99 Comments

  1. Markus

    So telekenisis telepathy and psionic weaponry etc is not demonic? Then why does sometimes they attribute it to witchcraft sometimes I’ve looked to see what the answers were and this topic is SO divided some say its witchcraft and demonic some say it’s a gift and some believe it doesn’t exist I think it’s either a parlor trick for the eye or that it’s possible through God I mean He did have Joseph dreams and Samson his strength, then what is truly witchcraft besides clairvoyance communication with the dead? I’m currently making a book with sibling that have such abilities and are Bible believing Christian’s, indent want to unintentionally promote the occult and attribute these things to God.Thank you for giving the time to read this and you have a good day

    • I would say no, those things aren’t demonic; they are fictional. As far as I am aware, there has been no credible evidence, ever, of telekinesis or telepathy. As understood in the context of this article, these are not spiritual or magical abilities—that’s the entire point Mark is making here—but natural ones, and as such, if they exist, they would be repeatable and measurable.

      The descriptions of witchcraft and sorcery described in the Old Testament, especially Deuteronomy 18, are linked to the religious practices of the nations Israel interacted with. Communion with the dead was certainly included, and specifically banned. Also divination from observation of natural forces (observing the flight of birds, examination of animal entrails, etc) or the casting of lots, which might be dice, or might be some other randomizing item, like a cast of I-Ching rods, although obviously Israel had no contact with China at that time and wouldn’t have known the I-Ching. “Spells and enchantments” were probably things like rituals to increase the fertility of the earth or bolster the strength of a house. The reference to making sons and daughters pass through fire is a reference to a specific ritual to the Ammonite god Moloch. All of these practices were related to seeking knowledge and power beyond what is commonly available to humankind from sources that are not God.

      Following that paragraph, we’re told that God will raise prophets to perform these same functions—to provide knowledge, wisdom, and supernatural intervention. Joseph and Samson fall into this category—individuals given power or knowledge by God to serve Israel. Modern Pentecostal traditions (among others, probably) assert that such power continues to be available to believers today, in the form of the “gifts of the spirit” as outlined in 1 Corinthians 12. I lack the wisdom and education to evaluate what that actually means, but I will tell you that I’ve seen some stuff done in Jesus’ name that was clearly not natural. I remain unconvinced that I wasn’t simply fooling myself into believing in what I expected, but I don’t discount it out of hand, either. After all, God does have power, or else He isn’t God. I tend to be cautious, though. I recommend reading about prelest, a concept taught by the Eastern Orthodox church.

  2. Markus

    I’d like to thank you sir for helping me understand, then why do fundamentalists condemn it not only in real life but in the fictitious world of Star Wars, X Men comics among others? Sure sometimes they can be “linked” to the dark arts but that’s not the ONLY way to get it, I dont want to seek it I was just curious about it, and like I said I do not want to promote the occult and attribute those things to God like how the Pharisees attributed Jesus power to the demons, although that was from ignorance and defiance than unintentional

    • Thank you for your thoughts, Markus. I hope I can help.

      When we’re talking about extra-normal and paranormal abilities, there are a lot of different theories and beliefs about them. Some people think that any claimed mental powers are really spiritual; others that any claimed spiritual powers are really mental. This article is not attempting to resolve that dispute. What it is saying is that there is evidence that human mental abilities have improved over the centuries, and we cannot discount the possibility that in the future there might be perfectly normal human mental abilities which in the present would seem superhuman, and that it is possible to imagine such future abilities without assuming that they are demonic.

      That does not mean there might not be demonic copies of such abilities. Indeed, there might also be divine versions of them. We really don’t know to what Paul was referring by words of wisdom and words of knowledge and discernment; we have guesses, usually based on experiences that seem to fit. The fact that Jesus said we could command mountains to move does not mean we cannot move them with our own machines. There are usually several ways to do anything. Speech, as the article suggests, is a mind power, as is reading silently. They are not demonic powers.

      “Fundamentalists” condemn fictional use of paranormal concepts because they fear that such considerations will lead people to explore demonic versions. I don’t share that fear. I think that a belief in supernatural power today is a positive step toward God. Not everyone who takes that step reaches that destination, but no one who disbelieves in the supernatural ever comes to God without overcoming that hurdle.

      I hope this helps.

      –M. J. Young

  3. I’m not as fundamentalist as I once was, and maybe I was never as fundamentalist as some in my church would have liked, but I have dealt with people who categorically reject fiction with fantastic elements most of my life. In most cases it comes down to trust in an authority who doesn’t really know what they’re talking about. Pat Robertson got a bee in his bonnet about D&D 30 years ago, and still preaches against it. There are plenty of people who hold the 700 Club, or Focus on the Family, or some other program, as the next step down from inspired Scripture. If James Dobson says fantasy literature is a problem, that’s good enough for them. Don’t need to read it for myself or learn anything about it—the Man of God has spoken!

    I have a dear friend who insisted C.S. Lewis was leading children into Satanism. Unfortunately for her, she taught at a Christian school where The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe was part of the curriculum. Since she was forced to assign it, she decided to instead read it aloud to the class so she could immediately denounce everything she saw as wrong with it. By the time she was finished, Lewis was her favorite author. A few months later, I visited her classroom. The school’s mascot was a lion, so it wasn’t at all surprising that there were lions *everywhere* in that room. But when I asked her how many of them were Aslan, she said, sheepishly, “All of them.”

    Of course, she still insists that rock music has “the same rhythms they use to summon demons in Africa,” in spite of the rock 4 beat being the same one used in the majority of contemporary worship choruses, so she still has a ways to go.

    The point, though, is that more often than not such attitudes are based on ignorance about whatever is being demonized, whether that’s Star Trek, Harry Potter, Green Day, or Oliver & Company (a movie I was not allowed to watch because of a Disney boycott). I mean, given the size of just one major fandom convention, if comics were leading people to the occult, it would be *really* freaking obvious. DragonCon’s attendance was 85,000 this year. San Diego Comic Con’s was 135,000. And relatively few comic readers even attend conventions. But I suppose if you’re the sort to blame the Devil when you don’t get a good parking space (and I know people who do), then you probably believe that each and every one of those hundreds of thousands is under demonic oppression. I disagree.

  4. Markus

    Thank you this really does help I wish I could tell those people that mental abilities like telekenisis are not bad depending on wether you use it for and where it came from, there’s a lot of my favorite heroes that use mental abilities like Psylocke and Jean Grey, I do hope on the New Earth (which will be the same but without the Curse) that id would have the opportunity to rewrite Star Wars, Frozen among other popular franchises for Gods glory cause i can see when a work or story is good or that it needs some changes. And rewriting stories and entertainment is my passion

    • Markus Schaper

      And this is Biblical I presume? Meaning what you guys say aligns with God Word? But yeah Derurotonomy 18:10 has been used by others to prove that psionic abilities are unnatural and I think in a way when we talk to God in our mind when we pray that basically a form of telepathy and God knows every thought and action from the heart and mind

  5. I think it might help to refer all of you to http://christian-gamers-guild.org/wp/blog/mjyoung/faith-and-gaming-magic/ Faith and Gaming: Magic.

    People who use a few Old Testament scriptures as a blanket statement that all such powers are necessarily evil or Satanic are missing the point. Yes, Deuteronomy condemns many types of divination, but then God gives the Urim and Thummin to the priests specifically as tools of divination, and David has the priests use them to help in his battle strategies. Divination is not evil; divination that calls on supernatural powers other than God is evil.

    So are mind powers evil?

    As the article suggests, if they’re natural abilities we develop, then they aren’t supernatural at all and have nothing to do with Satan or false gods.

    We have managed to teach chimpanzees and gorillas to use Ameslan–in essence to “speak” in the language used by the deaf. That’s not natural for them. Does that mean that it is Satanic? Not at all: we have managed to increase their natural abilities. Children learn to speak by listening to adults and mimicking us; they are not born able to speak, but they are born able to learn to speak. It might be that we were created with the ability to improve our own abilities–the example of Augustine and Athanasius demonstrates that we have indeed done so.

    I certainly agree that it might be possible to obtain special powers from the devil. I don’t think those would be psionic, though–they would be magical, using supernatural power to perform feats. In that case, I would say these are satanic. On the other hand, Jesus almost certainly teleported from Emaus to Jerusalem, and Philip appears to have teleported from Samaria to the southern road toward Ethiopia, and in neither case do we hold that to have been satanic, even if we think the devil might give someone a similar power.

    I think, too, we should consider that the devil doesn’t have anything original, and thus if there are satanic or satanically-gifted abilities, they are copies of divine gifts or abilities.

    What matters in these questions is the source. What comes from God is good.

    I hope this helps.

    –M. J. Young

    • Markus

      Yes this does help thank you, I have another thing to talk about before I leave you alone: the unforgivable sin is endlessly rejecting Christ till death right? Other ministry’s say that its attributing Jesus’s works to Satan, ba k then yes cause the Pharisees saw Jesus’s miracles but in a willful continued rejection they kept saying, the Hoyl spirits job is not only to convict us but to bring us to Jesus in the first place, if we continue to reject this till death then that’s unforgivable, I’m open to anything but I believe till death ends all opportunity we have EVERY chance to accept Christ and Merry Christmas

      • I’m afraid that I have to say I don’t know. Jesus said that whoever sins against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, but he didn’t explain how someone does that. I would say you’re probably right.

        The best advice I have heard on this is that anyone who is worried that he might have committed an unforgivable sin hasn’t. If he had, he would not feel any need for forgiveness.

        –M. J. Young

        • Markus

          Well either way thank you for clarifying on this and yeah I think this is a more truthful solution than attributing Jesus’s works to the Devil, cause yes the Pharisees did do that but they did it with continued rejection in front of Jesus’s face we cannot do that today cause He ain’t here but regardless of interpretations the basic theme is that if one commits this then they would feel no forgiveness, but I dont think it’s that easy to do it, if it were then EVERYONE would have committed it

  6. Markus

    Are Psychic and Psionic different? Cause some claim that Psychic is demonic (clairvoyance, telekenisis, etc) I also hear that Psionic is a better word or is Psychic the same? I’m sorry if I’m bothering you I’m just trying to get my facts straight before I use these kind of things for my stories especially since I’m using Jean Grey and other superheroes and use them for Gods glory (if I can) I like that use mind powers but at the same time I need true answers that perfectly align with the Word of God

    • The two words are mostly synonymous, but some people use ‘psionic’ to distance the purely fictitious mind powers of science fiction and superhero stories from real-world charlatans (and possibly occultists), who typically only use the word ‘psychic.’ At least, that is my understanding.

      There really isn’t a Biblical position to take one way or another. The Bible doesn’t talk about psychics of Jean Grey’s type because nobody in the ancient world had ever conceived of such things. It also doesn’t talk about locomotives, stock trading, or whether or not playtpus meat is kosher.

      I can give you *my* viewpoint, but I can’t claim that it ‘perfectly aligns with the Word of God.’ In my opinion, nobody can do that, although there are certainly plenty who will claim otherwise. I suggest you pray and meditate over the passages that give you trouble and over what you want to do. Let God guide your decision.

      Also, you may wish to go ahead and join the discussion group to get some more perspectives. The Guild is hardly united in thought on the topic. To join, send an email to subscribe@christian-gamers-guild.org or sign up through the web portal at https://christian-gamers-guild.groups.io/g/main

      • Markus Schaper

        Once again thank you for your help and I will pray for this even though I think I’ve got the answer: it depends on where you get it

  7. Markus Schaper

    Hey is it possible you can send me your email and MAYBE just maybe you could look at some psychic superpowers and maybe see if that’s what God would approve if it were a natural power? If it’s too big of a request I understand it’s just I want to know what is actually demonic or divine because I’m making a story that has siblings and a group of people with different abilities (kind of like X-Men) some psychic some physical, etc. I just want to be cautious cause other Christians would categorize this stuff as the occult due to exposure by fundamentals and extremists, once again if it’s too big of a request I understand I just want to tread carefully and I thought I can show others that not everything is what it seems when it come to things that people don’t understand in a good way.

    Thank you

      • That’s two whole different kettles of fish. Usually when people talk about “New Age” culture, they’re referring to a sort of a la carte spirituality where you pick a few religious or metaphysical ideas that appeal to you and use whatever wisdom is available in that worldview for spiritual guidance. It can run the gamut from a superstitious magical worldview to formalized Wicca religion. Tarot cards, palmistry and astrology; use of crystals and magnets; Feng Shui or other geomancy; Earth goddesses and belief in faeries; angel worship. And literally thousands of other informal spiritualist beliefs generally unconnected to the specific cultural or religious traditions a person would normally have experienced. (A Chinese person practicing Feng Shui is not usually ‘New Age’, but a white Midwesterner like me doing it is.)

        Mark will assert (and has in this very conversation) that such beliefs are a valuable and important first step toward coming to Christ. While I can see his point, I think there are too many people who get ‘just enough’ and stop there. It’s easy to substitute a general benign spirituality for the real thing.

        On the other end of things, there are sometimes Christians who mix that kind of spiritual nonsense with their own faith, attempting to use it as some kind of lever to get God to do what they want. I’ll admit to a little bit of temptation in that direction, myself—theurgy is an attractive idea. I have to remind myself of the story of Simon the Sorcerer in Acts 8. God’s power is not meant to turn us into Christian wizards—He uses it as He sees fit, not as we would direct Him.

        As a general rule, I’d caution people not to pursue new age spirituality. But as an element of fiction, I’m personally comfortable with it—learning about and appreciating alternative religious viewpoints doesn’t threaten my own faith—but I respect that other people aren’t. And some of those people aren’t comfortable with me being comfortable, so I usually keep things like my Dresden Files novels out of sight if those people are around.

        Parapsychology, on the other hand, is the application of the scientific method to a quite non-scientific subject. To be honest, I’d personally be thrilled if some parapsychologist turned up actual proof of the existence of ghosts or telepathy. The whole idea fascinates me. But what would that mean in relation to my spirituality? I have no idea.

        Whether or not there’s something spiritually problematic in trying to find physical evidence of spirits, I couldn’t say. I suppose it depends on what you’re after. If you’re trying to get information about life, the afterlife, the future, or what-have-you by investigating spirits, then I’d say that certainly falls into the category of necromancy—forbidden by Exodus and Deuteronomy. If your interest is in trying to find proof of some kind of spiritual reality, that might be laudable, but ultimately, I believe, futile. And even if you were successful, it would tend to make erode faith. Why trust God’s Word if you can independently verify it?

    • I’m going to instead again suggest that you subscribe to the email discussion list, as I recommended above. Messages sent there do come to my email, and also to the rest of the Guild. You’ll get a broader, and likely more educated, perspective than you’d get form just me. Although you’re not talking gaming specifically, you’re still on-topic—the Christian imagination is a subject we’ve discussed many times in the past. Again, subscribe@christian-gamers-guild.org or https://christian-gamers-guild.groups.io/g/main

  8. Markus

    Ok last one I swear ( it’s just I’ve enjoyed this conversation and I think what your saying and your claims are biblical) so how long have you researched about this specific topic? Cause I think as long as one person is not biased and see both sides of the topic and actually USE the Bible to back up thier claims, then I think the person is telling the truth but we must remember that Mans opinion is no substitute for Gods word

    • Wow…. It’s hard to say how long it’s been. I started roleplaying when I was about 12, and as I said, I grew up in a Fundamentalist church, so I almost immediately got some pushback. That was 1988, I guess, give or take a year. My Bible reading at that time was cursory, though. I think I started really delving into the Word when I was about 14, which would be around ’90. I had a bit of a crisis of faith at that time and got rid of much of my roleplaying material, thinking it was too much of a distraction, although I never came to the point where I thought the fantastic elements themselves were problematic. I continued to read fantasy literature through that time. I picked roleplaying back up as a Junior in high school—92-93, though at that point I played more sci-fi and superheroes rather than fantasy.

      A couple years later, as I was about to graduate high school, I started getting a little deeper into apology and meatier theological study. I recall it being around 1996 when I was actively engaged in debate on a local Bulletin Board Service. (An activity that, although it certainly added to my knowledge, I did without much love and therefore now bitterly regret.)

      A look back through the CGG archives shows I joined the Guild in 2002. I seem to have already formed a pretty solid foundation for my thinking on the Christian imagination at that time, though. As I read back through my old posts I don’t see much that I currently disagree with.

  9. Markus

    So basically a long time. Not bad, I know this might seem crazy but if God were to give us the abilities to control snow (Elsa), psionic abilities (Psylocke, Jean Grey etc), powers absorbtion (Rogue) or other abilities that are found in comics, could God himself give us such power (and I’m not talking about abilities that come from or is exclusively found in occult/demonic origins)? Cause I’ve heard people jump at high distances, have great strength among others, so sometimes I think that superpowers in a sense exist but comics tend to exaggerate reality, but yeah I just dont want to attribute something that is bad (occult and/or sorcery) to God, this is truly the last time I post on this cause I’d just like to know cause I’d like to use ideas of psionic abilities for my Christian characters but I wanted to check if that’s something that God can give and be mindful of this fallen world and it’s silly worldviews

    • Markus Schaper

      And I agree that mental powers are just that… Mental. Spiritual powers are ones that deal with the spirit (chi and other fake life energy that others make up with New Age philosophy)

      • Markus

        And what I’ve also read is that others claim that these powers bend the natural law and we cannot do that/not supposed to be, although there are some stories in which sometimes they do use these powers to bend reality its self

    • As I read through the “gifts of the spirit” I find that I am rather clueless concerning what many of them are. Some are workers of miracles–and that’s separate from gifts of healings. Wisdom, knowledge, I don’t know what they all mean. I sometimes find that I know exactly what someone needs to be told, and later wonder how I knew that. I suspect that God can give any ability at all to anyone he chooses. Note that when Moses brought water from the stone the second time, God scolded him for using the staff to do it; He wanted Moses to command the water to come without using the staff. That suggests to me that Moses had been given the ability to call water from the stone, whenever he wanted. The first time Elijah called fire from the sky, he prayed rather seriously; the second and third times he was almost flippant about it, as if this now was something he could do whenever he wanted. Certainly I would class those as spiritual gifts, but that doesn’t mean mental powers couldn’t be spiritual gifts.

      You will undoubtedly have some people who will say that whatever gifts you give your characters are demonic. I dare say even if you gave them the power to call water from rocks or fire from the sky, some will say these are Satanic counterfeits of gifts God gave to His prophets. The notion that we can’t violate the natural laws is an Enlightenment age belief, not a Biblical one–Peter walked on water. The very notion of a miracle is that God is intervening in ways contrary to “natural law”.

      I hope this helps.

      • Markus

        This does help and am I bothering you guys? If I am I’m sorry it’s just I do like mental powers you know but I dont actively “seek” it you know? And from what I’ve seen from you guys is that God can give us ANY powers/gifts but it’s up to us to see if we use our powers wisely or for our own selfish benefits wether it’s purely a spiritual or mental power. It’s just I’d like to know what the Bible says about this but it looks like the mental powers are either fake from recent imagination or it’s real and can be obtained from God or Satan but I’d prefer getting it from God if I was born with a power

  10. Going back to the article, when I read your post I didn’t read it aloud; I didn’t even move my lips. I apparently have a mental power which Athanasius and Augustine both lacked. Is that a gift from God? It is in the sense that my ability to speak, to see and hear, to walk, all are gifts from God; my ability to read is a gift from God, and my ability to read silently without moving my lips is a gift from God. Yet they are all what we would call “natural” gifts. I can remember my elementary school teachers coaxing some of my fellow students to close their mouths when they read and so not move their lips–it was taught to us at an early age.

    In the same way, it is entirely possible that what we call paranormal or psionic mental abilities could become natural abilities, something we learn and teach to our children. It is also possible that some people would have aptitudes for these and others not.

    I think for your purposes what you need to understand is that within the context of your fiction the powers are whatever you say they are, as long as you make it make sense and stick to it consistently. If Ralph’s telekinetic ability is a gift from God, you make it clear that that’s what it is; if Joe has a similar ability that he got from Satan, you make it clear that it is different in that regard. Indeed, if Pete got a similar ability studying with Tibetan monks who have for generations trained themselves and their offspring and students to use this, then you include background that this is a perfectly natural ability. In those backgrounds you include aspects that fit with them–Ralph feels it is wrong to use his TK for self-serving purposes, and Joe gets a flush of wickedness when he uses his, and Pete tires himself from the effort.

    Let me invite you to read http://www.mjyoung.net/stories/novel01/I000.html Verse Three, Chapter One, and pay particular attention to the Lauren Hastings stories. She has quite a few powers of different kinds, and at times wrestles with how she uses them. It might be helpful to continue with Old Verses New, as she starts using “arcane” magic and considers the ramifications of that as well. (Of course, I hope you enjoy them enough that you keep reading beyond that, but by the time we reach For Better or Verse she’s pretty much got her head together on those things.)

    Again, I hope this helps.

  11. Gee, I missed a lot of this discussion when my computer was down. Let me repeat what Bryan has suggested: join the guild, and get more people involved. One reason for that is that I would never claim my view is THE Christian answer. (I was scolded for doing that once, and realized that it was a mistake.) What we have is answers given by Christians, each of us seeking to understand God’s will to the best of our abilities. I can cite “credentials”–I started reading the Bible with The Golden Book of Bible Stories back in about 1959, obtained two degrees in Biblical Studies from different Christian colleges, and have been involved in ministry and study for decades before since then–but that doesn’t mean I have a corner on God’s truth. I often say that I know I’m wrong about something, because I’ve found that I was wrong before and corrected myself, and I would be foolish to assume that I now have a perfect understanding of it all. I just don’t know where my mistakes are, and when I find them I’ll correct them, and hope that I have corrected them correctly. But you’ll get more perspectives through the guild. The President and I (I’m the Chaplain) disagree about magic, he asserting that it’s fine to include in a game or story if it’s purely another natural force, I arguing that it should be supernatural because only so do we point to the existence of God. If you want to know THE Christian answer about psionics/psychic abilities, you’re never going to find it. The best you can do is find A Christian answer that is consistent with what you know.

  12. Markus

    I suppose the occult, anything demonic and witchcraft are one in the same? I get confused when they use the word occult more but I think it’s probably an interchangeable term if I’m not mistaken. So Deuteronomy not only describes witchcraft forbidden but the occult also? I’m just trying to learn more on what it forbids but I know that mind powers as long as they are from God is good. I just dont see why people won’t see it that way

    • “Occult” simply means “hidden.” Same word as “occluded.” Another couple of relevant words with a similar, but slightly different meaning are “arcane” and “esoteric” which don’t necessarily refer to secret knowledge, but that which is understood by only a few people.

      Occult is a nebulous term that can encompass as much or as little as you like. I most often associate it with the 18th and 19th century mystical and Hermetic traditions like the Golden Dawn, some branches of the Freemasons, etc, and various conspiracy-theorist favorites like the Trilateral Commission and New World Order. I don’t usually put things like Tarot reading, palmistry, astrology and the like in that category because those things are usually in plain view.

      There are at least twice as many opinions on this stuff as there are cultures that practice it. Although we want to categorize and tag everything, put it in neat boxes so we can understand it, that risks causing us to misunderstand things. Sure, you can say that all secret societies are occultic, and therefore demonic, but you’re inevitably going to run into a committed and upstanding Christian who is also a Freemason. How then do you respond?

      The fact that you’re confused and can’t reach a place where you have a definitive answer is, to me, a good sign. When all these things make total sense and you cease struggling with them, you’ve stopped learning.

      • Markus

        And what do you mean “plain view” do you mean that they are obvious in terms of they are witchcraft practices that are strictly forbidden? I just hope mind powers are not of the occult nor witchcraft

        • Bryan Ray

          I mean that you can walk down the street and see businesses offering Tarot readings as a service. That’s the opposite of hidden, thus not ‘occult.’ Troubling? For sure. Sinful? Likely. But not secret. But again, my own definition is narrower than many people’s.

          The Bible never talks about ‘the occult.’ The Pentateuch warns against some specific practices that were prevalent among the cultures surrounding Israel and some more general ones, most of which boil down to an amplification of the commandment not to worship other gods.

          • Markus

            Really? Cause when I got to movieguide or other sites they think the occult is the same as witchcraft or anything that’s demonic/satanic I dont think mind powers are that

          • Markus

            Do you read on Gotquestions.org? Cause they have something to say about psychokenesis and telepathy and I’d like to hear your commentary

          • Markus

            But at least mind powers (telekenisis, telepathy, psionic constructs, among others) are not of the occult/witchcraft, at least I hope so cause either they are fake or it’s real and God could give you that power. I dont mean to be presumptive but I hope you are not the false teachers that others warn about and you know what Deuteronomy ACTUALLY means

          • Markus

            That’s interesting cause others think that the occult IS witchcraft, I just hope you and this article are right about what your saying and youv3 used the Bible correctly for your research, i dont mean to be presumptive but i hope your not a false teacher leading me into something bad, I’d just like to get to the bottom of it, cause I’m a.ways finding something that might make it witchcraft and i keep commenting to see what it means. Others also say that fictional aliens and almost everything in science fiction and in our entertainment culture is demonic/satanic, I disagree I thi k that everything is corrupted by sin

  13. Markus

    But at least mind powers (telekenisis, telepathy, psionic constructs, among others) are not of the occult/witchcraft, at least I hope so cause either they are fake or it’s real and God could give you that power. I dont mean to be presumptive but I hope you are the false teachers that others warn about and you know what Deuteronomy ACTUALLY means

  14. Markus

    Do you read on Gotquestions.org? Cause they have something to say about psychokenesis, telepathy, parapsychology and the occult. I agree with some things from gotquestions but I disagree with it’s new Earth view (but that’s besides the point) I’d like to see what you think of these articles

    • Markus

      Even christiananswers.net (on the article what is the occult?), thefencepostblog.com, pathos.com, desiringgod.com among others but I feel like that they are the biggest ones and maybe you’ve missed something but I KNOW that mental powers are not demonic but at least fake and fictional

    • I think I said early on that I’m really not as Fundamentalist as the people I grew up around would wish. I suspect the websites you’ve referenced are written from the perspective of typical Evangelical paranoia. I don’t subscribe to that, so I will probably generally disagree with them. Remember that you’re writing on a website that has a goal of defending roleplaying games (D&D among them) against slander. So it’s *very* unlikely that we’ll see eye-to-eye with people interested in categorizing this, that and the other thing as occultic influences that Christians should stay away from.

