by Dapper Baron » Mon Dec 13, 2021 11:01 am
If that is so, why do they talk about things that clearly don't refer to human kings? Isaiah says that the being named Lucifer desired to supplant the very throne of God. The human king of Babylon in Isaiah's day never even acknowledged the living God, much less desired His throne. Furthermore, even when Babylon had captured Jerusalem, the kings of Babylon never showed any interest in ruling from the "mount of the congregation" - that is, Zion - and never attempted to do so. This cannot be speaking merely of a human being.
Likewise, Ezekiel 28 speaks of a being who was "perfect in every way," who lived in the very throne room of God, was present in the garden of Eden, and acted as the "covering cherub." No human king alive in Ezekiel's day would have ever even believed in Eden, never mind seeing or being there. Furthermore, walking on "the stones of fire" on "the holy mountain of God" is hardly something a pagan king would have been able to do.
These verses clearly speak beyond the human into the supernatural.