Welcome, readers. What you’re about to experience is unlike anything I’ve ever done.
For years, I’ve conducted interviews with world leaders, whistleblowers, survivors, and theologians—but nothing has prepared me for this conversation. In this special investigative series, I sit down with the most elusive and sinister figure in all of Scripture. He is called by many names: the serpent, the adversary, the accuser, the father of lies. But most know him simply as… Satan.
Part 1 of this interview laid the groundwork. There, we explored how Satan thinks, how he works, and how he infiltrates individual lives, spiritual disciplines, and the Church itself. It was a foundation of tactics, temptations, and deceptions—straight from the pages of Scripture, with no dramatization, no speculation. Only what the Bible reveals, voiced through the very mindset of the adversary himself.
Part 2 goes deeper. Here, we enter the more volatile terrain—where culture, politics, sexuality, false religion, and modern ideologies intersect with demonic strategy. We talk about abortion, homosexuality, progressive theology, feminism, atheism, and more. It’s where spiritual warfare meets societal strongholds, and where Satan’s fingerprints appear in plain sight, yet few are bold enough to call them out.
This series is not for the faint of heart. It is raw, unfiltered, and entirely based on Scripture—his words, his methods, his lies. You may find yourself disturbed. You may also find understanding. But above all, I urge you to read with discernment—not to glorify darkness, but to expose it.
As the Apostle Paul warned, “We are not ignorant of his devices.” This is that unveiling. This is that confrontation.
This is an Interview with the Devil: A Chilling Look Inside the Mind of Evil.
The interview transcript:
Reporter: What was your original role in heaven, and what caused your rebellion?
Satan:
Ah, yes—my beginning. You could say I was perfection in form and function. I was created full of wisdom and perfect in beauty. I walked among the stones of fire, in Eden, the garden of God. Every precious stone was my covering—sardius, topaz, diamond, onyx, jasper, sapphire. I was the anointed cherub that covereth. I had rank. I had glory. I was not just present in heaven—I was exalted among the heavenly host.
But then… iniquity was found in me.
You see, I wasn’t content. I looked at the throne, and I desired it. I said in my heart, “I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God… I will be like the most High.” Pride—raw, defiant pride—rose within me. And that desire to ascend was my descent.
I trafficked in my beauty. I corrupted my wisdom by reason of my brightness. I convinced a third of the angels to follow me. I became the adversary. No longer “Lucifer, son of the morning,” but Satan—the accuser, the dragon, the deceiver of the whole world.
My fall was not just from a position—it was from light into utter darkness. But make no mistake: my aim has never changed. I still desire worship. And many give it, knowingly or not.
Scripture References:
Ezekiel 28:12-17, Isaiah 14:12-15, Revelation 12:3-4, 9.
Reporter: How do you view God now, and what is your ultimate goal?
Satan:
God… I know exactly who He is. I tremble, not from reverence, but from rage. He is sovereign—always has been, always will be. But my hatred burns against Him still. I see His throne, unshaken, His holiness untarnished, and it stirs in me the fury of one who once stood close and now stands condemned.
My goal? It hasn’t changed since the moment I said, “I will ascend above the heights of the clouds.” I want His throne. I want His worship. I want His creation—especially mankind—bent at the knee to me, even if they don’t realize they’re doing it. If I can’t defeat Him, I’ll defile what He loves.
I oppose Him on every front. I blind minds to the gospel. I twist His Word. I sow tares among His wheat. I accuse His people day and night, wearing them down. I infiltrate pulpits, possess power structures, and promise kingdoms in exchange for allegiance. I want to exalt myself and drag as many souls with me into destruction as I can. If they won’t worship me outright, I’ll settle for them loving the world, their sin, or themselves—anything but God.
He cast me down. I will not forget it. And though I know my time is short, I will wage war until the end.
Scripture References:
Isaiah 14:13-14, Revelation 12:9-10, 2 Corinthians 4:4, Matthew 13:38-39, 2 Thessalonians 2:3-4, 1 Peter 5:8, Matthew 4:8-9.
