studying Mark 5 and found this video very enlightening into the mind of the people at the time and how the Jewish people would have viewed the man possessed by Legion
Interesting, I never knew that Jews believed in ‘spirit’ possession. As I thought you would believe the Soul goes to God, just like we believe it is in Islam. We believe in Jinn possession.
There are possessions from demons and such, and there are possessions from people that were so evil that they can't go to hell to fix them (a temporary place, afterward they go to heaven), so they wander the world getting terrible punishments and possess people for different reasons, a lot of times to escape the suffering or look for a way to fix themselves to then be able to enter hell.
Also to be clear, whether a Jew or non Jew, if people break God's commandments, which is the Torah for Jews and the 7 Noahide laws for non Jews, and they don't repent for it before they die, they have extreme suffering after. It doesn't matter if someone is Muslim, christian or atheist, or what their other faith's say about it, if they break the 7 Noahide laws, they suffer. www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/62221/jewish/The-7-Noahide-Laws-Universal-Morality.htm?gclid=Cj0KCQjwjpjkBRDRARIsAKv-0O2ugaO1DSfSSCQbdCs4vOUg6VXaVf771JzCxL9OjF660XAGE96hJQoaAiREEALw_wcB
As far as I have studied, the equivalent of the Jinn in Jewish tradition are the "Shedim," which are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible and explored greatly in the Talmud and bears all the characteristics of the jinn . In the medieval world where Jews and Arabs interacted, many Arabic translations of Jewish work or original Arabic works by Jews used "jinn" or "jann" to render "shedim" and vice versa (for example, the figure Asmodeus is called Melakhe Shedim or Malik al-Jinn, translated as "King of the Demons"). On the other hand, belief in "spirits" as in wandering souls of the dead or ghosts (the term "spirit" i.e. "ru'ch" in Hebrew or "ruh" in Arabic can have a wide range of meanings) such as Dybbuk and Ibbur only occur in Jewish folklore. This is similar to the many folk beliefs of Arab lore such as the Hama, a barn-owl (they do look creepy though) embodying the spirit of a recently dead person or the Ghoul, a creature that appeared to travelers in the wilderness and misled, killed and ate them. The Prophet Mohammed dispelled such beliefs but creatures like the Ghoul, Nasnas, Sila and Afrit still made it into Arabic literature.
@@AshrafAnam Demons and spirits of bad people do posses people, and they also possess animals. It is very common that people get reincarnated into animals as a punishment and part of their rectification process, also into all types of plants and foods and stones and dust and water etc.
@@HealingwithTruth1111 You believe in reincarnation? That's Hindu and Buddhist stuff. The Abrahamic tradition is opposed to such pagan ideas. Yes, demons possess people but the spirits of the dead cannot, they are in the afterlife, how can they?
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