 | Demon: Encyclopedia II - Demon - Demons in the Hebrew Bible
Demon - Demons in the Hebrew Bible
Demons as described in the Tanakh are not the same as "demons" commonly known in popular or Christian culture.
The demons mentioned in the Hebrew Bible are of two classes, the se'irim and the shedim. The se'irim ("hairy beings"), to which some Israelites offered sacrifices in the open fields, are satyr-like creatures, described as dancing in the wilderness (Isaiah xiii. 21, xxxiv. 14), and which are identical with the jinn. (But compare the completely European woodwose.) Possibly to the same class belongs Azazel, the goat-like demon of the wilderness (Leviticus xvi. 10ff), probably the chief of the se'irim, and Lilith (Isaiah xxxiv. 14). Possibly "the roes and hinds of the field", by which Shulamit conjures the daughters of Jerusalem to bring her back to her lover (Canticles ii. 7, iii. 5), are faunlike spirits similar to the se'irim, though of a harmless nature.
The "stones of the field" (Job v. 23), with which the righteous are said to be in league, seem to be field-demons of the same nature. The wilderness as the home of demons was regarded as the place whence such diseases as leprosy issued, and in cases of leprosy one of the birds set apart to be offered as an expiatory sacrifice was released, that it might carry the disease back to the desert (Leviticus xiv. 7, 52).
The evil spirit that troubled Saul (I Samuel xvi. 14 et seq.) may have been a demon, though the Masoretic text suggests the spirit was sent by God.
None of these demons, however, has actually a place in the system of Biblical theology; it is God alone who sends pestilence. There is no supernatural power beyond God (Deuteronomy iv. 35.) in Judaism. Shedim are simply spirits similar in nature to humans; some are good and some are bad, but all procreate like humans (although they lack physical bodies, see Talmud Bavli) and are able to pass between this world and the spiritual (Talumud Bavli, Masechta Brochos).
Some benevolent shedim were used in kabbalistic ceremonies (as with the golem of Rabbi Yehuda Loevy), and malevolent shedim (mazikin, from the root meaning to wound) are often responsible in instances of possesion. Instances of idol worship were often the result of a shed inhabiting an otherwise worthless statue;[citation needed] the shed would pretend to be a God with the power to send pestilence, although such events were not actually under his control.
Demon - Influences from Chaldean mythology
In Chaldean mythology the seven evil deities were known as shedu, meaning storm-demons. They were represented in winged bull form, derived from the colossal bulls used as protective genii of royal palaces, the name "shed" assumed also the meaning of a propitious genius in Babylonian magic literature (see Delitzsch, Assyrisches Handwörterbuch. pp. 60, 253, 261, 646; Jensen, Assyr.-Babyl. Mythen und Epen, 1900, p. 453; Sayce, l.c. pp. 441, 450, 463; Lenormant, l.c. pp. 48-51).
It was from Chaldea that the name "shedu" came to the Israelites, and so the writers of the Tanach applied the word as a dylogism to the Canaanite deities in the two passages quoted. But they also spoke of "the destroyer" (Exodus xii. 23) as a demon whose malignant effect upon the houses of the Israelites was to be warded off by the blood of the paschal sacrifice sprinkled upon the lintel and the door-post (a corresponding pagan talisman is mentioned in Isaiah lvii. 8). In II Samuel xxiv; 16 and II Chronicles xxi. 15 the pestilence-dealing demon is called "the destroying angel" (compare "the angel of the Lord" in II Kings xix. 35; Isaiah xxxvii. 36), because, although they are demons, these "evil messengers" (Psalms lxxviii. 49; A. V. "evil angels") do only the bidding of God; they are the agents of His divine wrath.
There are indications that popular Hebrew mythology ascribed to the demons a certain independence, a malevolent character of their own, because they are believed to come forth, not from the heavenly abode of God, but from the nether world (compare Isaiah xxxviii. 11 with Job xiv. 13; Psalms xvi. 10, xlix. 16, cxxxix. 8).
Other related archives2 Thessalonians, 6th century, Abraham ibn Ezra, Acts, Adam, Ahriman, Aleister Crowley, Anthony Crowley, Anton Rubinstein, Apocalypse of John, Archdemon, Ars Goetia, Articles lacking sources, Asmodai, Asura realm, Atman, Augustine, Augustine of Hippo, Avestan, Azazel, Azrael, Babylonia, Babylonian, Balrogs, Book of Revelation, Buddhism, C. S. Lewis, Cenobites, Chaldean, Choronzon, Christian demonology, Christian mythology, Christianity, Christians, Clive Barker, Cyclops, DC Comics, Demonolatry, Demonology, Demons, Disgaea: Hour of Darkness, Divine Comedy, Earth, Essenes, Eve, Ezekiel, Faust, Fiend (Dungeons & Dragons), First War in Heaven, Furies, Gabriele Amorth, Garden of Eden, Ghost Rider, Ghul, God, Goetia, Good Omens, Gospel of Mark, Greek, Gregory of Nyssa, Haggadah, Heaven, Hebrew Bible, Hecatonchires, Hell, Hell realm, Hellboy, Hellraiser, Hinduism, His Dark Materials, History of ideas, Iblis, Indo-European, Indo-European mythologies, Indo-Iranian, Interdimensional hypothesis, Isaiah, Islam, Israelites, J.R.R. Tolkien, Japanese folklore, Jerome, Jewish mysticism, Jews, John Chrysostom, Josephus, Karma, King Solomon, Laplace's demon, Lermontov, Lilith, List of specific demons and types of demons, Luke, Maimonides, Mariinsky Theatre, Marvel Comics, Masoretic text, Matthew, Maxwell's demon, Melkor, Michael, Mikhail Lermontov, Monte Gargano, Morgoth, Names of the demons, Naraka, Neil Gaiman, Neopaganism, Nephilim, New Testament, Occult, Origen, Ouija, Paradise Lost, Parsee, Philip Pullman, Plato, Plotinus, Prajapati, Proto-Indo-European, Puranas, Qur'an, Rabbinical, Rig Veda, Robert Asprin, S.L. MacGregor Mathers, Samael, Saul, Sauron, Semyazza, Septuagint, Shiva, Solomon, Spiritual warfare, Talmudists, Tanakh, Tartarus, Terry Pratchett, The City of God, The Demon, The Hellbound Heart, The Screwtape Letters, Tiw, Unification Church, United States, Universal reconciliation, Varuna, Vedic, Vishnu, Yokai, Zoroastrians, afrits, angels, anime, apocrypha, asuras, authoritarianism, celestial, citation needed, comic books, computer, computer games, conjured, controlled, daemon, daeva, demonic hierarchies, demonolatry, demonology, demons, deva, devas, djinn, dæmons, earth, exorcisms, fallen angels, fantasy, faunlike spirits, folklore, ghosts, grimoire, horror, humans, jinn, kitsune, leprosy, marids, medieval, mythology, nineteenth century, occult, omnipotent, oni, opera, physical laws, planchette, player characters, possess, possession, psychosomatic, religion, religions, role-playing, satan, satyr, sects, sentient, shaitans, sin, solitaire, spirit, superhero, supernatural, superstition, thought experiment, trinity, video games, winged bull form, woodwose
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Demons in the Hebrew Bible", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |