10/11/2007


Ezekiel 13:18 - 20 (HCSB)

In this passage, God continues to give an oracle to Ezekiel to pass on to the people.  There were among the Israelites in exile, women who were practicing a type of voodoo.  They would sew charms of different things on the sleeves of their garments.   And with them, they practiced a form of magic.

Remember that Plato believed that the “reality” of an object was in its essence rather than its substance.  This sort of pantheistic idea is the same as the use of charms.  By having a charm that represented rain, for instance, the wearer believed that they controlled the essence of rain and could therefore, by magic, control the weather.  Likewise, by creating a charm representing their enemies, they believed, and proclaimed (for a price) that Israel’s foes would withdraw from Jerusalem. 

Of course, we know that the Bible forbids magic because it removes God from the position of omnipotence in our lives.  We are to rely on Him for our needs and providence.  When we pretend to control any part of our lives without His assistance, we effectively set up and worship a false god.

Let us learn to rely on our sovereign God as the keeper and sustainer of our lives.  Charms are nothing more than trinkets that hold no special power.  God alone rules all things.

Jeff Justus
Cleff Publishing
www.cleffpublishing.com 
©2007 Cleff Publishing, all rights reserved.

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