      I think at this point that I’ve adequately explained my beliefs and what I believe is meant by the terms witchcraft and sorcery in the Bible. I very seriously doubt that anyone’s going to be practicing sorcery by accident. There are many, many other sins that are far more likely to be a problem for us, and a preoccupation with occultism and sorcery merely serves to blind us to them. We are tempted to dismiss our greed, lust, and unkindness as problems because at least we’re not witches!

      So if what you want to write doesn’t conflict with Scripture as you understand it, then write it! If you’re still questioning, perhaps consult your pastor—someone who knows you is far better to consult than random strangers on a web site. Neither I nor M.J. are either qualified nor entitled to either forbid or permit you to do anything. We’re neither of us in a position of authority and I, at least, have no formal theological education.

  15. Markus

    I REALLY am sorry if I’m annoying you, I just need to remember this: if it’s real then both sides could use it on others, if it’s fake, it’s fake. As long as it does not have a connection to witchcraft or the occult (which is mostly found in Duerotonomy and Isaiah) then it should be fine, like you guys have explained it’s not a power of the spirit (unlike New Age philosophies) it’s a power of the MIND. Sometimes we humans HAVE broken through the laws of physics thr

      • Hello again, Markus. I’ve been having trouble posting comments here, but Bryan suggested a way to get around it, so let’s see if this works.

        First, concerning the subject generally, you seem to be very bothered by it. I’m going to mention (perhaps again, it’s been a long conversation) the weaker brother problem http://christian-gamers-guild.org/wp/blog/mjyoung/faith-and-gaming-weaker-brothers/ and suggest that if this is your weakness you, personally, should avoid it. All of us have things we have to avoid that are not wrong and not bad for other believers, but which are a problem for us. My wife, a registered nurse, handles naked bodies several nights a week without any problems; I would not be able to do that.

        You need, too, to understand that individual verses only mean what they mean in context. Picking one verse and applying it to something for which it was not intended. I Corinthians 2:11 actually does not, in the Greek, mention thoughts; it speaks of knowing the “of man” things, the things inside a man. Further, it is part of an analogy, that just as only you can know what is inside you, only God knows what is inside God. However, the next verse says that we have been given that Spirit of God, so that we can understand what is inside God, and thus the point of the analogy is that it is possible to know what God is thinking. As to knowing what men are thinking, somewhere (I would bet on John’s Gospel) it says that Jesus knew what the people were thinking, so it is possible to know that–and yes, He was Jesus, but some believe He never did anything which we, by the Spirit, cannot also do.

        Further, even proof-texting (taking verses out of context to make a point) this verse might mean that no one can read your mind, but it does not mean that you cannot communicate your thoughts–the first point the article makes, that you can do that, by using speech. Tell me what you’re thinking, and I know what you’re thinking. That’s been happening in this conversation from the beginning.

        As to I Kings 8:39, I have that in the Updated New American Standard Bible as “…act and render to each according to all his ways, whose heart You know, for You alone know the hearts of all the sons of men,….” Hearts are not, strictly speaking, thoughts in the Bible; they are the core of our being, the seat of will and intention. This is about knowing someone’s motivation. In its context it is saying that God is in a position to judge and we are not, because God understands why we did what we did, and we do not.

        None of this means that God could not empower someone to do any of that. As I said, we don’t know what gifts of discernment, knowledge, or wisdom are, and God can reveal something to someone that cannot be known by natural means.

        But ultimately it is not our job to make you comfortable with something that bothers you. We can only explain why other believers are not uncomfortable with it. It would be entirely wrong for us to persuade you to embrace something that genuinely bothers you, and we are not trying to do that; we only need you to understand that what bothers you individually might well be perfectly fine for someone else.

        Again I hope this helps. (I also hope this posts.)

        –M. J. Young

  16. Markus

    This actually does help, and I guess that’s why I’m bothered because people do this kind of stuff and I fall for it

  17. Markus

    I did find that in mediumship and spiritism (especially in Deuteronomy18) they do mention TK and TP, but I suspect that they either “channel” (a New Age practice) the spirit to them, or it “comes” from the spirit. I’ve researched what Deuteronomy 18 and thier definitions of the abominations and the only possible connects with TK and TP is what I’ve said but I did hear that back then people who tried to be mediums or spiritist were possibly the first ventriloquists. Other than that the Bible wether explicitly or implicitly, the Bible says NOTHING a out these powers. I’ve researched a great deal about this and my gut tells me that they are either fake or really real but scarce.

    I’m curious on what your response would be…

    This WHOLE conversation might as well be part of the article itself LOL.

    Thanks,
    Markus

  18. Markus

    I have looked up Deuteronomy 18 and the definitions of the abominations its says and the only ones that have a possible connection with TK and TP are mediumship and spiritism, though some comes from “channeling” a spirit, the spirit does these actions, or the person “claims” to commune and see spirits. Although the original Hebrew text does state that people who did mediumship back in the Biblical days were considered the first ventriloquists. But other than that and God knows OUR thoughts, there is NOTHING about these powers in the Bible. I just dont know why big Christian sites like movieguide, christananswers, and gotquestions condemn these things just by using Deuteronomy 18, it kind of sounds like dogma but I dont want to be a heretic. This WHOLE conversation might as well be part of the article, huh? Lol

    • Markus

      This is also another confusing part: what exactly is the difference between a medium (besides the obviuos) and a spiritist?

      • This is going to be difficult.

        First, there are an awful lot of Christians out there who simply don’t understand the gospel. It is so much simpler to ask what it is we are supposed to do and not do, but that is exactly not what God expects of us. The message isn’t about rules that we follow; it’s about becoming more like loving children of God. Augustine couched it brilliantly in the words, “Love God, and do as you please.” The Christian life isn’t about following rules; it’s about seeking to become closer to God.

        Worse, the Law was never intended to be a set of rules which people followed to be more like God; it was supposed to be a picture of what someone looked like who loved God and his neighbor. Don’t kill, not because there’s a rule that says don’t kill, but because killing is a very unloving thing to do.

        In this sense, the details of Deuteronomy are irrelevant. They’re a useful picture of the kind of life God expected of his people maybe three to five thousand years ago, and we can learn from that, but we can’t apply it to our own lives directly.

