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During that time period, magic was invoking the power of a deity.
Quote from: Colin Michael on August 21, 2009, 09:25:53 AMDuring that time period, magic was invoking the power of a deity.Well, since only one deity actually exists, even that definition clearly distinguishes the acts of Moses and the acts of his detractors.
Actually, at that time period, Jewish culture believed that YHVH was simply the most powerful God.
Quote from: Colin Michael on August 21, 2009, 09:25:53 AMDuring that time period, magic was invoking the power of a deity.Quote from: Colin Michael on August 21, 2009, 10:14:06 AMActually, at that time period, Jewish culture believed that YHVH was simply the most powerful God.I do not consider a college student to be an authority on exactly what the people of ancient Israel believed. Particularly a college student who doesn't even accept the accuracy of the Bible, which contains the belief system of that time period.When God says to have "no other gods before me" He is saying that we shouldn't treat anything as a higher priority or authority than God. Just because people treat something as a god in their life, does not mean that thing is a God in reality.
Quote from: The Schaef on August 21, 2009, 10:10:12 AMQuote from: Colin Michael on August 21, 2009, 09:25:53 AMDuring that time period, magic was invoking the power of a deity.Well, since only one deity actually exists, even that definition clearly distinguishes the acts of Moses and the acts of his detractors.Actually, at that time period, Jewish culture believed that YHVH was simply the most powerful God. They did not deny the existence of other gods until sometime later. The commandment "have no other gods before me" presupposes the existence of other gods, as does the context of many pre-exilic verses. Later on, these gods were redefined to be "demons" or "fallen angel", depending on a Jew's particular theological standpoint.However, from a Redemption standpoint, I think that would agree.
communicating with nature spirits (neither Demon nor Angel)
communicating with nature spirits (neither Demon nor Angel) are within the power of man,
do Daniel and friends count as Magicians?
No, from a Christian worldview, fallen angels (and/or spirits of Nephilim) are demons. Nature spirits are something else entirely.
So it would logically follow that my statement is correct. In a Christian worldview, nature spirits are not demons. They are completely absent from the modern understanding of creation.
Tell that to Dante and every Scholastic thinker since him.And it's not about mixing anything with anything else. It's not an idea because there's a name for it, it has a name for it because it's factual or an idea.
Me too. Unfortunately, the Holy Scriptures don't say anything on the subject.