
Mark 3.22-27, Matthew 9.32-34, 12.22-30, Luke 11.14-23.
In between
Matthew and Luke tell the story in the context of an exorcism Jesus had just performed. Matthew even tells it twice. Likely this accusation took place more than once.
Mark 3.22 KWL - Scribes who came down from Jerusalem
- were saying Jesus has Baal Zevúl—
- that he throws out demons by the chief demon.
Matthew 9.32-34 KWL - 32 As they leave, look:
- People bring Jesus a mute person, a demoniac.
- 33 Once Jesus throws out the demon,
- the mute man speaks.
- The crowd is amazed, saying, “This never appears in Israel like this!”
- 34 Yet Pharisees are saying,
- “Jesus throws out demons by the chief demon.”
Matthew 12.22-24 KWL - 22 Then they bring Jesus a blind and deaf demoniac.
- Jesus cures him,
- so the deaf man is speaking and seeing.
- 23 The whole crowd is overwhelmed and is saying,
- “Isn’t this the Son of David?”
- 24 Yet Pharisees who hear of it say,
- “This man doesn’t throw out demons—
- unless by Baal Zevúl, the chief demon.”
Luke 11.14-16 KWL - 14 Jesus is throwing out a mute demon,
- and it happens when the demon comes out,
- the mute man speaks.
- The crowd is amazed.
- 15 Yet some of them say,
- “By Baal Zevúl the chief demon, he throws out demons.”
- 16 Others, to test Jesus,
- are seeking a heavenly sign from him.
2 Kings 1.2 KJV - 2 And Ahaziah fell down through a lattice in his upper chamber that was in Samaria, and was sick: and he sent messengers, and said unto them, Go, enquire of Baalzebub the god of Ekron whether I shall recover of this disease. 3 But the angel of the L
ORD said to Elijah the Tishbite, Arise, go up to meet the messengers of the king of Samaria, and say unto them, Is it not because there is not a God in Israel, that ye go to enquire of Baalzebub the god of Ekron? 4 Now therefore thus saith the LORD , Thou shalt not come down from that bed on which thou art gone up, but shalt surely die. And Elijah departed.
I think more people remember when Ahaziah sent soldiers to arrest Elijah, and the L
Christian mythology, particularly John Milton’s Paradise Lost, imagines Beelzebub as a whole other devil than Satan. Sometimes it’s Satan’s vice-devil. Sometimes it’s a devil who rebelled against Satan and went its own way. Sometimes it’s the devil who supervises idolatry; sometimes the devil who tempts humans with gluttony; sometimes the devil who specializes in demonizing people. Meh; a devil’s a devil.
The Galilean Pharisees didn’t know what to make of Jesus. They hated that he violated their customs, especially the ones about Sabbath. But they couldn’t deny he actually performed miracles and exorcisms—and they correctly understood you simply can’t do such things unless
Jesus wouldn’t look for bible verses, biblical loopholes, and rulings from biased elders; he’d say