their described personhood and activities, is a simple truth of Gods revelation, depicted to bring

glory not to the conquered but the Conqueror Jesus Christ.

Finally, if we accept the revelatory commitment that demons are defined as personal

beings which interact within the visible world we inhabit, then our pastoral and counseling care

should account for their impact like any other factor. Unger comments:

Because demons are spirit personalities, they can act upon and influence mans body and mind. Counselors, parapsychologists, and psychiatrists who deny or ignore this sphere of reality render themselves unequipped to deal with patients who may be suffering from occult oppression and subjection... [370]

Hence, contributions such as the Resources for Christian Counseling series which includes an

entire volume entitled Counseling and the Demonic should perhaps be further utilized. [371]

Rodger Buffords balanced perspective dictates stringent diagnostic standards and an aversion

toward one-size-fits-all deliverance activities, instead suggesting multiple spiritual intervention

methods of which “exorcism” is simply one. In sum, Bufford, Payne, and others offer tangible

steps, which could be carefully introduced in pastoral circles. [372] Hopefully this would blunt the

prevalence of pastoral silence toward occultism and its victims. [373]

369 Lutzer, Erwin W. The Serpent of Paradise: The Incredible Story of How Satans Rebellion Serves Gods Purposes, Page 21. 370 Unger, Merrill. Demons in the World Today, Page 23. 371 Bufford has an extraordinarily clinical and restrained approach toward the issue. In his introduction, he describes his work as “Biblical accounts of demonism and the work of Satan and his agents are compared and contrasted with the American Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R). After defining the problem and setting it in context, biblical principles for dealing with demonism are addressed along with practical suggestions from psychology and counseling. Examples from the counseling office are given to illustrate various approaches.” Bufford, Rodger K. Counseling and the Demonic, Page 13. 372 Anderson, Neil T. and Timothy M. Warner. The Beginners Guide to Spiritual Warfare . Beyond the necessity of equipping leadership, Anderson and Warner penned this work so that laypersons could be equipped to properly evaluate their relationship with the flesh, the world, and the enemy. This brief book contains a particularly insightful yet accessible chapter (3) concerning the inadequacy of the Western worldview and the importance of acquiring a biblical one. 373 Van Rensburg, J. Janse. “A Qualitative Investigation into the So-Called Ministry of Deliverance” in In die Skriflig 44 (3 & 4), 2010, Page 691.

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5.4 Suggestions for Further Study

Without a doubt, as one ponders on demonic personhood as evidenced throughout Barth

and Ungers writings, questions inevitably arise. On theological and practical levels, this subject

is far from exhausted. Beneficial insight and research are yet to be obtained. With the

contribution of this thesis in mind, let us examine a few areas which merit further investigation.

First, as this thesis analyzed Barths Church Dogmatics and Ungers Biblical

Demonology, plenty of critical works reviewing Barths theology were available, but when the

focus was narrowed to the field of demonology, only Vernon Mallow, who grouped Barth with

two other theologians for his analysis, took a specific and sizeable look at the demonic. The

situation was even worse when the study turned to Unger, as lengthy critiques on American

Evangelical demonology were noticeably absent. A contemporary analytical work or series on

the spectrum of demonologies in the past and present of the broader Christian community would

appear to be a distinct need.

Obviously, while this thesis undertook the theme of demonic personhood in Barth and

Unger, angelology could easily undergo the same examination. The study would be fairly

straightforward as well. As Barth provides far more content concerning angels than demons,

more material would be available for assessment. Since Unger does not contribute to the field of

angelology in any substantial way, he could easily be swapped out for another Evangelical

composition such as Angels: Elect and Evil by C. Fred Dickason.

A completely original work on the personhood of the angelic/demonic realm would also

be appropriate. Founded upon revelatory data, supported by cultural information from around

the world, supplied with specialists observations, informed by the numerous historical

traditions; an academic and systematic work of such magnitude would no doubt serve as a

starting point for numerous other studies. But while personhood is a major topic in anthropology

and theology proper, it remains an underdeveloped theme with regard to biblical intermediaries.

Finally, upon the composition of a demonology which utilizes personal indicators, the

results remain somewhat similar to early Christianitys understanding of the demonic realm.

With the academic trends for the past decades mostly modeling an impersonal demonic, perhaps

this has forged a wedge of disassociation with the demonology and the context of the early

church. Thus, an academic recovery and critique of ancient demonology would naturally follow

after asserting a demonic personhood. Recognizing the presence of Greek philosophical and

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ontological underpinnings, an unwavering fidelity to biblical commitments and priorities would

be essential. [374]

5.5 Conclusion

The theological area selected for this thesis, demonic personhood in the writings of Karl

Barth and Merrill Unger, was not chosen at random or upon the whim of a passing curiosity. As

this chapter hopefully demonstrates, the topic is not without its implications and further

questions. This brief section began by noting some theological results of maintaining a personal

demonic like Barth and Unger. Our Christology needs to be more obvious and personal in

accounting for Christs role as an exorcist. Personhood studies need to be more theological than

anthropological in nature; if not, the idea of a personhood of the demonic will be likely ushered

away from serious thought and consideration. Finally, soteriology is reshaped as a consistently

personal process.

We also considered a few practical and pastoral consequences. First, we engaged the

relevance and value of historical and contemporary observations regarding the demonic,

especially in personal manifestations. We followed this strand of thought to its end - the

reintegration of biblical and empirical studies on the demonic into our pastoral and counseling

practices.

In conclusion, we suggested a few areas which require further study. Academic,

analytical studies into demonology are very much in need. Evangelical demonology as a whole

lacked significant critiques with which this thesis could interact. Also, a near repetition of this

study for the subject of angels in Barth and others would also address more personhood

questions which were left mostly untouched. After this, we also outlined the need, in light of a

demonic personhood, to revisit the demonology of the early church in order that their theological

wealth might instruct and their theological errors might warn.

374 A suitable starting point for a historical study would be Everett Fergusons Demonology of the Early Christian World . His incredible research distinguishes the biblical perspective on demonology from the prevalent Jewish and Greek teachings on the subject. But he does not intentionally develop or critique their relationship with modern demonology.

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