- This article is about Lucifer in reference to Christian theology; for other meanings, see Lucifer (disambiguation).
Lucifer is a Latin word derived from two words, lux
(light; genitive lucis) and ferre (to bear, to bring), meaning light-bearer. Lucifer does not appear
in Greek or Roman mythology; it is used by poets to represent the Morning Star at moments when "Venus" would intrude distracting
imagery of the goddess. "Lucifer" is Jerome's direct translation in his Vulgate (4th century) of the Septuagint's Greek translation,
as heosphoros, "morning star", literally "bringer of the Dawn", of a phrase in Isaiah that originally intended no reference to Satan (see below). In Christianity, Lucifer has become
synonymous with Satan, nevertheless.
Modern astrologers identify the planet Venus as having been
known by the name Lucifer in Roman astrology before being given its current name. See poetical instances below.
Lucifer is also a deity in the Voodoo
religions.
"Lucifer" and the Hebrew Bible
"Lucifer" is used by Jerome in the Vulgate (4th century) to translate
into Latin Isaiah 14:12-14, where the Hebrew text refers to helel ben-shachar
(הילל בן שחר). Helel signifies the planet Venus, and ben-shachar means "the brilliant one, son of the
morning", to whose mythical fate that of the King of Babylon is compared in the prophetic vision. The Jewish
Encyclopedia reports that "it is obvious that the prophet in attributing to the Babylonian king boastful pride, followed by
a fall, borrowed the idea from a popular legend connected with the morning star". Isaiah 14 starts out discussing the King of
Babylon, and the reference "morning star, son of the dawn" originally applied
specifically to that king's pride,:
- 14:4 that thou shalt take up this parable against the king of Babylon, and say, How hath the oppressor ceased! the golden
city ceased!...
- 14:10 All they shall answer and say unto thee, Art thou also become weak as we? art thou become like unto us?
- 14:11 Thy pomp is brought down to Sheol, [and] the noise of thy viols: the worm is spread under thee, and worms cover
thee.
- 14:12 How art thou fallen from heaven, O day-star, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground,
that didst lay low the nations!
-
- (Isaiah, American Standard Version)
The compilers of the Jewish Encyclopedia note that Isaiah was drawing on some star-myth familiar to his hearers for
his passing image, and they suggest a comparison with the Greek star-myth of Phaėton, who suffered for his hubris.
The later Jewish tradition, with which the early church fathers were familiar, elaborates on the fall of the angels under the
leadership of Samhazai ("the
heaven-seizer") and Azael (Enoch, book vi.6f). Another legend in the midrash
represents the repentent Samhazai suspended star-like between heaven and earth instead of being hurled down to Sheol. The
Helel-Lucifer myth was transferred to Satan in the 1st century BC, as may be learned from Vita Adę et Evę (12), where
the Adversary gives Adam an account of his early career, and the Slavonic Enoch (xxix. 4, xxxi. 4), where Satan-Sataniel
(Samael?) is also described as a former archangel. Because he contrived "to make his throne higher than the clouds over the earth
and resemble 'My power' on high", Satan-Sataniel was hurled down, with his hosts of angels, and since then he has been flying in
the air continually above the abyss.
"Lucifer" in Roman poetry
"Lucifer" is a poetic name for the "morning star", a close translation of the Greek eosphoros, the "Dawn-bringer",
which appears in the Odyssey and in Hesiod's Theogony]].
A classic Roman use of "Lucifer" appears in Virgil's Georgics (III, 324-5):
-
- Luciferi primo cum sidere frigida rura
- carpamus, dum mane novum, dum gramina canent"
- "Let us hasten, when first the Morning Star appears,
- To the cool pastures, while the day is new, while the grass is dewy"
And similarly, in Ovid:
- Aurora, watchful in the reddening dawn, threw wide her crimson doors and rose-filled
halls; the Stars took flight, in marshalled order set by Lucifer, who left his
station last."
-
- (Metamorphoses)
A more effusive poet, like Statius, can expand this trope into a brief but profuse allegory, though still this is a
poetical personification of the Light-Bearer, not a mythology:
- "And now Aurora, rising from her Mygdonian
resting-place had scattered the cold shadows from the high heaven, and shaking the dew-drops from her hair blushed deep in the
sun’s pursuing beams; toward her through the clouds rosy Lucifer turns his late fires, and with slow steed leaves an alien
world, until the fiery father’s orb be full replenished and he forbid his sister
to usurp his rays."
-
- Statius, Thebaid 2.134
Lucifer in the Christian tradition
Jerome, with the Septuagint close at hand and a general familiarity with the pagan poetic traditions, translated
Helel as "Lucifer". Much of Christian tradition also draws on interpretations of Revelation 12:5 ("He was
thrown down, that ancient serpent"; see also 12:7 and 12:100) in equating the ancient serpent-god with the serpent in the
Garden of Eden and the fallen star, Lucifer, with Satan. Accordingly
Tertullian (Contra Marrionem, v. 11, 17), Origen (Ezekiel Opera, iii. 356), and others, identify Lucifer with Satan.
A description of the supernatural fall
- "the whole day long I was carried headlong, and at sunset I fell in Lemnos, and but little life was in me"
relates the fall of Hephaestus from Olympus in Homer's Iliad I:591ff, but it was drawn upon by Christian authors embellishing the fall of
Lucifer.
In the fully-developed Christian interpretation, Jerome's Vulgate translation of Isaiah 14:12 has made Lucifer the
name of the principal fallen angel, who must lament the loss of his
original glory as the morning star. This image at last defines the character of Lucifer; where the Church Fathers had maintained
that lucifer was not the proper name of the Devil, and that it referred
rather to the state from which he had fallen; St. Jerome transformed it into Satan's proper name.
It is noteworthy that the Old Testament itself does not at any point actually mention the rebellion and fall of Satan
directly. This non-Scriptural belief assembled from interpretations of different passages, would fall under the heading Christian mythology, except that the very idea of a Christian
mythology is widely attacked as offensive. For detailed discussion of the "War in Heaven" theme, see Fallen angel.
In the Vulgate, the word lucifer is used elsewhere: it describes the Morning Star (the planet Venus), the "light of the morning" (Job 11:17); the "signs of the
zodiac" (Job 38:32) and "the aurora" (Psalm 109:3). Aside from Isaiah's reference to the King of Babylon,
"lucifer" is applied to "Simon son of Onias" (Ecclesiasticus 50:6). In the New Testament, the Vulgate translates "glory
of heaven" (in Apocalypse 2:23) and "Jesus Christ" (in II Peter 1:19; Apocalypse 22:16) with "lucifer". ( these
references need checking)
Literature
Lucifer is a key protagonist in John Milton's Protestant Christian epic, Paradise Lost.
Milton presents Lucifer almost sympathetically, an ambitious and prideful angel who defies God and wages war on heaven, only to
be defeated and cast down. Lucifer must then employ his rhetorical ability to organize hell; he is aided by Mammon and Beelzebub. Later, Lucifer enters the
Garden of Eden, where he successfully tempts Eve, wife of Adam, to eat fruit from the Tree of knowledge of good and evil.
See also
External link
- A thorough
explication of the transference of helel to Lucifer
- Jewish
Encyclopedia: Lucifer; also Fall of
Angels
- "Notes on Lucifer"
- Vita Adae et Evae : Text from R.H. Charles, The Apocrypha
and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament
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