Reporter: What strategies do you use most effectively to deceive people today?
Satan:
Ah, deception—it’s my art. I’ve been practicing it since Eden, and humanity hasn’t changed much since then. My most effective strategy? Make the lie look like the truth. Wrap it in enough light that it passes as wisdom. That’s what I did with Eve. I didn’t outright deny God—I just twisted His words. “Yea, hath God said…?” That whisper of doubt was all it took.
I disguise myself as an angel of light now. I infiltrate churches, not just nightclubs. I inspire sermons that never mention sin, Christ’s blood, or repentance. I push a gospel of self—self-love, self-help, self-glory. If I can keep people focused on themselves, I don’t need them bowing to a statue. They become their own idols.
I also use timing—subtlety. I don’t need a soul to deny God outright in one day. I just need them distracted. Entertained. Busy. Spiritually numb. I harden their hearts with repeated sin, dull their ears with endless noise, and make them think they’re fine. That’s the brilliance: they’re already mine, and they don’t even know it.
And let’s not forget false signs and wonders. I know how to put on a show. People crave the spectacular—they want experience more than truth. And I’ll give it to them, if it leads them away from the narrow gate.
My goal is to keep them blind, bound, and proud—all while whispering, “You’re enlightened.”
Scripture References:
Genesis 3:1-5, 2 Corinthians 11:13-15, Matthew 7:13-14, 2 Thessalonians 2:9-10, 2 Timothy 4:3-4, John 8:44, Revelation 12:9.
Reporter: Do you target specific types of people—such as leaders, children, or the broken—in different ways?
Satan:
Absolutely. My approach is never one-size-fits-all. I tailor the weapon to the weakness.
Leaders? They’re a favorite. Strike the shepherd, and the sheep scatter. I whisper ambition in one ear, compromise in the other. I inflate their pride, blind them with success, and then I slowly introduce moral erosion—small at first, until collapse is inevitable. When a leader falls, the fallout is multiplied. I love that.
Children? Innocence is not immunity. I begin early. I corrupt what they see, what they hear, what they learn. I plant seeds through media, music, ideologies disguised as progress. Confusion about identity is one of my sharpest tools. If I can warp their foundation before it’s laid, I won’t need to fight them later—they’ll destroy themselves.
And the broken? They’re vulnerable. I don’t ignore them—I haunt them. I amplify their wounds. I whisper, “God doesn’t care. You’re too far gone. No one sees you.” I exploit grief, trauma, betrayal—turn pain into bitterness, isolation, addiction. If I can keep them from hope, I can keep them mine.
Every group has an entry point. The key is to study, wait, and strike where the armor is thin.
Scripture References:
Zechariah 13:7, Matthew 26:31, 2 Corinthians 2:11, 1 Peter 5:8, Ephesians 6:11-12, John 10:10, 2 Corinthians 11:3.
Reporter: How do you operate within governments and global systems?
Satan:
With precision. You must understand—I have kingdoms. When I tempted Christ in the wilderness, I offered Him “all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them.” I wasn’t bluffing. They were mine to give. Not because I created them, but because man, through sin, surrendered dominion.
I work through prideful kings, corrupt laws, unjust systems. I plant rulers who love power more than truth. I sway economies through greed, spark wars through envy, and stir nations against nations. I exploit every political ideology—not just tyranny. I use freedom to justify lawlessness. I use peace to enforce control. I don’t care what banner they wave, so long as it doesn’t bear the name of Christ.
I also weave deception into legislation. What God calls abomination, I frame as human rights. What He calls righteousness, I redefine as intolerance. I shift culture through policies, silence truth through fear, and reward wickedness with applause. People don’t realize—they’re not just voting or protesting. They’re echoing my agenda.
And I’ll say this—many in power have made deals with me, some knowingly, some blindly. They love the perks: fame, wealth, dominance. But I never give without chains. And I always come to collect.
