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I must admit, I do enjoy watching legal dramas on television. Whether it was Law & Order or Matlock or The Practice, I have always been fascinated by the psychological warfare that takes place in a TV courtroom, the subtle tricks that lawyers would play on witnesses, leading them along until they would confess or implicate the guilty party. Shows like that are great illustrations of the power that rests in human language.
Satan is one of the most crafty and cunning wielders of language, as seen in his first appearance in Genesis. Even the most innocent sounding of questions lead humanity to its downfall: "Did God actually say...?" (3:1). That question, combined with half-truths and appeals to human avarice, was all Satan needed to nudge Adam and Eve into sin. And the rest, as they say, is history.
Satan is one of the most crafty and cunning wielders of language, as seen in his first appearance in Genesis. Even the most innocent sounding of questions lead humanity to its downfall: "Did God actually say...?" (3:1). That question, combined with half-truths and appeals to human avarice, was all Satan needed to nudge Adam and Eve into sin. And the rest, as they say, is history.

