The European Union in Prophecy The EU in Prophecy I | Page 396
The European Union in Prophecy
God in His great mercy bore long with Lucifer. He was not immediately degraded
from his exalted station when he first indulged the spirit of discontent, nor even when
he began to present his false claims before the loyal angels. Long was he retained in
heaven. Again and again he was offered pardon on condition of repentance and
submission. Such efforts as only infinite love and wisdom could devise were made to
convince him of his error. The spirit of discontent had never before been known in
heaven. Lucifer himself did not at first see whither he was drifting; he did not
understand the real nature of his feelings. But as his dissatisfaction was proved to be
without cause, Lucifer was convinced that he was in the wrong, that the divine claims
were just, and that he ought to acknowledge them as such before all heaven. Had he
done this, he might have saved himself and many angels. He had not at this time fully
cast off his allegiance to God. Though he had forsaken his position as covering cherub,
yet if he had been willing to return to God, acknowledging the Creator's wisdom, and
satisfied to fill the place appointed him in God's great plan, he would have been
reinstated in his office. But pride forbade him to submit. He persistently defended his
own course, maintained that he had no need of repentance, and fully committed
himself, in the great controversy, against his Maker.
All the powers of his master mind were now bent to the work of deception, to
secure the sympathy of the angels that had been under his command. Even the fact
that Christ had warned and counseled him was perverted to serve his traitorous
designs. To those whose loving trust bound them most closely to him, Satan had
represented that he was wrongly judged, that his position was not respected, and that
his liberty was to be abridged. From misrepresentation of the words of Christ he
passed to prevarication and direct falsehood, accusing the Son of God of a design to
humiliate him before the inhabitants of heaven. He sought also to make a false issue
between himself and the loyal angels. All whom he could not subvert and bring fully
to his side he accused of indifference to the interests of heavenly beings. The very
work which he himself was doing he charged upon those who remained true to God.
And to sustain his charge of God's injustice toward him, he resorted to
misrepresentation of the words and acts of the Creator. It was his policy to perplex
the angels with subtle arguments concerning the purposes of God. Everything that
was simple he shrouded in mystery, and by artful perversion cast doubt upon the
plainest statements of Jehovah. His high position, in such close connection with the
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