        Take the passage you’re citing in Deuteronomy 18. You ask what the difference is between a medium and a spiritist. I compared about twenty translations and did not find the word “spiritist” in any of them; several of them mentioned either being a medium or consulting one. That’s part of the problem: we’re trying to translate specific words from a very different language as it was used thousands of years ago. Beyond that, the passage specifically tells us that these things were practices of the people God was driving out of the land, and that’s the critical factor: Israel was not to adopt the spiritual and religious practices of those people because they were at odds with what God was directing. The list is sweeping, and it may be overlapping, because God didn’t want them saying, “well, this isn’t really consulting a medium, it’s consulting a spiritualist.” All of that was forbidden to Israel because it was all connected to religious practices God was driving away from them. They were to seek and serve Him, not dabble in efforts to get information from other spirit sources.

        That, too, is significant in your problem. When we talked about Magic http://christian-gamers-guild.org/wp/blog/mjyoung/faith-and-gaming-magic/ we pointed out that nothing in the Bible is about arcane magic because there was no such thing until the early modern age; it was all condemning foreign religious practices. In the same way, the notion of mind powers did not exist until the twentieth century, and so nothing in the Bible is about mental powers.

        You’re talking about writing fiction in which such powers exist as mental powers. The people who object to it argue that because they don’t exist as mental powers they must be satanic spiritual powers. Obviously these people don’t comprehend the concept of fiction. If you say they’re mental powers, that’s what they are.

        If you were seeking them in real life, I would tell you to be very careful, because spirits can be very deceptive. However, saying that is not the same thing as saying it would be wrong to write about them, nor that I believe they will never exist. I just don’t think anyone has them now.

          • Markus

            And to be honest I’ve researched these terms, and they are similar in terms of having spirits but thier philosophies are different and sometimes they claim to have mental powers maybe years after mental powers were really invented in the 20th century (and even put them under the word “psychic” in which it usually mean a person knows the future) in which to me that mental powers are not really exclusive to one party like any other power, cause in the real world there’s only two sources of spiritual power: God or Satan and I’d rather get it from God.

  19. Markus

    And another thing I’ve found: that mental powers require a “psionic” energy of some kind from the mind, does our brain even HAVE energy? I’m not talking about Chi or some spiritual power, but is there some kind of energy in the minds cause supposedly there must be a “psionic” energy to do such things with the mind.

  20. Markus

    I really am sorry if this is too much, I just want to cover all the angles on this subject and my last three comments are the final nails in the coffin for me, when they get answered, I’ll have the result and I’ll know what to do

  21. Markus

    I have actually found more for psionic energy in reddit

    “Psychic abilities are your natural spiritual abilities manifested while in the body. They indicate a close connection with your spirit, and, in general, with the spiritual realm.Psionic abilities fall into the realm of fiction. The terms is used to describe fictional abilities of the mind, as opposed to spirit.However, because psionic abilities often coincide with, or are described in terms of, existing spiritual abilities, they are often confused for the same.”

    https://backpackerverse.com/psionic-energy/

    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02091/full

    I will stop so you can fully read and come to a conclusion, it’s just I find new things about these powers everyday and to be honest it’s a bit irritating I think its teetering on boths side of either the occult or the natural,

    • Markus, I can’t help thinking that given your methodology you will never reach a conclusion. The problem is the sheer size of the Internet. For example, in 2012 You Tube announced that the total length of all its content if watched end to end would take two thousand twelve years. As long as you keep searching the Internet you are going to keep finding more material.

      Obviously, too, there are probably twice as many opinions on the subject as there are people writing about it. Are psychic and psionic the same or different? Is there a difference between the spirit and the mind? Do any of these abilities actually exist, or are the people who have claimed to have them all frauds? For fifty years James Randi’s organization offered a million dollar prize to anyone who could demonstrate the existence of supernatural or paranormal abilities. The telling point isn’t that no one ever succeeded in claiming the prize, but that no one ever tried.

      In the end, though, you don’t need to know the answer. You want to know whether it’s O.K. to use such powers in fiction, and the answer is that it depends entirely on how you define them in your fiction. Nothing else matters.

      • Markus

        Ok I now understand this now, it’s basically up to me on how I define it, as I did say I looked up Deuteronomy 18 many times and the only possible connections are mediumship or spiritist but its not really exclusive cause it more of a result from communication with spirits or ghosts, or channeling them to the person. This is the history of the term: https://www.motionpictures.org/2013/10/the-carrie-phenomenon-a-brief-history-of-telekinesis/

        And honestly from looking at this, its balanced: meaning it can be used for evil or good and not exclusive to one another

          • Markus

            I thought they were interchangeable, but what do you think now that I’ve revealed the terms true origin?

          • I’m going to bore you with some trivia.

            Back in the 1960s there was a battle between the two leading publishers of dictionaries, Merriam Webster and Funk & Wagnall’s. Webster, the original American dictionary, maintained the practice of listing definitions in historical order, that is, the earliest known definition of the word first, progressing through the years, marking some of the definitions “obsolete” because they were no longer in use. F&W, by contrast, put the currently most common definition first and worked backwards into obscurity.

            If you had a Webster’s, you could see how the meaning of a word developed over time.

            If you had a Funk, you could get the definition most used today right up front.

            Funk & Wagnall’s won. Today Webster also lists definitions in sequence from the most common in modern usage.

            I personally feel that this is a great loss of a resource for those of us interested in philology and linguistics–but really, what matters in modern language is not how a word was used originally but how it is used now. To some degree Humpty Dumpty (in the Alice books) was right: a word means what the user intends it to mean, no more and no less. I use “telekinesis” and “telekinetic” specifically for powers which enable the movement of objects or substances remotely, because that’s pretty much the standard in the gaming world. I tend to replace “pyrokinesis/cryokinesis” with “pyrogenesis/cryogenesis” because I think them more accurate terms and find both in use. I don’t use “telekinetic” for other types of mind skills, for which telepathic, metabolic, clairsentient, teleportive, and other terms are better suited. But a word means what the speaker and the hearers mutually understand, so using a word you understand to have a particular meaning is fine.

            I remember hearing that one of the professors at my college objected to anyone referring to the resurrection of Christ as “fantastic” or “fabulous” because etymologically those words suggest something fictitious–of or pertaining to fantasy or fable. Yet when we use them, we mean outrageously good. I don’t have a problem with them so used.

