The prophet's dictionary guide to the supernatural

prophets equates to a conclave called by God with His prophets. See Sod. 307. Confrontation—A) A face-to-face meeting where clashes and conflicts usually take place, or ideas, beliefs, and thoughts are challenged. B) The object of which is the resolution of a conflict. 2 Kings 2:11; Job 38:1; Galatians 2:11. 308. Conjure—To enchant by magic or sorcery. To invoke or evoke into appearance and operation. To summon by bewitching, charming, or hexing. A series of prayers, incantations, and magical rites that cause to materialize or to cast a spell. 309. Conjure Man—A witch doctor. 310. Conjurer—A magician, sorcerer who uses spells to charge, entreat, or call into action forces to perform phenomenal feats for them, even only if to amuse onlookers. The work and activities of a witch doctor. 311. Conjuror—One who conjures. A wizard, sorcerer, or witch. 312. Constellation—A) A star cluster like the Milky Way, Orion, Pleiades, and Archturus. B) The celestial sphere that covers star clusters. Constellation of world power, believed to be governing spiritual powers of the earth. C) Venerated in times past as the princes of the heavenly worlds. See Archons and Star Cluster. 313. Constituents—A) The inner substance of a thing. B) The spiritual components found in the elements of a knowledge, teaching, and substance that result in the performance of its intended purpose. Prophetically, it speaks to that which makes up the prophet’s anointing. Job 38:36; Psalm 51:6; Proverbs 18:8. 314. Consul—An official appointed by a government who is dispatched to a foreign land to conduct business that is usually of a commercial nature. It is one of the ambassadorial terms for the prophet and the apostle. Any official of a sovereign with delegated authority and diplomatic assignments. 315. Corn—Jesus gave several parables in the gospels using corn symbolism and imagery. He said two important things about corn that have greater significance than what may be seen on the surface. In John 12:24, the Lord told about the power of corn to reproduce itself after death. He told His disciples that once it fell to the ground and died, it then reproduced itself after its own kind. The second reference is equally impressive. In describing the inherent power of the earth, a type of the human being, the

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