Again, you totally avoid the issues.Yet the lamentation is directed to the king of Tyrus, a human! Clearly if one tries to interpret literary poetic prose without understanding metaphor and imagery, they will not properly discern the lamentation.
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Again, you totally avoid the issues.Yet the lamentation is directed to the king of Tyrus, a human! Clearly if one tries to interpret literary poetic prose without understanding metaphor and imagery, they will not properly discern the lamentation.
More avoidance. What have you got to hide?What's the difference? Can there be one without the other?
What's the difference between Satan and demons? Are you being serious? Do you not think that Satan is one individual spirit being with there also being other separate individual spirit beings called demons?
Whatever. Who cares what we call them? Stick to the issue at hand instead of wasting time with semantics.In the KJB devils are defined as demons or supernatural unclean spirit of a bad nature. Nowhere in the KJB translates demons but always devils.
Goodness gracious. Where do you come up with this nonsense? You are saying that all devils/demons are collectively called Satan? What?! You are just making things up at this point.The spirit called Satan is identified a great dragon, serpent, called the Devil. The dragon is the serpent, called the Devil that is Satan and there is no distinction between demons and devils. All of these are known as the unclean spirit called Satan!
It refers to the devil, Satan, separately from "his angels". Why do you refer to "his angels" collectively as Satan? You are not making any sense whatsoever.They are many by inhabiting all who have not the Spirit of Christ in them, yet Satan, the Devil, and great dragon called old serpent are ONE in the same unclean power to deceive and kill.
Revelation 12:9 (KJV) And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
In the KJB devils are defined as demons or supernatural unclean spirit of a bad nature. Nowhere in the KJB translates demons but always devils. The spirit called Satan is identified a great dragon, serpent, called the Devil. The dragon is the serpent, called the Devil that is Satan and there is no distinction between demons and devils. All of these are known as the unclean spirit called Satan! They are many by inhabiting all who have not the Spirit of Christ in them, yet Satan, the Devil, and great dragon called old serpent are ONE in the same unclean power to deceive and kill.
Revelation 12:9 (KJV) And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
Exactly. It is delusional. Look at how many posts, Scriptures and arguments he is avoiding on this thread. He never does this when he is arguing truth.Whatever. Who cares what we call them? Stick to the issue at hand instead of wasting time with semantics.
Goodness gracious. Where do you come up with this nonsense? You are saying that all devils/demons are collectively called Satan? What?! You are just making things up at this point.
It refers to the devil, Satan, separately from "his angels". Why do you refer to "his angels" collectively as Satan? You are not making any sense whatsoever.
Angels are spirits (Hebrews 1:14). Demons are fallen angels. They operate in the invisible realm. Their allegiance is to Satan. When the Bible talks about the activity of the devil, it sometimes includes the phrase “and his angels.” Satan is a distinct entity from his demons, but you cannot divide Satan from the fate of his angels. They are depicted as a collective whole. They move and fight as a unitary army. For example, Scripture describes them in Matthew 25:41 as “the devil and his angels,” in Revelation 12:7 as “the dragon … and his angels,” and in Revelation 12:9 as “that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan … and his angels.”In the KJB devils are defined as demons or supernatural unclean spirit of a bad nature. Nowhere in the KJB translates demons but always devils. The spirit called Satan is identified a great dragon, serpent, called the Devil. The dragon is the serpent, called the Devil that is Satan and there is no distinction between demons and devils. All of these are known as the unclean spirit called Satan! They are many by inhabiting all who have not the Spirit of Christ in them, yet Satan, the Devil, and great dragon called old serpent are ONE in the same unclean power to deceive and kill.
Revelation 12:9 (KJV) And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
You!
You are avoiding the obvious fact that cherubim are not human beings. Ezekiel 28:12-19 refers to a perfectly created, anointed cherub who later fell. You are not recognizing that Ezekiel 28:1-10 is about the human prince of Tyre with Ezekiel 28:12-19 being about the spiritual ruler of Tyre who influenced their human ruler to become like him (arrogant, thinking he was a god, etc.). So, who was that fallen cherub if not Satan? It's not reasonable at all to claim that any human being, including the human ruler of Tyre, would ever have been called the perfect anointed cherub who protected the holy mountain of God.I'm not the one trying to force this lamentation to be about Satan, because if the lamentation is not speaking of Satan, your theory of Satan being an angel of God before he became Satan falls apart. This is one of the primary passages used by those who support the unbiblical theory of Satan as a fallen angel of God. So, who in reality is avoiding? Look in the mirror!