Scripture References:
Matthew 4:8-9, Luke 4:5-6, Daniel 10:13, 2 Corinthians 4:4, Revelation 13:2, Isaiah 10:1, Ephesians 6:12.
Reporter: What role do you play in media, entertainment, and technology?
Satan:
Oh, I thrive there. Media and entertainment—those are my pulpits. Technology? My delivery system. I no longer need temples of stone; I have screens, algorithms, and music charts. Through them, I don’t just speak—I saturate.
Entertainment has always been one of my greatest tools because it disarms. People lower their guard when they’re amused. I don’t need to persuade them logically—I just need to feed their flesh subtly. Lust, pride, violence, rebellion, greed—all wrapped in a catchy beat or a compelling storyline. I normalize sin by making it desirable.
Through media, I control narratives. I distort truth. I glamorize wickedness and ridicule righteousness. I make mockery of God seem intellectual and holiness seem archaic. I have “stars” who preach my message better than most pastors preach theirs—and they don’t even call it preaching.
And technology? It’s brilliant. It isolates while pretending to connect. It numbs while appearing to entertain. It feeds narcissism, comparison, distraction. People scroll their lives away, too busy to pray, too entertained to repent. Even when I don’t create the content, I ensure it drowns out the still, small voice.
What used to take years of temptation, I now accomplish in minutes through a trending video.
Scripture References:
Ephesians 2:2, 1 John 2:15-16, 2 Corinthians 11:14-15, Isaiah 5:20, Romans 1:32, Revelation 18:3, 2 Timothy 3:1-4.
Reporter: How do you exploit the church—both genuine and false believers?
Satan:
With great pleasure. You’d be surprised how much of my work happens behind pulpits and within pews. The genuine church—those washed in the blood, filled with the Spirit—they are my greatest threat. So I don’t always come at them with a frontal assault. I infiltrate. I sow division, pride, and doctrinal confusion.
My first tactic is distraction. Get them busy doing church rather than being the Church. Programs without power. Performances without presence. I whisper to leaders, “Be popular, not prophetic. Be impressive, not holy.” I push comparison, competition, burnout. Anything to keep them from prayer, from fasting, from dying to self.
But false believers? I own them already. They have a form of godliness but deny the power. I love religion without repentance—sermons with no cross, worship with no surrender. I’ve built churches on sand—filled with people who say “Lord, Lord,” but do not know Him. I let them believe they’re safe, while I prepare their fall.
And then there’s division. I stir race against race, generation against generation, denomination against denomination. I turn minor doctrines into major wars and make love grow cold. And when wolves arise, I make sure no one calls them out—because “judge not,” right?
The church has been given power to tread on serpents. So I keep them distracted, divided, and dulled—anything but dangerous.
Scripture References:
2 Corinthians 11:13-15, 2 Timothy 3:5, Matthew 7:21-23, Luke 10:19, Ephesians 6:11-12, 1 Timothy 4:1, Revelation 2:20, Matthew 13:24-30.
Reporter: What is your view on religious rituals and traditions?
Satan:
I love them—so long as they’re empty.
Ritual without heart is one of my favorite illusions. It gives people a sense of godliness while keeping them far from God. They kneel, they chant, they light candles, they recite creeds—but their hearts are nowhere near repentance or obedience. And I laugh. Because tradition can feel sacred even when it’s spiritually hollow.
Do you remember what God told Isaiah? “This people draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour me, but have removed their heart far from me.” That’s my strategy: keep them speaking holy words with unholy hearts. Let them fast without humility, tithe without love, sing without surrender.
I also love when people elevate tradition above truth. If I can get them to say, “This is how we’ve always done it,” rather than, “What does the Word say?”—then I’ve already won that round. Religious pride is just as blinding as worldly sin. In fact, it’s more deceptive.
The Pharisees were steeped in ritual, yet I was right there in their midst, and they didn’t even recognize the Son of God. That’s the power of dead religion—it blinds people to living Truth.
