You have some cockamamie theory that this was the earthly government.
How the earthly government was able to do things like have magicians who could turn their rods into serpents (which was the occasion for Moses’ serpent to swallow them) is something you have explained less well. My explanation (literal demons) works QUITE well! Because the truth always does.
You could use some back-to-the-bible work, beginning with Ephesians 6.
I rebuke you.
BZZZ! Try again.
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BAAL
BAAL, MASTER
ba±al
OT:1167, "master; baal." In Akkadian, the noun belu ("lord") gave rise to the verb belu ("to rule"). In other northwest Semitic languages, the noun ba±al differs somewhat in meaning, as other words have taken over the meaning of "sir" or "lord." (Cf. Heb. °adon.) The Hebrew word ba±al seems to have been related to these homonyms. The word
ba±al occurs 84 times in the Hebrew Old Testament, 15 times with the meaning of "husband" and 50 times as a reference to a deity. The first occurrence of the noun ba±al is in Gen 14:13: "And there came one that had escaped, and told Abram the Hebrew; for he dwelt in the plain of Mamre the Amorite, brother of Eshcol, and brother of Aner: and these were confederate with [literally, "ba±al's of a covenant with"] Abram."
(from Vine's Expository Dictionary of Biblical Words, Copyright © 1985, Thomas Nelson Publishers.)
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Who was the Baal of Eqypt?