We swapped computers in 2015. The new one was supposed to be so much better for someone like me, someone whose vision is becoming more and more limited. Why, it has no wires! You could pick it up and carry it around with you and no, it was not a laptop. It was one of those new âall-in-ones.â Part laptop, part tablet, but with a screen the size of a large desktop. You didnât even need a mouse and keyboard. Rrrrright. In my viewpoint it will take them a few more years to make this no-mouse-no-keyboard thing work smoothly enough that you donât find yourself wanting to throw the whole thing through the window at least once a day.
But it would have been a much easier transition if it hadnât been a Lenovo. Does that ring a few bells with the techie crowd? In 2014, Lenovo began building a third party adware program called "Superfish" into its consumer PCs. If you have read anything about it, you already know where this is going. There was so much adware embedded in this thing we couldnât even read a line of text without pop-ups flooding the screen. If the cursor ran across a magic word, another would instantly appear. And the thing kept track of every website you visited, producing even more ads. Sometimes they popped up so quickly that when you were trying to click on something on the legitimate page, you wound up clicking on an ad instead. We couldnât even load our desired programs for all the pop-ups. But this wasn't the worst of the problem. This adware made it much easier for hackers to break through HTTPS entirely, and such an attack occurred shortly after the program became public.
As far as I know, we were never hacked, but this stuff was so deeply embedded that it took at least three trips to the Geek Squad to get it out. And after every scrub, we had to spend time loading the programs we wanted yet again. The first four months we were actually able to use the computer about 4 weeks. Finally on September 5, 2017, Lenovo settled the lawsuit brought by the Federal Trade Commission agreeing to procure affirmative consent for any future adware programs and to have audited security checks for the next 20 years. They also agreed to pay $3.5 million as part of a state level settlement.
Satan embeds his adware into our culture the same way. When you canât even watch a hamburger commercial without âsoftâ porn invading your living room, when the teasers for the shows you avoid include language your mama would have washed your mouth out with soap for using, and when we are constantly told that we arenât hip, cool, smart, happy, or the most interesting people in the world without beer, hard liquor, cigarettes, or dancing the night away in skimpy clothes on a rooftop somewhere exciting where whatever you do stays, then you need to watch out for your souls more than ever before.
The world will laugh at you if you mention Satan. He isnât real, we are told. Only the ignorant believe in a mythological character like that. If you are a Christian, you must believe in Satan. If you donât accept that part of the Bible, why would you accept any other part?
Growing up I thought the only New Testament verses that mentioned Satan were the ones around Jesusâ temptation and the good old roaring lion in Peter. Imagine my surprise when I looked it up. I counted 19 outside the gospels, less one for the Peter passage we all know, for a total of 18 others. Then there were the ones who called him something else like âthe god of this age,â and âthe Devil.â And many of them talk about his âadware.â Check a few of these out.
2 Cor 2:11 mentions the âdevicesâ of the devil. Eph 6:11 speaks of his âschemes.â 2 Cor 4:4 tells us he âblinds the minds.â 2 Cor 11:14 tells us he âdisguisesâ himself. All I have to do is look around and see those devices and schemes every day, not just on television but in the speech and behavior of people who have already been taken in. Have you ever seen the original âInvasion of the Body Snatchers?â Some days I feel exactly like Kevin McCarthy, looking over my shoulder to see where the pods are, and wondering which of my neighbors have been replaced.
One of Satanâs devices are his ministers. The New Testament warns again and again of false teachers, false messiahs, false prophets, and false apostles. They fashion themselves as âministers of righteousnessâ (2 Cor 11:15). Not only do they appear to be doing good, they even look good. False teachers on the whole are good-looking and charismatic. A lot of what they say sounds good and is, in fact, good. But 90% of rat poison is good too. It only takes the 10% to kill the rats. When you keep finding the good in a man you know is teaching error, maybe Satanâs adware has taken hold of your heart already.
Our culture has become embedded with evil masquerading as good. We had to have our computer âscrubbed to the bonesâ to get rid of the adware. Maybe itâs time we all used a spiritual scrub brush on ourselves before we are taken in too.