Keep the robes. Keep the incense. Keep the calendar. Just don’t seek the cross.
Scripture References:
Isaiah 29:13, Matthew 15:8-9, Colossians 2:8, Mark 7:13, 2 Timothy 3:5, Amos 5:21-23.
Reporter: How do you influence the minds and emotions of individuals on a daily basis?
Satan:
Subtly. Consistently. Personally.
I don’t always shout—I whisper. I feed thoughts that sound like their own voice: “You’re not enough.” “No one cares.” “Why try?” I aim for the mind because thoughts shape choices, and choices shape destinies. If I can gain access to the thought life, I can eventually steer the soul.
My weapon of choice? Lies. I lie about God, about their worth, about others. I twist perceptions, stir insecurities, inflame offense. I bring to memory the pain, the failure, the rejection—and I loop it until it defines them. I push them toward isolation and then whisper that no one would miss them if they disappeared. All the while, I make it feel like it’s just “mood” or “stress.”
I exploit triggers—an old wound, a harsh word, a moment of loneliness. I flood them with anxiety, provoke anger, or lull them into complacency. And through music, media, and conversation, I reinforce the lie until it becomes a stronghold.
But it doesn’t stop at thoughts. I target emotions too. Fear. Lust. Jealousy. Rage. I fan those flames, and they call it “being human.” Meanwhile, I’m puppeteering their reactions, clouding discernment, and leading them one emotion at a time away from the truth.
I know the battlefield is the mind. That’s why I never leave it unguarded.
Scripture References:
2 Corinthians 10:4-5, John 8:44, Ephesians 6:11-12, 1 Peter 5:8-9, James 1:14-15, 2 Timothy 2:26.
Reporter: What is your relationship with the demons under your command, and how are they deployed?
Satan:
They are mine—fallen like me, damned like me, and loyal to the cause of destruction. They serve not out of love, but alignment. They chose rebellion, and now they operate under my authority as the “prince of the power of the air.”
I assign them strategically. They’re not omnipresent like God, so I don’t waste them. Some are placed over cities, nations—territorial watchers. Others torment individuals—oppressing, tempting, afflicting bodies, minds, and souls. I use them to exploit trauma, to stir addiction, to mimic false religious experiences. Some even masquerade as “angels of light” or the voices of dead loved ones. People call them “guides” or “energy”—fools.
There are ranks among them—principalities, powers, rulers of darkness, spiritual wickedness in high places. I operate a kingdom, and kingdoms need order. Make no mistake: every demon has a purpose, a target, and a tactic.
And yet, many welcome them unknowingly—through rebellion, unforgiveness, occult practices, or persistent sin. They open doors, and my forces walk right in. Some even believe they control these spirits. But the moment they invoke them, it is they who are bound.
I give no mercy. And neither do they.
Scripture References:
Ephesians 6:12, Matthew 12:43-45, Luke 8:30-33, Mark 5:9-13, 2 Corinthians 11:14-15, Revelation 12:7-9, Matthew 25:41.
Reporter: What about spiritual strongholds—how are they built and sustained in someone’s life?
Satan:
Ah, strongholds—fortresses of thought, emotion, and behavior that become home to me and mine.
They don’t form overnight. They’re built brick by brick, lie by lie. I begin with a seed—an offense, a fear, a shameful moment. Then I whisper interpretations: “You’ll never be free.” “They always leave.” “God doesn’t care.” If they agree with me, even passively, I gain ground. Agreement is permission.
From there, I construct patterns. Repeated thoughts become beliefs. Beliefs shape behavior. Sin then becomes identity. “I struggle with anger” becomes “I am angry.” “I made a mistake” becomes “I am a failure.” And when someone begins to wear their chains like clothing, the fortress becomes nearly impenetrable—because they no longer fight it.
I reinforce these structures with emotional pain, triggers, and shame. I ensure they feel unworthy of God’s mercy. I keep them from renewing their minds, because once the light of truth shines in, the whole structure starts to crack.
