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bgwill3 -> RE: Scriptures about talking to the dead (6/24/2008 11:45:23 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Bluethread quote:
ORIGINAL: bgwill3 The only place in the NT where someone living communicated with someone dead, that I can think of, is the Transfiguration, when Jesus talked with Moses and Elijah I am not exactly sure how this impacts the question/issue in the OP. But I am more than certain that some folks here can elucidate. :-) The Scriptures do not say tha Yeshua(Jesus) summoned Moshe and Eleyahu(Moses and Elijah), nor does He share what was discussed. It also , says that He was transfigured, not that He transfigured Himself. This leads me to believe that this is more of a manifestation or something that Yeshua experienced and not an act of necromancy initiated by Him. Oh, I wouldn't define this as necromancy either. Saul and the witch at Endor... Definitely necromancy. Definitely forbidden. But I do believe that it was an instance in which someone living spoke with someone dead. I am utterly opposed to summoning (or attempting to summon) dead people. And I also believe that those persons who claim that someone (John the Baptist, Elijah, Paul, etc.) appeared to them and gave them a revelation or some such, are deceived. Again, I was just mentioning the living and the dead speaking with each other. That it was Jesus, and that he was uniquely glorified in this instance, leads me to believe that this instance was a demonstration, for the sake of Peter, James, and John (and ultimately, for our sake as well), of God's approval of Jesus. Also, that Moses (the Lawgiver) and Elijah (the Prophet) were talking with Jesus, indicates that he is the perfect fulfillment of the old Covenant, and the one to whom the Law and the Prophets pertain. God gave us the Scriptures, in which he reveals his will. He has also given us his Holy Spirit. To consult the dead, whether for aid (as Catholics do, as well as asking ancestors to 'be with us') or for any other reason, is unnecessary. Scriptures indicate that Christ himself advocates for us in the presence of the Father (1 John 2:1-2), and that the Holy Spirit is our Comforter (John 14-16). We are specifically told how to pray, and I don't recall any passage of Scripture that instructs us on praying to departed persons. What can departed saints and ancestors do for us that Jesus and his Holy Spirit cannot?
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