The Definition of the word Serpent
Serpent
(Heb. nahash; Gr. ophis), frequently noticed in Scripture. More than forty species are found in Syria and Arabia. The poisonous character of the serpent is alluded to in Jacob's blessing on "Dan (Gen. 49:17; see Prov. 30:18, 19; James 3:7; Jer. 8:17)." (See [571]ADDER.) "This word is used symbolically of a deadly, subtle, malicious enemy (Luke 10:19). "The serpent is first mentioned in connection with the history of the temptation and fall of our first parents (Gen. 3). It has "been well remarked regarding this temptation: "A real serpent" "was the agent of the temptation, as is plain from what is said" of the natural characteristic of the serpent in the first verse "of the chapter (3:1), and from the curse pronounced upon the" "animal itself. But that Satan was the actual tempter, and that" "he used the serpent merely as his instrument, is evident (1)" from the nature of the transaction; for although the serpent may "be the most subtle of all the beasts of the field, yet he has" not the high intellectual faculties which the tempter here displayed. (2.) In the New Testament it is both directly asserted and in various forms assumed that Satan seduced our "first parents into sin (John 8:44; Rom. 16:20; 2 Cor. 11:3, 14;" "Rev. 12:9; 20:2)." Hodge's System. Theol., ii. 127."
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