Check out our Event Calendar! View birthdays, holidays and upcoming tournaments!
Moses can't be an evil prince of Egypt during the Hebrew apostasy but the most evil creatures in all of human history can start heroes? And on a flippant "sorry [not sorry] if they don't represent 'your' [snicker] interpretation?" following a Pontius' "there's no way of knowing"? The way these are being handled is far from neutral: neutral was when they were human and able to be converted, but universally evil to begin with.I'm out.
First off, I don't think it's right to question Gabe/the elder team's sincerity as the original post did.
"The Sons of God" in the Hebrew Bible.The rationale for a non-heroic Nephilim is the common interpretation that the Nephilim are the off-spring of fallen angelic beings and humans. This is based off language seen in Genesis 6:2 where the Bible says the "sons of God" or in transliterated Hebrew "ben elohiym" which literally translates to the sons of God. The interpretation of this phrase is what the argument hinges on.Interpretation of this topic is split among Christians and scholars. A large number of classic Christian interpreters would say that the nephilim are the offspring of an intermarriage of the godly line of seth and the evil line of Cain. Matthew Henry is a commentator who would take this interpretation. This view has serious problems.To see these problems, let us return to "ben elohiym." This phrase occurs two times in the plural in the OT. (You see this Hebrew phrase in Daniel a time or two in reference to theophanies.) This appearance and in the first two chapters of Job. The Job appearance is how we must reach a conclusion based on this word. In the book of Job, "ben elohiym" is used in reference to what could be a divine council of Angels. "The Sons of God" are those who present themselves before God and Satan is among them. This usage would surely imply that the Sons of God are among the divine order. Given that this usage (one of two major usages in the Bible) shows the sons of God as being among the divine order, we must be hermeneutically consistent and apply it to the Genesis passage as well. This makes the nephilim the offspring of humans and fallen angels. Based on that conclusion, I would have to say good or neutral nephilim have no leg to stand on. I'm not going to quit the game or anything remotely close over this, but with all my training and research, I can't be ok with heroic nephilim.
Just to make sure I'm clear on what people are saying--the controversial issue for those who are opposed to the card in its current form is not whether they are human or human/demon, but rather whether they should have a "good side" or not, is that accurate?
oh please... blue and red aren't good brigades
Quote from: TheHobbit on March 27, 2018, 10:51:51 AMoh please... blue and red aren't good brigades Calling it now--a Blue deck will finish Top 3 at Nationals this year.
Quote from: The Guardian on March 27, 2018, 10:45:24 AMJust to make sure I'm clear on what people are saying--the controversial issue for those who are opposed to the card in its current form is not whether they are human or human/demon, but rather whether they should have a "good side" or not, is that accurate?I think it would be really cool for it to be human/demon as this would be the first in Redemption, and the history of the Nephilim appears that they are “demigods.” At the very least it needs to be WC class and have the giant identifier.