But false prophets also arose among the people, just as there will be false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them, bringing upon themselves swift destruction. And many will follow their sensuality, and because of them the way of truth will be blasphemed. And in their greed they will exploit you with false words. Their condemnation from long ago is not idle, and their destruction is not asleep. 2 Pet 2:1-3.
Dene Ward
But it would have been a much easier transition if it hadnât been a Lenovo. Does that ring a few bells with the techie crowd? In 2014, Lenovo began building a third party adware program called "Superfish" into its consumer PCs. If you have read anything about it, you already know where this is going. There was so much adware embedded in this thing we couldnât even read a line of text without pop-ups flooding the screen. If the cursor ran across a magic word, another would instantly appear. And the thing kept track of every website you visited, producing even more ads. Sometimes they popped up so quickly that when you were trying to click on something on the legitimate page, you wound up clicking on an ad instead. We couldnât even load our desired programs for all the pop-ups. But this wasn't the worst of the problem. This adware made it much easier for hackers to break through HTTPS entirely, and such an attack occurred shortly after the program became public.
As far as I know, we were never hacked, but this stuff was so deeply embedded that it took at least three trips to the Geek Squad to get it out. And after every scrub, we had to spend time loading the programs we wanted yet again. The first four months we were actually able to use the computer about 4 weeks. Finally on September 5, 2017, Lenovo settled the lawsuit brought by the Federal Trade Commission agreeing to procure affirmative consent for any future adware programs and to have audited security checks for the next 20 years. They also agreed to pay $3.5 million as part of a state level settlement.
Satan embeds his adware into our culture the same way. When you canât even watch a hamburger commercial without âsoftâ porn invading your living room, when the teasers for the shows you avoid include language your mama would have washed your mouth out with soap for using, and when we are constantly told that we arenât hip, cool, smart, happy, or the most interesting people in the world without beer, hard liquor, cigarettes, or dancing the night away in skimpy clothes on a rooftop somewhere exciting where whatever you do stays, then you need to watch out for your souls more than ever before.
The world will laugh at you if you mention Satan. He isnât real, we are told. Only the ignorant believe in a mythological character like that. If you are a Christian, you must believe in Satan. If you donât accept that part of the Bible, why would you accept any other part?
Growing up I thought the only New Testament verses that mentioned Satan were the ones around Jesusâ temptation and the good old roaring lion in Peter. Imagine my surprise when I looked it up. I counted 19 outside the gospels, less one for the Peter passage we all know, for a total of 18 others. Then there were the ones who called him something else like âthe god of this age,â and âthe Devil.â And many of them talk about his âadware.â Check a few of these out.
2 Cor 2:11 mentions the âdevicesâ of the devil. Eph 6:11 speaks of his âschemes.â 2 Cor 4:4 tells us he âblinds the minds.â 2 Cor 11:14 tells us he âdisguisesâ himself. All I have to do is look around and see those devices and schemes every day, not just on television but in the speech and behavior of people who have already been taken in. Have you ever seen the original âInvasion of the Body Snatchers?â Some days I feel exactly like Kevin McCarthy, looking over my shoulder to see where the pods are, and wondering which of my neighbors have been replaced.
One of Satanâs devices are his ministers. The New Testament warns again and again of false teachers, false messiahs, false prophets, and false apostles. They fashion themselves as âministers of righteousnessâ (2 Cor 11:15). Not only do they appear to be doing good, they even look good. False teachers on the whole are good-looking and charismatic. A lot of what they say sounds good and is, in fact, good. But 90% of rat poison is good too. It only takes the 10% to kill the rats. When you keep finding the good in a man you know is teaching error, maybe Satanâs adware has taken hold of your heart already.
Our culture has become embedded with evil masquerading as good. We had to have our computer âscrubbed to the bonesâ to get rid of the adware. Maybe itâs time we all used a spiritual scrub brush on ourselves before we are taken in too.
But false prophets also arose among the people, just as there will be false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them, bringing upon themselves swift destruction. And many will follow their sensuality, and because of them the way of truth will be blasphemed. And in their greed they will exploit you with false words. Their condemnation from long ago is not idle, and their destruction is not asleep. 2 Pet 2:1-3.
Dene Ward