For Jews and Christians, the Bible forbids the pursuit of divination, necromancy, witchcraft, etc. It’s a no-no.
I think even Islam forbids it. But then again, Islam forbids everything anyways.
“For Jews and Christians, the Bible forbids the pursuit of divination, necromancy, witchcraft, etc. Its a no-no.”
As you can see ... there are not many Christians on this thread. Instead they defend evil and laugh at others that see the dangers on impressionable kids.
Yeah, but as you can see on this thread, Jews and Christians who take theses teachings to heart are a bunch of "nutcases".
>>>the Bible forbids the pursuit of divination, necromancy, witchcraft, etc. Its a no-no.
The Bible also forbids lobsters and shrimp for dinner, and blended fabric clothing.
For me as a child, the ouija just sat there. I guess then I’m not damned. Well not counting the seafood platter.
the Bible forbids the pursuit of divination, necromancy, witchcraft, etc.
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I never understood why astrology was included in there. isn’t that just about interpretting the movement of planets in the sky? We know the moon affects the tides...I’m not defending astrology, just askin’.
Yep. Interestingly enough, gypsy fortune tellers refuse to have their own fortunes told. They know, from professional contact with their clients, that the urge to peek into the future tracks with personal impotence. People who buy their services are fearful, and the act of consulting soothsayers makes them ever less competent to deal with real life.
This is true, even when the soothsayers are Christians, and the ouija board they use is the Bible. The fascination with "prophecy teaching" among Christians directly correlates with their catastrophic loss of credibility and competence in the larger culture.