The prophet's dictionary guide to the supernatural
shutdown due to the sluggishness that accompanies the cold weather. D) A sign of suspended activity and productivity. Winter’s barrenness can often be accompanied by a period of spiritual taunting or ridicule, of reproach and surrender to difficulty and tribulation. In prophecy, dreams or visions depicting winter symbolize the aged and can mean a time of defamation; a season where one is vulnerable, renounced, exposed, or stripped like the trees made naked by their fallen leaves. The frozen image of the winter season, snow, and ice indicates a time of hard labor with slim rewards. It can also signify a time of year such as the holiday season where celebration, recreation, and relaxation are the order of the day. Winter is often synonymous with the north. 1624. Wisdom—The word for knowledge, insight, and information useful for practical living and spiritual prowess. Its symbolic liquids in ancient periods were wine and water. Its spiritual colors (auras) were gold and blue. Wisdom’s number in the ancient world was seven to exemplify its universal practice and necessity. Wisdom in Scripture is personified in Proverbs 8 as a lady, the great lady governess and dispenser of the supernatural treasuries of the Almighty. Study Proverbs 8–9. See explanations for the Seven Spirits of God, Seven Days, and Incubation Experience. 1625. Witch—A) Wizard. A practitioner of the occult using sorcery, wizardry, and magic to manipulate the supernatural and compel its subservience upon God’s creation. B) Illegal use of the spirit creation to craft natural forms and objects from Creator God’s immaterial worlds. C) Human vessels that oppose the power and authority of Christ and His church on earth with cruel assault tactics against them and God’s truth. Exodus 22:18; Deuteronomy 18:10. 1626. Witchcraft—A) The occupation of the devil’s agents exercising his dark powers for the production of his will. B) An institution of satanic priests and priestesses of darkness. C) Female lust, and the practice of spiritism and necromancy. Spiritually, the practice of abusing creation for one’s own purposes by the imposition of demonic desires upon the will and lives of others by magic, sorcery, and other occultic means. 1 Samuel 15:23; 2 Chronicles 33:6. See the spiritual objectives of witchcraft from Nahum 3:1–6. 1627. Witches Creed—“Do what you will but harm none.” This ancient slogan is said to be the governing guide that regulates the witch’s exercise of their occult powers. Anyone with any light can see that it is nothing more than a seductive trap to deceive people into using their free will agency to unlawfully
Made with FlippingBook Ebook Creator