From Justin An Evolution in Demonology

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From Justin: An Evolution in Demonology

Tanya Brittain

Tanya Brittain

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From Justin: An Evolution in Demonology

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From Justin: An Evolution in Demonology

1 Table of Contents

Abstract

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From Justin: An Evolution in Demonology


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Justin Martyr

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Pre-Christian Demons

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Fallen Angels

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Conclusions

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11

Bibliography

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14

2
Abstract

Christianity is not the only sphere in which demonology exists, it never truly has been. Early Christians
procured the Jewish fallen angel traditions found in the

Book of Enoch

(and by extension

Genesis

6:1-4) and expanded on them, appropriating them to their way of religiosity. The popular opinion in the
early centuries of the Common Era was that Christians were a strange – and even dangerous – cult.
Early Christians faced rumours charging them with acts including incest and cannibalism, as well as the
standard concerns of danger that lay in their lack of offerings to the gods. In those times, Pagan
religiosity declared that the gods must be appeased and lack of offerings was detrimental to the overall
well-being of the Roman Empire. Christians were steadfast in their faith and their monotheistic
practices. Many apologists emerged to defend their religion. Justin Martyr was one of the most
influential founding fathers of the Christian Church, as we know it today. There are many books written
on Justin, and indeed many scholars have expended great effort to examine his life and works. This
article therefore is nothing unique in that sense. Here I demonstrate and recognize the lasting effects
that Justin Martyr’s demonology has had over time and into the twenty-first century. It is evident that
our culture is fascinated with the demonic and supernatural realms – apocalyptic, world-ending themes
in tandem with soul possessions are major themes in popular culture – just as much (if not more) than
the religious life of the millions of Christians around the world.

Keywords

: Demons, Demonology, Nephilim, Justin Martyr

From Justin: An Evolution in Demonology

People have always held presuppositions regarding the existence a supernatural realm. Throughout
history, ideas surrounding otherworldly specimens, an afterlife, magic, gods, and

daemons

are abundant. Such enchantments have been a prevalent frame of reference for humanity for centuries;
from one culture to the next the details may vary but all of humankind shares in the desire to
understand the world around them through supernatural, as well as, natural means. For millennia,
civilizations stretching from each far corner of the globe have used myth to make sense of and articulate
the wonders that comprise life as it is experienced. Religion and myth are and have been a way to
connect with a Power, a Being, whose existence and wonder surpasses our finite capabilities.

Before the advent of monotheistic traditions there existed many gods, each with their own function and
responsibility

from the miniscule to the grandiose

there was a god for everything.

Divine members of a pantheon caused personal gains and losses in individuals’

lives, natural phenomena of changing weather patterns

drought, flood or storm

and the changing of seasons. Before Christianity, demons were not perceived as anything inherently
evil, or bad, but rather they were indifferent. They were merely a product of the supernatural

or spiritual

realm. Angelology and demonology were ideas born into the Jewish faith tradition,

The book known to us as

the Bible

is in fact replete with the types of assumptions, characters, stories,

and motifs which scholars customarily subsume under the label of “myth”: indeed, it would not be
possible for a

religion to express its basic understanding of the world and the human role within it in a meaningful way
without making use of the structures and language of myth. Myth is an essential product of the religious
enterprise

inasmuch as its defining characteristic is its discursive attempt to establish that a particular social
group’s

distinctive activities, customs, beliefs, institutions, and practices are ones that are firmly rooted in what
is being represented as

the “natural” order of things.” John Reeves, “Resurgent Myth: On the Vitality of the Watchers Tradition
in the Near

East

of Late Antiquity,” in The Fallen Angels Traditions Second Temple Developments and Reception History,
ed.,

Angela Harkins

et al

The Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series

53(2014), 95.

4 adopted

then highly elaborated, and developed

by Christians. One of the most influential Christian apologists, especially in the realm of demonology
was Saint Justin Martyr. Justin appropriated the Watchers Tradition of

1 Enoch
and transformed it to fit his ideas of what it meant to be a Christian. He employed a mixture of
allegorical and literal interpretations and fused them with his Christology. Thus, he bred a belief system
surrounding angels and demons that is prevalent even to this day. Many supernatural ideas that are
customary in the pop-culture horror genre find their roots as far back as Justin Martyr. Not only was he a
Roman-era Christian, Saint, philosopher, theologian and martyr, he was also a pioneer who unwittingly
paved the way for contemporary theology. The demonology that Justin put forth in the second century
has reverberated through the centuries, and has had a lasting impression on the way not only Christians,
but even contemporary secular pop-culture, portrays the Devil, his minions, Fallen Angels and the
Nephilim.

Justin Martyr

A basic, yet crucial question to begin with is who was Justin Martyr? Although later cannonised, Saint
Justin Martyr, was not born a Christian. Born in approximately 100 C.E. in the city of Flavia Neapolia,
Samaria, he lived an average Hellenistic family life and received a Greco-Roman education. He studied
Stoic, Peripatetic, Pythagorean, and Platonic systems; he is believed to have been a philosophical youth,
teeming with religious yearnings common to Middle

As well, it has influenced a swath of new religious movements including conspiracy theory craze
religions like UFO religions. For an encapsulating dialogue pertaining to such, see:

Christopher Partridge, “Alien

Demonology: The Christian roots of the malevolent extraterrestrial in UFO religions and abduction
spiritualties

,”

Religion

34:3(2004): 163-189. For a more in-depth analysis of contemporary pop-culture see: David L. Bradnick,

“Loosing and Binding the Spirits: An Emergenist Theology of the Demonic,” (Ph.D. diss., Regen Univer

sity School of Divinity, 2015). Another avenue of intrigue is that even modern concepts of vampires stem
from this period


[s]econd century folk demonology involved vampires,

daemones

lusting after mortals to reconnect with a human

body…” James C. Pope, “The Power of Demons: Demonology in Justin Martyr’s Apologetic,” (M.A.
thesis,

Carleton University, 1993), 15.

Related Papers

Annette Y. Reed, “The Trickery of the Fallen Angels and the Demonic Mimesis of the Divi…

By Annette Y. Reed

“The Hostile Devices of the Demented Demons”: Tatian on Astrology and Pharmacology

By Matthew R Crawford

Annette Y. Reed, “Beyond Revealed Wisdom and Apocalyptic Epistemology: E…

By Annette Y. Reed

Then the Devil Left: Satan’s lack of presence in the Apostolic Fathers

By Jonathan Burke

Reconciling the Supernatural Worldviews of the Bible, African Traditional Religion,…

By Hans Moscicke

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