Audre Myers over at Nebraska Energy Observer always has some interesting observations about the world around us (indeed, once a week she writes a post called “Random Observations“—check it out). Her latest post—the whimsically titled “ooOOoo – BOO!“—explores the world beyond our observation, the world of ghosts, spirits, demons, and “haints.” It’s also the world of angels, and of God.
Myers makes a point that that really hit me when I was in college taking a senior seminar history course called “Society and the Supernatural”: that as Christians, if we believe in the Holy Trinity, we also have to believe in a broader supernatural world. For Christians, there is ample scriptural evidence of not just the presence of the Holy Spirit, but also of angels—with their own hierarchy and roles—and demons, those fallen angels that joined Lucifer in his prideful rebellion against God. The Bible speaks often of “principalities” and spirits that rule over ungodly nations.
How far beyond Scripture such supernatural creatures extend is a source of speculation and debate, and I suspect we won’t truly know until we’re on the other side. There is a danger in exploring the non-godly supernatural, as it opens spiritual doors within us that could make us susceptible to demonic influence—or, at the extremes, possession. Compulsive sinning can have the same effect, but messing with the occult—even out of an innocent curiosity to understand that world better—seems far likelier to result in catastrophic unintended consequences.
What I did learn in that college course, though, was that at least one member of the Scottish Enlightenment (whose name and work I cannot locate—blast!) expended a great deal of energy trying to discover fairies (apparently, people are still looking for them). He reasoned that if fairies, giants, and other mythical creatures of Scottish folklore existed, that would prove the existence of the supernatural. If the supernatural is real, God is real; if God is real, then fairies can exist.
Our groping, grasping attempts to understand the supernatural are, well, natural—it’s certainly a fascinating subject. But the Bible makes it clear what fate awaits us if we accept Christ—and what awaits us if we reject Him.
Still, I do not discount out-of-hand the possibility of supernatural presences beyond what we know from Scripture. I don’t want to go poking around in their domains for the reasons stated above, but it’s intellectually arrogant and shortsighted to assume we know everything. That’s the folly of our modern age—we applaud ourselves for demystifying the world, yet we’re more lost and in the dark than ever.
And what of those Scottish fairies? Surely their existence is more than the feeble attempts of ancient minds to explain the natural world, as the priests of scientism and materialism would argue. No, there is too much anecdotal evidence—across thousands of years and cultures—to discount the existence of such things.
All I know is that Jesus is alive—and all this talk of ghosts has me excited for Halloween.
Outstanding article. You gave a puny scribbling flesh and spirit. Well done, you!
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Well thank you! I love your posts on spiritual matters and cryptozoology (can’t wait to read more about Bigfoot!). Here’s hoping he pops up in 2020, as you wrote today.
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