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MagadanAid to Bible Understanding
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Mark (8:10), according to the best Greek manuscripts, referred to the same territory as “Dalmanutha.”—See DALMANUTHA.
No place called “Magadan” is today known in the region around the Sea of Galilee. However, some scholars believe that Magadan is the same as Magdala. Lending some support to this view is the fact that in Aramaic the letter “l” often replaces the “n” of Hebrew words. Thus Magadan could have been changed to Magdala. Others suggest that “Magdala” perhaps came to appear in more recent copies of the Greek text on account of an attempt to equate Magadan with Mejdel.
Magdala (possibly Magadan) is considered to be modern Mejdel, about two miles (3 kilometers) N of Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee. Located near the fork formed by the road running along the Sea of Galilee from Tiberias and the one coming down from the western hills, this site occupies a strategic position. Ruins of a relatively modern tower found there indicate that Mejdel once guarded the southern entrance to the Plain of Gennesaret. Both Mejdel and Magdala (a form of the Hebrew migh·dalʹ) mean “tower” or “fort.” This place is often suggested as the home of Mary Magdalene.
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Magdalene, MaryAid to Bible Understanding
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MAGDALENE, MARY
See MARY No. 3.
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MagdielAid to Bible Understanding
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MAGDIEL
(Magʹdi·el) [God is excellence, or, perhaps, choice gift from God].
A descendant of Esau, and one of the sheiks of Edom. (Gen. 36:40-43; 1 Chron. 1:51, 54) Magdiel may have also been the name of a place and a tribe.—See TIMNA No. 3.
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MaggotAid to Bible Understanding
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MAGGOT
The larval or wormlike stage of an insect just after leaving the egg. The term “maggot” is applied particularly to the fly larvae found in decaying vegetable or animal matter and in living tissues. The living or putrefying material provides heat for hatching the eggs and nourishment for the maggots.
Maggots have a legless, slender, segmented body that appears to be headless. However, with reference to the head, volume five of The Smithsonian Series, Insects, Their Ways and Means of Living, page 343, states: “The tapering end of the body is the head end, but the true head of the maggot is withdrawn entirely into the body. From the aperture where the head has disappeared, which serves the maggot as a mouth, two clawlike hooks project, and these hooks are both jaws and grasping organs to the maggot.”
The Scriptures allude to the parasitical nature of maggots and their subsisting on dead organic matter. (Job 7:5; 17:14; 21:26; 24:20; Isa. 14:11) The miraculous manna, if saved by the Israelites until the morning of the next day, gave off a repulsive odor and developed worms or maggots, except the manna stored up on the sixth day and saved over for the sabbath. (Ex. 16:20, 24) In mentioning the “maggot” in connection with Gehenna, Jesus evidently was alluding to the dump outside the city of Jerusalem where fires consumed the refuse and where worms or maggots subsisted on decaying matter near, but not in, the fire. (Mark 9:48; compare Isaiah 66:24.) The word “maggot” was employed by Bildad to denote someone of little account.—Job 25:6; see GEHENNA.
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Magic and SorceryAid to Bible Understanding
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MAGIC AND SORCERY
Secret arts and uncanny powers presumably used to accomplish things beyond what are natural, and which are associated with spiritistic, occult powers. “Black” magic is said to consist of spells, special curses and “the evil eye” that bring harm to one’s enemies. “White” magic, on the other hand, is said by its practicers to produce good results by breaking the spells and canceling the curses. Among some ancient peoples “black” magic was forbidden under penalty of death. The Bible, however, goes a step farther and forbids every form of spiritistic magic. (Lev. 19:26; Deut. 18:9-14) By the use of magical formulas, said to be obtained through supernatural knowledge and wisdom, the practitioner attempts to influence people and alter future events. In this respect magic differs from divination, which attempts only to discover future events rather than influence or change them.—See DIVINATION.
Much of the concept of magic-working sorcery is based on the belief that evil spirits can be induced either to leave or to enter a person; that they can be tricked and deceived; that they can be captured or trapped in a piece of wood or a clay image. For example, by making magic paths of honey or other agreeable things it is thought that the demons can be led around at the will of the magician.
All such notions naturally gave rise to a crafty class of magic-practicing priests, who exercised great power over the lives of the people, extorting large payments from those under their influence on the pretense of possessing supernatural powers over and beyond those of the demons. They believed that these professional sorcerers could invoke the demons to obey, but that the demons had no power over the sorcerers.
These spiritistic practices, so-called “sciences,” were developed and used by the ancient Chaldeans of Babylonia. Sixteen centuries ago Epiphanius said that in his opinion it was ‘Nimrod who established the sciences of magic and astronomy.’ Isaiah, in the eighth century B.C.E., tells us that Babylon of his day was rife with sorceries of all sorts. (Isa. 47:12-15) More than a century later, in the days of Daniel, the magic-practicing priests were still a part of the Babylonian court. (Dan. 1:20; 2:2, 10, 27; 4:7; 5:11) This expression “magic-practicing priests” is a literal and explicit translation of the Hebrew.
The Babylonians had a great fear of physically deformed persons called warlocks and witches, in the belief that they were dispensers of “black” magic. The priests, on the other hand, were said to be masters of “white” magic. They believed that the same incantation that made a sick man well if spoken by a priest would kill the man if uttered by a warlock or witch.
As people scattered around the earth due to the confusion of languages at Babel, it is possible that they took with them some concept of such magical arts. (Gen. 11:8, 9) Today millions practice the magic of mantra, that is, the mystic formula, hymn or spellbinding prayer of popular Hinduism. Magic-practicing priests, witch doctors, medicine men and sorcerers of all sorts are found among primitive people the world over, as they were among the Egyptians of the eighteenth century B.C.E., in the days of Joseph. (Gen. 41:8, 24) Over two centuries after Joseph was sold into slavery, the magic-practicing priests of Egypt seemingly duplicated to an extent the first two miracles performed by Moses. (Ex. 7:11, 22; 8:7) But they were powerless when it came to producing gnats, having to admit that it was “the finger of God!” They were likewise helpless in preventing the plague of boils from afflicting themselves.—Ex. 8:18, 19; 9:11.
CONDEMNED BY THE BIBLE
The Bible is singularly different from the writings of other ancient people in that its references to uncanny powers and magical arts are all condemnatory. Nowhere does it recommend “white” magic to cancel spells of “black” magic. Rather, it urges faith, prayer and trust in Jehovah as the protection against unseen “wicked spirit forces” and all their related activities, including magical influences. (Eph. 6:11-18) In the Psalms the righteous pray for deliverance from evil; Jesus taught us to pray for deliverance “from the wicked one.” (Matt. 6:13) The Talmud and the Koran, on the other hand, give way to
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