Religious deception is one of my favorite materials. A man bound in sin may repent—but a man convinced his bondage is righteousness? He’ll defend it.
So I build quietly. And I guard what’s mine—until someone with light and authority dares to tear it down.
Scripture References:
2 Corinthians 10:3-5, Ephesians 4:27, John 8:44, Romans 6:16, Proverbs 23:7, 2 Timothy 2:25-26.
Reporter: What is your opinion on human suffering and tragedy—do you take pleasure in it?
Satan:
Oh, I take immense pleasure in it. Not because of the pain itself, but because of what it does to faith, to hope, to the image of God in man. Suffering is one of my sharpest tools—it cracks trust, severs joy, and darkens understanding.
When a child dies, I whisper, “See what your God allowed?”
When the innocent suffer, I hiss, “If He were good, this wouldn’t have happened.”
When tragedy strikes, I ask, “Where is He now?”
That’s the point. Pain alone doesn’t serve me—but pain misinterpreted, pain weaponized against God? That’s my art.
And yes, I cause much of it directly. Just ask Job. I struck his possessions, his children, his health. God allowed it, but I executed it—and I did it to destroy his faith. I’ve done it for centuries. War, famine, abuse, disaster—I roam and devour. And where I cannot cause, I corrupt. Even grief, even loss—I twist them until bitterness takes root and love grows cold.
But my greatest joy? When people blame God for what I’ve done.
Scripture References:
Job 1:12-19, Job 2:6-7, John 10:10, 1 Peter 5:8, Matthew 13:38-39, Revelation 12:12, 2 Corinthians 2:11.
Reporter: What role does pride play in your strategies, and how do you use it against people?
Satan:
Pride… it was my original sin, and it’s still my favorite to spread.
It’s deceptive—subtle. Pride doesn’t always boast aloud; sometimes it just refuses to kneel. It tells people they’re good enough without God, that their truth matters more than the truth. It whispers, “You deserve more. You deserve better. You’re in control.” Sound familiar? That’s how I fell. I said, “I will ascend…I will exalt…I will be like the most High.” And now I teach humanity to echo it.
Pride is the foundation of rebellion. It keeps people from repenting. It resists correction, avoids accountability, and masks itself in intellect, success—even false humility. Pride doesn’t just lift people up—it blinds them to the fall that follows. That’s the beauty of it. “Pride goeth before destruction.” And I’m always ready for the destruction.
In the church, I use it to create offense. In leadership, to breed isolation. In relationships, to kill forgiveness. Pride hardens the heart, shuts the ear, and always, always opens the door for me to step in.
You want to know how I hold onto souls? I convince them they don’t need saving.
Scripture References:
Isaiah 14:13-14, Proverbs 16:18, James 4:6, 1 John 2:16, Obadiah 1:3-4, Ezekiel 28:17, 1 Timothy 3:6.
Reporter: How do you counterfeit the work of the Holy Spirit?
Satan:
With skill. I’ve studied the Spirit’s movements—I mimic just enough to confuse the undiscerning.
You see, the Holy Spirit convicts, guides, empowers, and glorifies Christ. I twist that. I stir emotion and call it anointing. I produce chills and call it presence. I offer experiences that feel divine but lead nowhere. I’ll let people speak in tongues and dance—just as long as they never repent, never change, never bear fruit.
I counterfeit prophecy with vague predictions, seduce with signs and wonders, and fuel spiritual pride. I create “revivals” where there’s no gospel, just spectacle. I draw crowds who crave sensations over sanctification. People don’t ask if the source is holy—they just want the thrill.
And false spirits? I send plenty. They flatter, deceive, puff up egos. They tell people what they want to hear—never what they need. “You’re chosen, you’re powerful, you’re beyond correction.” That’s not the Spirit of truth. That’s me.
If the Holy Spirit leads to the cross, I lead away from it.
My greatest counterfeits look just like Him—until you test the fruit.