Yea, exactly! He cannot address that. He just ducks around it.You are avoiding the obvious fact that cherubim are not human beings. Ezekiel 28:12-19 refers to a perfectly created, anointed cherub who later fell. You are not recognizing that Ezekiel 28:1-10 is about the human prince of Tyre with Ezekiel 28:12-19 being about the spiritual ruler of Tyre who influenced their human ruler to become like him (arrogant, thinking he was a god, etc.). So, who was that fallen cherub if not Satan? It's not reasonable at all to claim that any human being, including the human ruler of Tyre, would ever have been called the perfect anointed cherub who protected the holy mountain of God.
These 2 kings were simply surrogates who Satan used. They were his evil ambassadors. Satan worked through them. He spoke through them. He is still doing the same today.I'm not the one trying to force this lamentation to be about Satan, because if the lamentation is not speaking of Satan, your theory of Satan being an angel of God before he became Satan falls apart. This is one of the primary passages used by those who support the unbiblical theory of Satan as a fallen angel of God. So, who in reality is avoiding? Look in the mirror!
Satan is described as “the prince [archōn or ruler] of the devils” in Matthew 9:34, 12:24 and Mark 3:22. Matthew 9:34 extends the name to “Beelzebub the prince [archōn or ruler] of the devils.”I'm not the one trying to force this lamentation to be about Satan, because if the lamentation is not speaking of Satan, your theory of Satan being an angel of God before he became Satan falls apart. This is one of the primary passages used by those who support the unbiblical theory of Satan as a fallen angel of God. So, who in reality is avoiding? Look in the mirror!
When you say spirit, what are you meaning by spirit? For example, there is the holy Spirit. Do you take that to be meaning a real being? Or do you perhaps take it to mean the way JWs take it to mean, for example?
His disciples obviously thought spirits were real and can manifest bodily. After all, Christ appeared to them bodily, but initially they mistook Him for a spirit. And guess what? Christ has arms and legs, and they still mistook Him for a spirit initially. What should that be telling us? That maybe spirits have arms and legs? Maybe. You never know.
Angels are spirits (Hebrews 1:14). Demons are fallen angels. They operate in the invisible realm. Their allegiance is to Satan. When the Bible talks about the activity of the devil, it sometimes includes the phrase “and his angels.” Satan is a distinct entity from his demons, but you cannot divide Satan from the fate of his angels. They are depicted as a collective whole. They move and fight as a unitary army. For example, Scripture describes them in Matthew 25:41 as “the devil and his angels,” in Revelation 12:7 as “the dragon … and his angels,” and in Revelation 12:9 as “that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan … and his angels.”
These 2 kings were simply surrogates who Satan used. They were his evil ambassadors. Satan worked through them. He spoke through them. He is still doing the same today.
- Satan was in Eden, the Garden of God (v. 13)
- Satan was an anointed guardian cherub (v. 14)
- Satan was blameless in his ways from the day he was created, till unrighteousness was found in him. (v. 15)
- Satan was proud because of his beauty. He corrupted God’s wisdom for the sake of his own prideful splendour.
- Satan was “the anointed” or “covering cherub” who was laid low by pride and expelled by God from heaven before creation. cast to the ground, with the evil angels (v. 17).
Satan is described as “the prince [archōn or ruler] of the devils” in Matthew 9:34, 12:24 and Mark 3:22. Matthew 9:34 extends the name to “Beelzebub the prince [archōn or ruler] of the devils.”
You are avoiding the obvious fact that cherubim are not human beings. Ezekiel 28:12-19 refers to a perfectly created, anointed cherub who later fell. You are not recognizing that Ezekiel 28:1-10 is about the human prince of Tyre with Ezekiel 28:12-19 being about the spiritual ruler of Tyre who influenced their human ruler to become like him (arrogant, thinking he was a god, etc.). So, who was that fallen cherub if not Satan? It's not reasonable at all to claim that any human being, including the human ruler of Tyre, would ever have been called the perfect anointed cherub who protected the holy mountain of God.
Who can threaten the Devil ? No one can in fact ! such exist like gravity.Satan attacks those who are real and are a threat to him.
What a deception of Satan to believe he and his demons are not real.