  22. Markus

    No that’s ok I LOVE trivia, so in modern times the word “telekinesis” dont really involve spirits anymore in terms of definition and psychokinesis are interchangeable? But at the end of the day its WHERE you get your powers from. Did you get to see the brief history of telekenisis? And with that wiki site, I forgot that there’s a possibility that people can just change it into somethings not true like on Wikipedia… and the Russian guy was wrong to look on mediumship for that. And the best example of a medium is Cole Brown from The Sixth Sense and he didnt have telekenitic powers

  23. Markus

    I have also realized something: in the realm of fiction there are variables of mental powers like for example, Ermac from Mortal Kombat uses telekenisis but it’s a spiritual form due to him being created as a fusion of souls, Jean Grey has it from a genetic mutation, Eleven is simply born from it as a natural, so not EVERY telekenisis is not the same in the world of fiction but I still dont know what a spiritist is besides thier philosophy in which they use mediums to commune with spirits and sometimes telekenisis and telepathy are the results of this

  24. Markus

    Ok so lat one before you respond: what about psionic energy (energy that’s exclusive to the mind)? What do you think about that and is it scientifically-based, spiritually fake or PURELY fictional?

    • First thing, you keep posting that same link to that article. Please stop doing so.

      My opinion about psionic energy is that I do not see any adequate evidence of its existence. It makes for good fiction, but efforts to study it have produced no credible evidence.

      • Markus

        Oh ok, so yeah my only problem now is the supposed connection of these powers and mediumship (the examples is the article I send, channeling, seances, the spirits through the medium, or the spirits themselves) that honestly is my last piece of the puzzle

        • I’m not sure if it’s the frequency of your commenting or the fact that you started dropping a lot of links, but the spam filter has started flagging your posts. That’s why they’re not appearing immediately.

          You seem to have fallen down the paranormal nomenclature rabbit hole. I’m going to stress again that most of what you’re talking about is imaginary. And even when treated as real phenomena, since it can be neither reliably observed nor measured, there’s no way for anyone to come to agreement on what any of the words actually mean or how they can be categorized. So I advise you not to get too hung up on where people draw lines around things. You can’t talk sense about what is inherently nonsense.

          Regarding the energy contained in the human brain: There is a certain amount of electro-chemical energy there. If I remember correctly, our brains are about 30 Watts during normal conditions.

          And the word “telekinesis” is just a Latin construction meaning “motion at a distance.” Same roots as “telephone” or “telegraph” and “kinetic energy.” Telepathy is the same thing: Feeling at a distance. It makes no difference who coined the words—they’re an obvious construction if you want a pseudo-scientific Latinate word.

  25. Markus

    Oh ok, I see I guess ita the mediumship/mental power connection is what bothers me with that Russian parpaschylogist, but now I see it’s all in the matter of HOW and WHAT it is in your own fiction and it can be either spiritual, technological, natural hence there’s variations which people fail to see ALOT

  26. Markus

    Do you think the power God gives us is limited and temporarily? I think it would be limited (in terms of Gods vast power) but He could give us permanent powers, theres people who have super strength, superior speed, agility among other things people can do

    • Paul tells us that the gifts and the callings of God are irrevocable. I take that to mean that if God calls you to be an evangelist, you will always be an evangelist, and if He gives you the gift of discernment you will always have that gift.

      My one uncertainty is that in making lists Paul speaks of “gifts of healings”, and I take that to mean he gives to one person the ability to give healings to other people. That doesn’t mean he can heal everyone always, but that he can heal some people sometimes.

  27. Markus

    Another pretty much explains it all, I’ve also seen that parapsychology is part of the “occult” but from what I’ve seen and looked the ONLY occult it mentions is Deuteronomy18 (which yes we have already established it) but I’ve still been seeing that these mental powers can be connected to mediumship through seances or thier own gift of “seeing” gifts or “channeling”(New Age practice) the spirit to you… those I believe are the only puzzle pieces left now that I know that the soul and mind are not the same thing

    • Markus

      And especially with the Russian guy who coined that term and looked to find the answer through mediumship then the American parapsychologist did take all the voodoo out and tried to make it scientific

        • Markus

          Cause I’m concerned with Rogues abilities of “life force” absorbtion powers from what I’ve read it’s more ambiguous

        • You’re doing it again, Markus: you’re trying to put specific meanings to words that are used flexibly.

          In Greek, we have the psuche, the pneuma, the soma, and a few other words. In the Septuagint, the 300 B.C. translation of the Old Testament that was effectively the standard translation for anyone who didn’t speak Hebrew until Jerome created a Latin version, Genesis tells us that God placed a pneuma in a soma and man became a living psuche. That’s often translated a spirit in a body to create a living soul, and so we argue about whether a soul is a third thing or whether a soul is the combination of a spirit in a body. But it’s even more complicated because the pneuma means a wind, and from that a breath, and from that a spirit, so it could be that God breathed a breath into the body and turned it into a living being.

          Plato complicates it more for us, because we know he was very influential but we don’t know how influential he was over biblical usage of words. For him the psuche was pretty much the same as the pneuma; he believed in a world of perfect spiritual objects reflected by flawed material objects–that there is in the spirit world a perfect sphere and a perfect cube and a perfect person, but the material world only has imperfect spheres and cubes, and the material body makes the person containing the perfect psuche imperfect.

          We don’t even really know, or agree, as to how the words pneuma and psuche, spirit and soul, are used in the New Testament, and in fact we sometimes translate them to different words precisely because we don’t think their meaning is consistent from one passage to another.

          So what is a life force? As far as I know its a phrase used in fiction to describe some aspect of a person or creature that has not been defined or clearly identified. What then is a soul? Well, it might be the same thing as a spirit, or it might be a spirit-like component of a creature that is distinct from a spirit, or it might be the combination of a spirit and a body, that is, an entire creature, or it might be the life of the creature, or it might be the realm of thought, or of emotion, or of will. What is a spirit? Again, we don’t know. It might simply be breath, that we are breathing. It might be one of three parts that constitute a person, or one of two parts that form a soul which is a person.

          We simply don’t know.

          And any theologian or pastor or teacher who tells you otherwise isn’t telling you more than that his opinion, his best understanding of the issue.

          Thus I will tell you mine, with the caveat that I might be wrong. I held a different belief in the past, and decided I was mistaken, and so corrected myself to this, which I can only hope is right. I think, though, that in the beginning God formed a material body and placed within it a spirit, such that the two were fused into one thing that we call a soul, and we also call it a person. It is a very complex object which has thoughts and feelings and desires and decisions involving both physical and spiritual aspects at such a high level of integration that we cannot distinguish the one from the other at all easily.