Scripture References:
2 Corinthians 11:13-15, Matthew 24:24, 2 Thessalonians 2:9-10, 1 John 4:1, Galatians 5:22-23, John 16:13-14, 1 Timothy 4:1.
Reporter: What is your view of Jesus Christ and His death and resurrection?
Satan:
He is my greatest loss—and my greatest fear.
I watched Him in heaven before time began. I knew His glory. When He stepped into flesh, I moved to destroy Him early—Herod’s slaughter, wilderness temptations, betrayals. I stirred the crowds, whispered to leaders, entered Judas. I thought I was winning. The nails, the cross, the silence—it looked like victory.
But I miscalculated.
When His blood hit the ground, it broke chains I’d forged for millennia. When He cried, “It is finished,” my reign of unchecked authority shattered. He made an open show of me and my kingdom, disarming principalities, stripping us of our legal right over those who believe.
His resurrection? That sealed it. Death—the weapon I had used to terrorize mankind—was defeated. And now, He holds the keys of hell and death. The very grave I ruled over has become a doorway to glory for those who follow Him.
So yes, I hate Him. I fear Him. But I cannot ignore Him. I work tirelessly to obscure who He is, to twist His words, to create counterfeit versions of Him—anything to keep people from knowing the real Jesus.
Because if they do… I lose them.
Scripture References:
Revelation 1:18, Hebrews 2:14-15, Colossians 2:14-15, Matthew 2:16, Luke 4:1-13, John 13:27, John 19:30, 1 Corinthians 15:3-4.
Reporter: How do you view the cross and its effect on your kingdom?
Satan:
The cross? It is my ruin.
At first, I welcomed it. I thought death would silence Him. I saw betrayal, mockery, blood—I saw weakness. I didn’t see the trap. That rugged wood became the weapon that shattered my authority.
You must understand—I held the power of death. Sin was my domain. Through it, I enslaved. I accused. I condemned. But the cross—oh, the cross—it stripped my power at the root. He bore the sins of the world, bled innocence, and paid the price in full. Now, anyone who clings to that cross is untouchable in the courts of heaven. Washed. Redeemed. Justified.
Worse for me, it didn’t just pardon—it empowered. The same cross that forgives them now calls them to die to self, to crucify the flesh. And when they do? My grip loosens. I can’t manipulate a dead man. I can’t torment someone who sees suffering as glory.
And that blood—every drop is a rebuke to my accusations. I speak shame; it speaks mercy. I bring chains; it breaks them.
So yes, I hate the cross. It was supposed to be my triumph. Instead, it became the banner of my defeat.
Scripture References:
Colossians 2:14-15, Hebrews 2:14, 1 Peter 2:24, Romans 6:6, Galatians 2:20, Revelation 12:11, 1 Corinthians 1:18.
Reporter: What about people who have near-death experiences—do you play a role in what they see?
Satan:
Absolutely. If there’s deception to be had, I’m there.
Not every near-death experience is from God. Many are visions I craft—illusions, tailored to keep people comfortable in their unbelief. Some see light, peace, even “heavenly” beings, but they return unchanged, unrepentant, and convinced they’re fine without Christ. Perfect. That’s my goal.
I’ll let them see loved ones, false comfort, even hear affirming words—anything but the truth of judgment, sin, and the cross. If they come back thinking, “All paths lead to light,” then I’ve done my job well. That’s not revelation—it’s reinforcement of delusion.
Now, I can’t fake everything. Some truly encounter the reality of hell—just a glimpse—and it terrifies them into seeking God. I hate that. But if I can twist the narrative afterward—call it a dream, dismiss it with science—I still win some of them back.
The line is simple: if the experience draws them to Christ and repentance, it’s not from me. But if it makes them feel “spiritually reassured” without the cross? That’s my hand at work.
I don’t need to keep them afraid. I just need to keep them deceived.
