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Well, there are different accounts of people being raised back to life, as themselves (not as zombies or skeletons). If you're referring to Ezekiel and the Valley of Dry Bones, it was being used as an prophesy to show the return of Israel (see verse 11). Even in that story, they were given flesh, and were whole people, not zombies (or the lesson regarding Israel's future wouldn't make any sense, or would be counter to what God was saying).I don't think there is any biblical or theological basis for using zombies or skeletons in Redemption, no.
Quote from: Redoubter on January 22, 2014, 06:34:02 PMWell, there are different accounts of people being raised back to life, as themselves (not as zombies or skeletons). If you're referring to Ezekiel and the Valley of Dry Bones, it was being used as an prophesy to show the return of Israel (see verse 11). Even in that story, they were given flesh, and were whole people, not zombies (or the lesson regarding Israel's future wouldn't make any sense, or would be counter to what God was saying).I don't think there is any biblical or theological basis for using zombies or skeletons in Redemption, no. But we can use this for a card that allows certain characters to come out of the discard pile, right?