          In my back yard I have a stack of boards, just scraps of wood to look at, but marked with permanent ink with a date, the name of one of my sons, and the fact that he broke it with his bare foot. He was studying martial arts. I could easily break my foot on such a board. For me, breaking the board without using a tool would be a superhuman feat. Yet he strengthened that part of his soul, his being, such that he could do that. I have no problem with the notion that someone could strengthen some other part of his soul such that he could do what to me are superhuman feats. I think trying to figure out what part of a person does what is a lost cause, and particularly when you’re going to bring in words that didn’t exist and didn’t have Greek or Hebrew equivalents during Biblical times, like “life force”, or when you’re going to try to fix the meanings of words whose meanings have been both flexible and debated for millennia.

          • Markus, go back and read what I wrote again. Pay particular attention to this: anyone who claims they know exactly what a soul is is simply giving you his own opinion/conclusion on a subject that has been debated now for millennia, and his opinion isn’t exactly worthless but it ultimately proves nothing.

            The Greek word psuche has many meanings, and in English we sometimes make it soul, or psyche, or life, or mind, or thought, or being. We can argue that the soul, psyche, life, mind, thought, and being are all different things, but how much of that is because we use different words for them whereas in Greek they were all the psuche?

            You are not going to reach an incontrovertible answer to this.

            I’ve written another article on the subject; it will appear in early August. Maybe it will help you.

  28. Markus

    And if I understand correctly: psyche is another word for the mind and can be interchangeable with soul or spirit but is mostly used for the mind

  29. Markus

    I’ve also seen that parapsychology is part of the “occult” but from what I’ve seen and looked the ONLY occult it mentions is Deuteronomy18 (which yes we have already established it) but I’ve still been seeing that these mental powers can be connected to mediumship through seances or thier own gift of “seeing” gifts or “channeling”(New Age practice) the spirit to you… those I believe are the only puzzle pieces left now that I know that the soul and mind are not the same thing

  30. Markus

    I did find on Gotquestions.org (although I disagree with them on some subjects) they say that the Human Soul is not all known and is DISTINCT from the heart and mind

    • Markus, go back and re-read what I wrote last time. It doesn’t matter what WeSpeakForGod.Org or HereAreAllTheAnswers.Com or anyone else says about the soul or the mind or the spirit; it is only another opinion, another human effort to make sense of some very complicated notions that God never bothered to fully explain to us because we did not need to know. The answer is, no one really knows the answer, and if you’re talking about doing something with fiction, the only thing that matters is what you as the writer intend.

      • Markus

        Now I see, I have all the puzzle pieces now, thank you guys for your help (even if I have pushed your buttons) so I’m guessing that everything even the definitions of mental powers are a blank canvas for a fiction writer, that’s my point of view of course and it wouldn’t REALLY matter if the mind and soul are the same entity, the point is that there is only TWO sources for spiritual power: God or the Devil and I rather take the former

        • Markus

          And I guess the Russian parapsychologist who tried to explain it through the TRUE OCCULT was more of a whackoand NEVER came close

          • Markus

            And if I remember about witchcraft/magic it goes something like this: “In the Bible, the idea of “witchcraft” is similar to “divination.” It’s an attempt to communicate with evil spirits so they’ll provide information or insight. In some cases, it can mean attempting to use a ritual or chant (e.g. spell) in an effort to convince a spirit to do something.

            The Bible’s view is essentially saying, “Yes, you can, in fact, interact with demons—but DON’T.” And that’s what it means when it forbids “witchcraft.” The Bible tells us not to try and cast spells or talk to the dead—not because we really can, but because it opens us up to dangerous forces. The Bible condemns all forms of witchcraft—whether it’s information-based or spell-based, effective or pointless, minor or major. Casting an occult spell is not a harmless thing, even if there’s no chance of it really working, because doing so means following the lead of a demonic spirit. This is why God told the people of Israel not to get involved, at all, in such things when they came into the Promised Land. The problem is not the word, it’s what the word might mean. What most people call “witchcraft” is foreign to the Bible. Harry Potter’s version of magic, for instance, is more like the Force from Star Wars or the “bending” abilities from Avatar: The Last Airbender. It’s explicitly NOT something involving demons or Satan. These kinds of “witches” are totally different from what the Bible means when it refers to sorcery, magic, and divination.

            Now, that doesn’t necessarily mean all of those stories are A-OK for all people at all times. It’s fair to say that if a person’s not careful about such things, they can get confused about what’s real and what’s not. If someone had that issue, these kinds of stories could potentially affect their faith. But it is a matter of conviction more than anything else. (Also see: Are movies like Harry Potter OK for Christians?)

            In contrast, things like Ouija boards and seances (which sometimes people would claim TK and TP from this) are the biblical definition of “witchcraft” and can’t honestly be defended under any circumstances. Most “occult” concepts are deliberately tied to Satanic demons or spirits—and that’s extremely dangerous territory. When in doubt, it’s wise for believers to keep their distance from anything called “witchcraft” in real life until they know more about what’s really involved.”

            Link:https://412teens.org/qna/what-does-the-Bible-say-about-witchcraft.php

  31. Markus

    Another thing I do not get is how telekinesis is a for of Mediumship via Wikipedia and how seances and channeling can be part of receiving TK, but I guess they are part of New Age rituals and wouldnt it raise flags when the man who coined telekinesis is the same dude who tried to prove it through mediums or other occult? Sure the American parapsychologist made it scientific but wouldnt is be some concern from the Russian dude? I just wanna get the history right, I understand that in fiction it can be whatever

  32. Markus

    But they are the same people who say this: “Performing supernatural feats through occult powers, like a comic book superhero or villain, is generally based on pagan myth—not a Christian claim. Scripture does not explicitly tell people “thou shalt not turn invisible, shoot fireballs, fly on brooms, levitate objects, or turn into animals.” That’s because such things cannot happen.”

    So they cant be trusted

  33. Markus

    I actually got just couple of problems:I’ve also seen that parapsychology is part of the “occult” (idk why cause it’s just study of mental phenomena), I guess the Russian parapsychologist who tried to explain TK and TP through the TRUE OCCULT was more of a whacko and NEVER came close, what about seances and channeling? I know they are part of New Age practices but they claim to have these TP and TK activities happening and Wikipedia claim telekinetic activity as a form of Mediumship and lastly is magic the same thing as witchcraft? Cause I looked into the definition of it and it just says having supernatural power over nature and that’s not really helpful for a biblical definition but I believe it’s the same for Deuteronomy 18:12

    It’s just a mix of my last comments

    • Markus

      And I also don’t know why Merriam-Webster says telekinesis is used by spiritualistic mediums when it should JUST say it’s moving objects by the mind or telepathy by communicating ONLY with the mind, comments of that?

  34. Markus

    And I don’t get how Telepathy (or clairaudiance in mediumship) is a sixth sense along with clairvoyance (which is connected to soothsaying and hence forbidden)

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