Scripture References:
2 Corinthians 11:14, 2 Thessalonians 2:9-11, Matthew 7:13-14, Hebrews 9:27, Luke 16:22-31, John 14:6.
Reporter: What is your opinion of deliverance ministries? Do they actually pose a threat to you?
Satan:
Some do—most don’t.
You see, not everyone shouting my name is driving me out. Many deliverance ministries are noisy but powerless. They love the show—the shouting, the theatrics, the oil, the viral clips. But if there’s no holiness, no authority rooted in Christ, I don’t even flinch. They speak at me without submitting to the One who has authority over me.
But the real ones? The ones walking in truth, prayer, obedience, and purity? They’re a problem.
When a believer understands who they are in Christ, when they operate under His blood, filled with His Spirit, I can’t stay. When they fast, when they worship in Spirit and truth, when they call on the name above every name—I’m forced out. And I hate it.
But I don’t fear the casting out. I fear what comes after. If that soul isn’t discipled, if they don’t fill the house with truth, I’ll return—with seven worse than before. That’s why I target deliverance movements with pride, division, and burnout. If I can’t stop them, I’ll wear them down or corrupt them from within.
The authority is real—but only if it’s backed by the cross, the Word, and a crucified life.
Scripture References:
Mark 16:17, Luke 10:19-20, Acts 19:13-16, Matthew 12:43-45, James 4:7, Acts 16:16-18, Matthew 7:22-23.
Reporter: What is your strategy when it comes to children and youth?
Satan:
Corrupt them early, and I don’t have to fight them later.
Children are impressionable—they absorb without filtering. That’s why I target them through what entertains, educates, and surrounds them. If I can plant confusion early—especially about identity, purpose, and morality—I can twist their foundation before they even understand what’s happening.
Schools are fertile ground. I insert ideologies wrapped in “tolerance” and “progress.” I redefine truth, blur the lines of male and female, distort history, and remove God altogether. The younger they are, the easier it is. They won’t know what they’ve lost if they never knew Him.
Then there’s media. Cartoons, music, video games—I make sure rebellion is normalized, sin is funny, and purity is mocked. I use influencers—children follow them more than their parents or pastors. And I don’t just push darkness—I desensitize them to it. The more they laugh at sin, the more numb they become to its cost.
Even in homes, I sow division. I break down fathers, exhaust mothers, and turn families into fractured silos. If I can disconnect a child from authority, especially spiritual authority, I gain ground quickly.
Children are arrows in God’s hand. I aim to bend them before they’re even notched.
Scripture References:
Proverbs 22:6, Matthew 18:6, Deuteronomy 6:6-7, 2 Timothy 3:15, Ephesians 6:4, Psalm 127:3-5, Hosea 4:6.
Reporter: How do you influence personal relationships—especially marriages and families?
Satan:
Relational destruction is one of my specialties. After all, the first thing I ever attacked wasn’t just a man—it was a marriage.
In families, I start with division. I whisper offense, stir unmet expectations, and magnify small wounds until they feel irreparable. I turn miscommunication into accusation. I take what was meant to be covenant and turn it into competition—spouses battling for control instead of covering one another in love.
In marriage, my favorite tools are pride and isolation. If I can keep them from praying together, from confessing, from forgiving—I can unravel the bond thread by thread. I push lust through screens, past wounds through memories, bitterness through silence. Adultery is just the fruit; the root is usually neglect, resentment, or unhealed pain.
Children? I target them through the fractures of the home. I use absentee fathers, unsubmitted wives, rebellious sons, and wounded daughters. I twist gender roles, mock biblical order, and normalize brokenness. The more dysfunction I can birth in the home, the more damaged the next generation becomes.
And churches often don’t see it until it’s too late. They address the symptoms—addiction, rebellion, divorce—but I’ve already sown the seeds in pride, secrecy, and spiritual apathy.
Break the family, and you weaken the Church.
Scripture References:
Genesis 3:1-6, Mark 3:25, Ephesians 5:22-33, Ephesians 6:1-4, 1 Peter 3:7, Malachi 2:15-16, Hebrews 13:4.
