Vinson: The Witch of En-dor
Tuesday, October 27, 2015 3:04 pm
By MIKE VINSON Saint, sinner, rich, and poor, all walks of life tend to be intrigued by those elements associated with the DARK SIDE: witches, warlocks, ghosts, goblins, things that go "bump in the night." The yearly celebration of Halloween--pagan ritual or merely a fun night for children and adults?--raises "intrigue" to an attractively unsettling new height. Allow me to share with you a story I find most intriguing. As though dealt an unfair hand by Fate, the Biblical story of King Saul, first king of Israel, has to be considered a classic tale of irony. Handpicked by the Almighty/God, anointed by Israel's greatest prophet, Samuel, Saul ultimately fell from the pinnacle of grace, literally, onto his own sword, a tragic suicide to say the least. The prophet Samuel, King Saul's liaison to the Heavens, had died, and the Almighty, jaded by Saul's habitually self-serving, stubborn ways, had turned a deaf ear to the king's prayers. Still, Saul found no relief in his consultations with other prophets, nor from the practice of U'rim, in which an oracle (High Priest) would reveal whether a planned maneuver was condoned by the Almighty. Also, the war with the arch-enemy Philistines raged, and the Philistines had the upper hand. That war, coupled with these other pressures, had reduced the once-mighty Saul to a spiritually desperate man. Some time back, following standards set forth by the Almighty, King Saul had issued a decree outlawing the black arts: "wizards," and "those who hath familiar spirits" and "peep and mutter." However, as desperation erodes mental capacity, Saul prodded one of his confidants to seek out for him such an individual, someone who could peer into the future and foretell what was in store for him as king, as well as the eventual outcome of the conflict with the troublesome Philistines. The confidant reluctantly told the king, "Behold, there is a woman that hath a familiar spirit at "En-dor." So, King Saul donned a disguise and, with two confidants, under the cloak of darkness, went to a cave located in En-dor, where dwelt this witchy woman. Once there, Saul approached the witch, saying, "I pray thee, divine unto me by the familiar spirit, and bring him up whom I shall name unto thee." As a cloud-like form manifested itself, the witch, now wise to the ruse, thus filled with dread, cried out, "Why hast thou deceived me? For thou art Saul" Over the course of the past couple weeks, stores across America--the world--have experienced increased sales in pumpkins, an assortment of candies, costumes, and masks. Come Halloween night, a.k.a. "All Hallows Eve," Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015, SUVs and mini-vans, driven by well-groomed yuppies, will creep down the streets of upper-class neighborhoods, and groups of children will emerge from the vehicles and excitedly dart from one house to the other, doorbells-a-ringing! Regardless its true origin, the theme of Halloween, in this modern age, is meant to induce a degree of "fright." Well, readers, I find nothing more frightening that than the Old Testament story of King Saul communicating with a witch at nighttime inside a dark cave in En-dor! Happy and safe Halloween! (Reference: Holy Bible, Book of I Samuel, Chapters 28-31).
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