Agency of Evil Spirits
      
      
         431
      
      
        the Sabbath quiet of the synagogue at Capernaum—all were healed by
      
      
         [516]
      
      
        the compassionate Saviour. In nearly every instance, Christ addressed
      
      
        the demon as an intelligent entity, commanding him to come out of
      
      
        his victim and to torment him no more. The worshipers at Capernaum,
      
      
        beholding His mighty power, “were all amazed, and spake among
      
      
        themselves, saying, What a word is this! for with authority and power
      
      
        He commandeth the unclean spirits, and they come out.”
      
      
         Luke 4:36
      
      
        .
      
      
        Those possessed with devils are usually represented as being in
      
      
        a condition of great suffering; yet there were exceptions to this rule.
      
      
        For the sake of obtaining supernatural power, some welcomed the
      
      
        satanic influence. These of course had no conflict with the demons. Of
      
      
        this class were those who possessed the spirit of divination,—Simon
      
      
        Magus, Elymas the sorcerer, and the damsel who followed Paul and
      
      
        Silas at Philippi.
      
      
        None are in greater danger from the influence of evil spirits than
      
      
        those who, notwithstanding the direct and ample testimony of the
      
      
        Scriptures, deny the existence and agency of the devil and his angels.
      
      
        So long as we are ignorant of their wiles, they have almost incon-
      
      
        ceivable advantage; many give heed to their suggestions while they
      
      
        suppose themselves to be following the dictates of their own wisdom.
      
      
        This is why, as we approach the close of time, when Satan is to work
      
      
        with greatest power to deceive and destroy, he spreads everywhere the
      
      
        belief that he does not exist. It is his policy to conceal himself and his
      
      
        manner of working.
      
      
        There is nothing that the great deceiver fears so much as that we
      
      
        shall become acquainted with his devices. The better to disguise his
      
      
        real character and purposes, he has caused himself to be so represented
      
      
        as to excite no stronger emotion than ridicule or contempt. He is well
      
      
        pleased to be painted as a ludicrous or loathsome object, misshapen,
      
      
        half animal and half human. He is pleased to hear his name used in
      
      
        sport and mockery by those who think themselves intelligent and well
      
      
        informed.
      
      
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        It is because he has masked himself with consummate skill that
      
      
        the question is so widely asked: “Does such a being really exist?” It is
      
      
        an evidence of his success that theories giving the lie to the plainest
      
      
        testimony of the Scriptures are so generally received in the religious
      
      
        world. And it is because Satan can most readily control the minds of
      
      
        those who are unconscious of his influence, that the word of God gives