The description of the beast in this passage has political overtones. The Old Testament frequently uses a horn as a symbol of political power. The beast wears the royal crowns (diadems) of political authority. The leopard, the bear, and the lion remind the reader of the great empires of the past such a Babylon, Persia, and Greece. Behind all this political power lurks the dragon, that old devil, the serpent Satan (Rev. 12:7-9).
One of the horrifying things about this passage is that the devil does not do his work alone, but has the active support of people. Human beings who follow Satan are capable of incredible depravity. It does not take long to come up with a Hall of Shame that includes Nero, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and Pol Pot; the Arab and Western slave trades; terrorism; and genocide in Nazi Germany, Rwanda, Cambodia, Bosnia, and Armenian Turkey. No evil is impossible when demonic power removes all human restraint and amplifies the natural evil of human sin.
Human rights investigator Gary Haugen discovered in Rwanda that mass murder does not require "pathological" killers. "When all restraints are released, farmers, clerks, school principals, mothers, doctors, mayors, and carpenters can pick up machetes and hack to death defenseless women and children." Haugen concludes, "The person without God...is a very scary creature."
The Nazis knew that almost anyone is capable of unspeakable brutality. Prospective SS officers received a German shepherd puppy at the beginning of training. The puppy grew up with the officer candidate. Working, playing, and sleeping together, they were constant companions for six months, the dog developing total trust for the budding officer. But the officer's final test before induction into the SS required him to strangle the dog to death with his bare hands. Those who couldn't do it were expelled from the SS. But those who did the deed had become capable of monstrous evil, and it had happened in only six months.
We certainly object to evil when it gets out of hand in a quantitative way. But are we as willing to acknowledge that the evil we exhibit each day is not substantively different from what manifests itself on a large scale? But for the grace of God...
Lord, don't be afraid to confront me about the depths of my own depravity. I am willing to know the truth about myself so that You can purify me and make me more like You.