| @serf_in_USA: I think the point that milgita is making is that those 3 terms, found in the sources you provide, are not directly attributed to Satan in the context as they are in other places. For example, in Isaiah 14:12, the passage is directed toward the "king of Babylon" - much as in the same way that Genesis 3 does not specifically identify the serpent as a personification of Satan (even if it is almost universally accepted as such). Disagreeing points of view are proper but sarcasm is not very becoming - especially in religious discussions. |