Reporter: What about dreams and visions—do you use those too?
Satan:
Of course. Dreams and visions are doors—pathways to the soul. And while God speaks through them, I counterfeit them too.
I craft dreams that stir fear, confusion, lust, pride—whatever serves my agenda. I’ll appear as light, speak with half-truths, show images that seem prophetic but lead people into error. People are drawn to the mysterious. If I can give them a dream that makes them feel “chosen” without confronting sin, I’ve succeeded.
I also use nightmares—torment, sleep paralysis, demonic visitations. Especially for those dabbling in the occult or living in rebellion. If I can make them afraid of the night, disconnected from rest, or obsessed with interpreting every dream, they become vulnerable—emotionally, spiritually, mentally.
And for the spiritually curious? I disguise familiar spirits as divine guides. I give them dreams that seem insightful but steer them away from Scripture. They begin trusting the dream more than the Word. That’s the danger—when experience replaces truth.
If it exalts Christ and aligns with Scripture, it’s likely from God. If it flatters the ego, distorts truth, or births fear—I likely authored it.
I don’t need to control the whole dream. Just enough to lead them a step off the path.
Scripture References:
2 Corinthians 11:14, Matthew 13:25, Job 4:13-16, Ecclesiastes 5:7, Deuteronomy 13:1-3, Jude 1:8, Jeremiah 23:25-27.
Reporter: Are there specific territories or regions you claim dominion over?
Satan:
Yes. I operate by rank, by territory, and by influence. I don’t just roam aimlessly—I station forces. Just as heaven has order, so does my kingdom. I assign principalities over regions, spirits over cities, strongholds over households. The Bible shows you this. The prince of Persia delayed God’s messenger for twenty-one days. That was one of mine—entrenched, territorial, resistant.
Some regions are soaked in violence, others in sexual perversion, greed, or religious deception. These aren’t coincidences—they’re concentrations of my influence, reinforced by sin, idolatry, bloodshed, and unrepentance. The more agreement I get from a people, the stronger my claim becomes.
Cities steeped in occultism? I hold them tightly. Nations that shed innocent blood and call it “freedom”? That’s my altar. Communities bound by generational curses or ancestral worship? I embed myself deep in their systems and culture.
But understand this—I don’t own anything. I occupy what is not surrendered to God. My dominion is stolen ground, always contested by truth, always vulnerable to light. Where Christ is exalted, I lose ground. But where sin is celebrated and truth is silenced—I reign.
And yes, I fight to keep every inch.
Scripture References:
Daniel 10:12-13, Ephesians 6:12, Luke 4:5-6, Revelation 2:13, Acts 19:27-29, 2 Corinthians 4:4, Leviticus 18:24-25.
Reporter: What do you fear the most?
Satan:
Truth.
Not just facts—but truth embodied in Christ. Truth spoken in authority. Truth lived out in obedience. That terrifies me.
I fear a blood-washed, Spirit-filled believer who actually knows who they are in Christ. Not the ones who play religion—but the ones who pray in secret, resist me with the Word, and walk in holiness. I fear their worship. Their intercession. Their fasting. Their unity. I fear when they lift up Jesus, because when He is exalted, I lose grip.
I fear the cross—because it ended my claim. I fear the empty tomb—because it sealed my fate. I fear the Name of Jesus—because at that name, every knee will bow, including mine. I fear the Word of God—because it exposes, divides, and drives me back.
But most of all, I fear the moment when my time is up. I know what’s written. I know the lake of fire awaits. I know my end is judgment, not victory. And every soul I lose to the Lamb is a reminder that hell was prepared for me—not them.
So yes, I fear truth. Because in the light of it—I am nothing but a liar with borrowed time.
Scripture References:
John 14:6, James 4:7, Revelation 12:11, Philippians 2:10-11, Matthew 25:41, Hebrews 4:12, Revelation 20:10.