New Redemption Grab Bag now includes an assortment of 500 cards from five (5) different expansion sets. Available at Cactus website.
By all rights is should be able to discard Herod's Temple without question, it was a temple unto Yahweh,where sacrifices and worship took place.
Temple of Nisroch wouldn't be in play *in your opponent's territory* while you're blocking.
Speaking of Z.Temple, though... Following the special ability on Z Temple, did that temple even "Keep the Ark" as you put it, Schaef?
This is not a matter of the word "Temple" being in the card title. It is a matter of the card says "Discard a Temple" and Temple of Dagon is just that, a TEMPLE. The card does not say "A good temple" or "A holy temple" or anything. Simply "a temple."
I see this as an identifier like any other. If a card is a "temple" then it meets the requiremnt, and can thus be discarded.
So says Schaef, Captain of the "Temple" Guard.
The Ark was an example; the Temples hold a certain class of Artifacts which Temple of Dagon et al cannot hold. What I am trying to tell you is that "Temple" has a specific meaning in Redemption
I think that is the first time anyone typed out my full initials...
I'll have to agree with the masses on this one, Temple of Dagon is a temple.
'temple' means any and all temples at this point, period.
we cannot draw a connection between 'temple' and 'temple artifact' just because 'temple artifact' has been defined before in redemption;
therefore, at this point in time unless ruled or defined otherwise, as long as anyone can prove a card as being a 'temple' of some sort, then desecrate the temple can discard it.
Since "artifact" is completely unaligned, you can discard any artifact, good or bad.
To assume the same should apply to the "Temple" is logical and the most likely interpretation.
I think that to say hosts of a Christian card game have absolutely no way of figuring that out using common sense, especially considering that those Temples are different in nearly every way from other cards that have the word "temple" in the title, I think you are giving people a LOT less credit for intellect than I would dare.
QuoteI think that to say hosts of a Christian card game have absolutely no way of figuring that out using common sense, especially considering that those Temples are different in nearly every way from other cards that have the word "temple" in the title, I think you are giving people a LOT less credit for intellect than I would dare.COME ON! Enough.Archangel.... I agree with your definitions. I also think #4 is the only one that makes sense.
So how come Z's Temple says "Temple" and everyone nods their head in perfect agreement and understanding, but Desecrate says "Temple" and people just start including all kinds of other weird cards willy-nilly?
Zerrubbabel's Temple's SA says "good Temple" while Desecrate's SA just says Temple.
I've gotten a lot of flak for paying attention to the capitalization of Temple suggesting a proper term based on Jewish history and the Artifacts we use.
No gameplay mechanic argument was presented to support discarding Sites or Enhancements, and eventually I came across one by linking equivalent card type and function.
I've frequently wondered aloud why what's good for the goose can't be good for the gander, and received no answer other than further implications that I'm not using my brain.
Oh, and I also like the use of the term "supposedly", like I'm just making up arguments under false pretenses.
Oops! That was my fault. I misunderstood why you were emphasizing that. I thought it was a response to daClock.
I was suggesting earlier that Temple of Nisroch would be set-aside and therefore out of play, however I guess you meant if it was played in battle.
I don't think anyone has implied that you are not using your brain...I meant that something that is "obvious" was not obvious to me.
and my impression that you were saying there's no way you could look at it and KNOW it was a capital-t-temple-of-god. Looking back at your posts, it still looks to me like you were saying that.
I looked at the card and that was the conclusion I drew, even though I am now willing to revise it to a definition that's a little broader and a lot simpler.